The Senate Judiciary Committee is investigating the New Orleans terrorist attack that left 15 people dead, as well as the explosion outside the Trump hotel in Las Vegas.
A rare snow storm blanketed the Houston area and across Southeast Texas, and this included areas along the Texas Coast, like the beach in Galveston. The same system also brought s
Over 10 inches of snow has been reported in Louisiana as a historic, unprecedented snowstorm slams the South. The snow is falling across Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina and Florida, bringing many roads to a standstill.
A rare, historic snowfall blanketed parts of the southern U.S. on Tuesday, allowing residents to play in the rather unusual weather. Families went snow tubing in Houston. People made snowballs and snow angels. People were even seen skiing on Bourbon Street.
GALVESTON, Texas — You may not recognize these pictures ... as everywhere from beaches to Bourbon Street were covered in snow.
As crews installed temporary barriers in the French Quarter ahead of the Super Bowl, one month after a Texas man plowed past the defenses on the city's most famous street
Houston's brick roads tell an important history of this Texas city, including the history of Freedmen's Town in the Fourth Ward.
Senior Bowl director Jim Nagy announced Saturday that all players in the 2025 Senior Bowl will wear a special helmet sticker to honor Tiger Bech, the former Princeton football player who was killed in the New Year’s Day terror attack on Bourbon Street in New Orleans.
Senior Bowl executive director Jim Nagy announced Saturday that all 2025 Senior Bowl participants will wear a helmet decal honoring former Princeton
Survivors of the New Year’s Day Bourbon Street attack, along with the families and loved ones of the 14 people killed, are set to receive a share of more than $2 million in donations from businesses, organizations and individuals.
House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mark Green says the "national security blunders of the past four years" have "emboldened" terrorists and homegrown violent extremism.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Congressional lawmakers demanded answers Wednesday about the FBI’s response to the Jan. 1 truck attack in New Orleans that killed 14 people, questioning why the bureau’s top official in the city was out of town and raising concerns about its initial, erroneous assertion that the rampage was “not a terrorist event.”