EYE
OF THE STORM
Our Response to Hurricane Katrina
11/02/05
 |
| FBI New Orleans office in the
aftermath of Katrina |
As
water gushed into New Orleans in the aftermath of Katrina,
the FBI began pouring people and resources into the beleaguered
city. Within days, we had nearly 500 special agents and
staff from all over the country on the ground who were
part of a coordinated federal effort, working with state
and local authorities to help rein in the chaos and rescue
those still stranded.
What we found was staggering. The hurricane caused
massive wind damage and unprecedented flooding. "I
couldn't believe my eyes," said Boston Special Agent
in Charge (SAC) Ken Kaiser, who temporarily left his
post to serve as the on-scene tactical commander in New
Orleans. "More than 80 percent of the city was flooded,
up to the rooftops in some places. There were scores
of helpless people."
Kaiser, a former New Orleans SAC, headed a team of
more than 200 FBI agents with specialized training, including
SWAT and hostage rescue team members, communications
specialists, helicopter pilots, and evidence collection
specialists.
In addition to Kaiser, we immediately dispatched New
Haven SAC Michael J. Wolf, now heading the Critical Incident
Response Group, or CIRG. Wolf represented the FBI in
the Law Enforcement Coordination Center, a multi-agency
task force that drew members from local, state, and federal
agencies.
The task force's immediate mission was to secure the
city. FBI tactical personnel were the lead federal agents
working with the New Orleans police in two of the city's
eight police districts. They answered emergency calls,
stopped looting, and assisted with search and rescue
operations.
FBI personnel worked out of a downtown hotel spared
from the worst of the flooding and from a mobile command
center established in Baton Rouge. Our teams patrolled
the devastated city and helped guard critical sites,
including the ruined New Orleans FBI Office. SAC James
Bernazzani—along with New Orleans agents, two New
Orleans Police Department officers, and two contract
security personnel—stayed in our downtown building
as the flood waters were rising to guard classified information,
criminal evidence, and weapons.
Bernazzani also worked with local officials to produce
intelligence assessments of known or suspected violent
criminals in the New Orleans area who might have fled
to safer locations. We shared the information with other
field offices and law enforcement officials across the
nation.
We also quickly established a task force with other
law enforcement agencies to thwart and investigate hurricane-related
fraud and scams.
The work in the hurricane ravaged areas is far from
over—and made all the more difficult by the damage
caused less than a month later by Hurricane Rita. "We're
going to rebuild, just like the city," SAC Bernazzani
told one reporter. "We're part of the community."
In addition to New Orleans, we also lent a hand in
other Gulf Coast areas battered by the storm—including
in Alabama and Mississippi—setting up command posts,
working with our partners to help find missing children
and their families, and sending employees with specialized
experience. |