After 12 years of searching, the reward has been raised for information in a Bossier Parish missing persons case. An anonymous donor now is offering $100,000 for tips that lead to Clinton Nelson's remains, authorities say.
A Shreveport man says he loves using boxing to help keep young men off the streets and out of trouble. Now he says he is searching for an alternative venue for his program because the city has shut down his training facility for renovations.
A knock came unexpectedly at her door. Hours later, she was cleaning her blood-stained doorstep, washing away a recent reminder of how the violence of Shreveport's streets had come calling.
Police are investigating an armed robbery Monday afternoon at a Shreveport-area bank. It happened around noon at Citizens National Bank, in the 9200 block of Ellerbe Road.
Months after whistleblowers prompted an investigation into euthanasia practices at Bossier City's animal shelter, the president of a volunteer group says she has been told by city officials that her services no longer are needed.
Police are investigating after a man was found shot in an alley Friday morning in Shreveport. It happened around 8 a.m. in the 600 block of Airport Drive, near Simms Street and N. LaSalle.
Both Louisiana State Police and the FBI confirm that they are aware of a Shreveport mayoral candidate reportedly receiving a threat on his family's doorstep.
"Everybody can, you know, pay the ticket and it's not a problem. But how do you get it off your conscience when you kill a little kid? So that's the reason why we're out here today."
AEP/SWEPCO customers in South Bossier are all wired up about being left in the dark by power outages. The utility says it is working on an $18 million solution.
To put it in perspective, the new fiber optic network will be fast enough to download 25 songs in 1 second and a 90-minute high-definition movie in 30 seconds.
Shreveport's Proud Mary 360° Grill is getting its own reality television show. And it will give patrons an opportunity to decide whether a recipe is worthy of Shreveport's stamp of approval.
"Regionally, Bossier is the lowest, which is kind of counter-intuitive when you consider the fact that, you know, your teachers are performing at a high level because it's an A district."
A multimillion-dollar grant is meant to breathe life back into one of Shreveport's oldest and once prosperous neighborhoods that now finds itself riddled with shotgun houses, flailing businesses and occasional crime.