NEW ORLEANS — New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick said she had hired former New York Police Commissioner William J. Bratton as a consultant during a tense city council meeting Wednesday as officials and residents sought answers over security lapses after a terror attack that killed 14 people in the French Quarter.
Kirkpatrick also told councilmembers she won't step down.
''I will not resign,'' Kirkpatrick said. ''I believe I can be that person to lead us forward.''
Kirkpatrick assumed a defensive stance as the city council prepares to launch its own investigation into the street barrier systems within and around Bourbon Street, where on New Year's Day an Islamic State group-inspired attacker drove his F-150 truck around a police car blockading the street and rampaged down the city's most famous thoroughfare.
Bollards, protective columns designed to block vehicle traffic, had been removed from the entrance of Bourbon Street because the city was in the process of replacing them. However, the replacement barriers being installed are not designed to stop a fast-moving truck, according to a Nola.com report.
Mayor LaToya Cantrell has acknowledged she could not confirm if the new bollard system is sufficient to stop a similar vehicle attack. And on Monday, state Attorney General Liz Murrill ordered a review of security measures that were in place for New Year's celebrations and the Sugar Bowl.
One group of law firms announced Wednesday that they have secured nearly two dozen victims of the attack as clients and are conducting their own investigation, stating that ''officials were tragically aware and did not protect the public.'' One of the firms, Romanucci & Blandin, helped George Floyd's family secure a $27 million settlement against the city of Minneapolis after he was killed by a police officer.
Unanswered questions and a new security consultant