Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Shootings in New Orleans

10 people wounded near French Quarter; two men killed elsewhere.

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NEW ORLEANS — Ten people were shot and wounded early Sunday near the French Quarter in New Orleans, a popular spot for tourists. Hours later in another part of town, another shooting killed two men and wounded two others.

Police said both shootings remain under investigat­ion, and authoritie­s did not immediatel­y draw any connection between them.

Two of the 10 people shot on Canal Street near the French Quarter were in critical condition in hospitals, Police Superinten­dent Shaun Ferguson said. No arrests were announced by midday Sunday, and police did not immediatel­y release informatio­n about any of the victims.

“What happened in our city overnight was a cowardly and senseless act that we cannot and will not tolerate,” Ferguson said in a statement.

He said New Orleans has seen a significan­t reduction in violent crime over the past four years.

Ferguson told The New Orleans Advocate/The Times-Picayune that a person of interest has been detained, but it was not immediatel­y clear whether the person had any connection to the shooting.

The first shootings happened about 3:20 a.m. on a busy commercial block of Canal Street that has streetcar tracks and is near many hotels.

Ferguson said police quickly responded to the scene as patrols were heightened for this weekend’s Bayou Classic, the annual Thanksgivi­ng weekend rivalry football game between Grambling State and Southern University at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome.

“While this investigat­ion is in the very beginning stages, one thing is certain — we will not stop until we identify and arrest those responsibl­e,” Ferguson said in his statement.

New Orleans Mayor Latoya Cantrell also pledged to bring the perpetrato­rs to justice.

“The shootings on Canal Street early this morning were an ugly disruption of an otherwise beautiful holiday weekend. We will do everything we can to wrap the victims and their families in our love and support, and to bring the criminals responsibl­e to justice,” she said Sunday on Twitter.

Kenneth Culbreth told The New Orleans Advocate/ The Times-Picayune that he had gone into a CVS pharmacy in the early morning. Moments later, he walked out to a crime scene.

“On my way out of the CVS, I heard pops,” Culbreth said. “It was so many, I couldn’t keep count.”

Culbreth spent the rest of the morning watching the scene, with law enforcemen­t officials and several emergency vehicles moving in and out at a rapid pace.

Police initially said 10 people were wounded. They later said that 11 were wounded, but the Police Department then sent a statement saying the correct number was 10.

The shooting on Canal Street happened near the spot where 10 people were shot, one of them fatally, on Bourbon Street on Nov. 27, 2016. One man was convicted of attempted manslaught­er and obstructio­n of justice, but jurors could not reach a verdict on a second-degree murder charge. Another man awaits trial.

The shooting Sunday afternoon that killed two men and wounded two others happened in a residentia­l area about 3 miles north of the French Quarter.

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 ?? AP/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate/MAX BECHERER ?? A woman looks out from inside a McDonald’s restaurant Sunday as New Orleans police investigat­e a shooting on the edge of the city’s famed French Quarter.
AP/The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate/MAX BECHERER A woman looks out from inside a McDonald’s restaurant Sunday as New Orleans police investigat­e a shooting on the edge of the city’s famed French Quarter.

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