
Police departments and emergency management agencies across the U.S. boosted New Year's Eve security measures on Wednesday as revelers gathered to ring in 2026. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. The festivities are shadowed by the anniversary of an ISIS-inspired truck-ramming terrorist attack in New Orleans on Jan. 1 that killed 15 people and injured scores of others.
Main Idea: Big U.S. cities, especially New Orleans and New York City, increased security for New Year’s Eve events amid recent terror threats and past attacks.
Key Points:
Extra police, guards, and checkpoints can slow travel and raise public safety costs for taxpayers and businesses in big cities.
The heavier security in New Orleans, New York City, and other cities may lower the risk of attacks and help people feel safer at crowded events.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central jurisdiction taking concrete security action through a large law-enforcement deployment for New Year’s Eve.
Central city government deploying thousands of police officers around Times Square for New Year’s Eve.
Core local law-enforcement actor in the New Orleans security response.
Key enforcement agency securing the Rose Parade area.
Federal agency providing intelligence and public vigilance guidance.
Mentioned in connection with security posture and response to the threat environment.
Mentioned as a major city with heightened security and a large New Year’s event, but not the main.
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