Description
During the chaos of Hurricane Katrina, Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré became known as the “Category 5 General.” His no-nonsense leadership helped shift the federal response -- but one moment defined him forever.
At the New Orleans Convention Center, amid tens of thousands of stranded survivors, Honoré saw a mother clutching her 5-month-old twins. Soldiers around her had their weapons drawn. Honoré ordered them lowered, declaring: “They’re victims, not combatants.”
He then carried one of the twins himself, handing the other to a soldier, and brought them to safety aboard a Coast Guard vessel for medical care. Nearly 20 years later, those twins credit Honoré’s actions with giving them a sense of purpose in life. One now serves as a U.S. Marine.
In this one-on-one conversation with WWL Louisiana’s David Hammer, Honoré reflects on that day, his Katrina service and how disaster response in America changed because of it.
🔹 Highlights in this video:
Gen. Honoré recalls his first moments in New Orleans after Katrina
The famous command: “Put those weapons down”
The rescue of Alexandra Wheeler’s twin boys
➡️ Watch more stories in our WWLTV Katrina Archives playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5rtbtQPnKpqRyGx3zUr8vzE21OoX0oSZ
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