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Director offers dank thrills in Thai cave boys rescue saga

BANGKOK (AP) — Their story gripped the world: determined divers racing against time and water to rescue 12 boys and their soccer coach trapped for more than two weeks in a flooded cave deep inside a northern Thai mountain.
The ordeal in late June and early July 2018 had barely ended when filmmakers began their own race to get the nail-biting drama onto cinema screens. The first of those projects premiered last weekend, when director Tom Waller’s “The Cave” showed at the Busan Film Festival in South Korea.
The film was shot over three months earlier this year and has been in post-production since then. The 45-year-old Thai-born, British-raised filmmaker said the epic tale of the Wild Boars football team was a story he simply had to tell.
The boys and their coach entered the Tham Luang cave complex after soccer practice and were quickly trapped inside by rising floodwater. Despite a massive search, the boys spent nine nights lost in the cave before they were spotted by an expert diver. It would take another eight days before they were all safe.
Waller was visiting his father in Ireland when he saw television news accounts of the drama.
“I thought this would be an amazing story to tell on screen,” he said.
But putting the parts together after their dramatic rescue proved to be a challenge. Thailand’s government, at the time led by a military junta, became very protective of the story, barring unauthorized access to the Wild Boars or their parents. Waller often feared his production might be shut down.
His good fortune was that the events at the Tham Luang cave in Chiang Rai province had multiple angles and interesting characters. Especially compelling were the stories of the rescuers, particularly the expert divers who rallied from around the world. He decided to make a film “about the volunteer spirit of the rescue.”
Other people proposed telling the story from the point of view of the boys, and Netflix nailed down those rights in a deal brokered by the Thai government.
“I took the view that this was going to be a story about the people we didn’t know about, about the cave divers who came all the way from across the planet,” Waller said. “They literally dropped everything to go and help, and I just felt that that was more of an exciting story to tell, to find out how these boys were brought out and what they did to get them out.”
Waller even had more than a dozen key rescue personnel play themselves.
Waller said they were natural actors, blending in almost seamlessly with the professionals around them, and helped by the accuracy of the settings and the production’s close attention to detail.
“What you are really doing is asking them to remember what they did and to show us what they were doing and what they were feeling like at the time,” he said. “That was really very emotional for some of them because it was absolutely real.”
Waller said his film is likely to have a visceral effect on some viewers, evoking a measure of claustrophobia.
“It’s a sort of immersive experience with the sound of the environment, you know, the fact that is very dark and murky, that the water is not clear,” he said.
“In Hollywood films, when they do underwater scenes, everything is crystal clear. But in this film it’s murky and I think that’s the big difference. This film lends itself to being more of a realistic portrayal of what happened.”
Some scenes were filmed on location at the entrance to the actual Tham Luang cave, but most of the action was shot elsewhere, Waller said.
“We filmed in real water caves that were flooded, all year-round,” he said. “It is very authentic in terms of real caves, real flooded tunnels, real divers and real creepy-crawlies in there. So it was no mean feat trying to get a crew to go and film in these caves.”
“The Cave” goes on general release in Thailand on Nov. 28.

Owner has serial affairs with restaurant staff members

DEAR ABBY: I have been employed at a fine dining restaurant for 30 years. I love my job. New owners bought it eight years ago, and the restaurant was booming. Our owner had an affair with another employee, and her schedule and treatment became insane. She didn’t have to work as hard as the rest of us, treated everyone she worked with horribly and nothing was done about it. She and her family suddenly moved out of state a short while ago, and nothing was ever said about her again. Recently, we found out that he’s having an affair with another co-worker,

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CHARLES 'CHUCK' EDWARD GANAWAY JR.

August 25, 1960 — September 28, 2019
Charles “Chuck” Edward Ganaway Jr., 59, a resident of Bayou L’Ourse, passed away Saturday, September 28, 2019, at his home.
Chuck was born August 25, 1960, in Illinois, the son of Charles E. Ganaway Sr. and Catherine Hill Ganaway.
Chuck worked for Nationals Supermarket as a cashier and stocker for almost 5 years; he was a very hard worker and everyone at Nationals loved him. Chuck entered the United States Air Force right after turning 21, where he served as an electrician for the aircrafts from 1981-1985. Chuck had an infectious, beautiful smile that could light up a room; he could make anyone laugh with his blunt humor, and he will be missed tremendously by all who knew him.
He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his father, Charles E. Ganaway Sr. of Bayou L’Ourse; one brother, Louis F. Ganaway and wife Joan of Bayou Vista; two sisters, Ginger L. Bonin of Morgan City, and Melissa D. Marcel and husband Corey of Bayou Vista; brother-in-law, Floyd Vining Jr. of Berwick; and a host of nieces, nephews, great- nieces and nephews, and cousins.
Chuck was preceded in death by his mother, Catherine Hill Ganaway; sister, Kim R. Vining; brother-in-law, Lockwood Bonin Jr.; nephew, Jonathan Ganaway; and maternal and paternal grandparents.
Funeral Services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, October 2, 2019, at Twin City Funeral Home with Mr. James Kyle officiating. Visitation will be held Tuesday, October 1, 2019, from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m. at Twin City Funeral Home, and will continue Wednesday October 2, 2019, from 8 a.m. until the time of services. A graveside service will be held in Hardin, Illinois, at a later date.
Friends are invited to leave condolence messages for the family at www.tiwncityfh.com

WILLIS HALE ROCHEL

June 4, 1933 — September 29, 2019
Funeral services celebrating the life of Willis Hale Rochel will be held Thursday, October 3, 2019, at 1 p.m. at Ibert’s Mortuary in Patterson. Following the service, he will be laid to rest in the Patterson Protestant Cemetery. The Rev. Clyde Crappell will conduct the services. The family requests that visiting hours be observed Thursday at Ibert’s Mortuary in Patterson from 10:30 a.m. until time of service.
Hale, as he was affectionately known, was born on Sunday, June 4, 1933, and was one of six children born to Howard and Margaret Rochel. A native of Patterson and a resident of Baldwin for the past eight years, Hale passed away at the age of 86 on Sunday, September 29, 2019.
Those he leaves to cherish his memory include his wife of 64 years, Emma Naquin Rochel; four sons, Greg Rochel and his wife Verna, Tim Rochel and his fiancée Jeannie Hebert, Mark Rochel, and Glenn Rochel and his wife Bobbie; four siblings, Cary Rentrop, Lee Rochel, Bill Rochel and Linda Crappell; 12 grandchildren; 20 great-grandchildren; and a host of nieces, nephews and in-laws.
He was preceded in death by his parents, Howard Lee Rochel and Margaret Hale Rochel; and his sister, Peggy Mire.
Serving as pallbearers will be his four sons, Greg, Tim, Mark and Glenn Rochel, his brother-in-law, Paul Naquin, and nephew, Robbie Crappell. Honorary pallbearers will be all of his grandsons, known as Hale’s crew.
Family and friends may view the obituary and express their condolences online by visiting www.iberts.com.
Arrangements have been entrusted to Ibert’s Mortuary, Inc., 1111 Lia Street, Patterson, LA 70392, (985) 395-7873.

Jindal gone, not forgotten in 2019 race

BATON ROUGE (AP) — Bobby Jindal left the Louisiana governor’s office nearly four years ago and evaporated from the state political scene after a failed presidential bid. Still, he’s a permanent fixture in Louisiana’s current governor’s race.
Democratic incumbent John Bel Edwards keeps his Republican predecessor front and center in his reelection quest.
In speeches, advertising and fundraising pitches, Edwards frames his GOP opponents as other versions of Jindal, the two-term governor whose financial policies are blamed for driving the state into a decade of budget troubles and left office with dismal approval ratings. Edwards, the Deep South’s only Democratic governor, campaigns for the Oct. 12 election as the leader who brought Louisiana out of the fiscal ditch Jindal created.
“When I walked into office, I found a $2 billion budget deficit, the largest in the history of our state, left to me by Bobby Jindal. Working hard in a bipartisan fashion, we turned that into surpluses,” Edwards said in a debate.
A recent fundraising email from Democratic operative James Carville told potential Edwards donors that U.S. Rep. Ralph Abraham and businessman Eddie Rispone would return Louisiana to “the way things were when Bobby Jindal was governor.”
Abraham and Rispone note that when he was a state lawmaker, Edwards voted for most of the Jindal-era budgets that he now derides. The two don’t defend Jindal’s budgeting tactics, and they bristle that Edwards keeps bringing the ex-governor up.
“Bobby Jindal’s not running for governor. I’m running for governor,” Rispone said when asked about Jindal’s handling of the budget.
Jindal has avoided Louisiana’s political scene since he exited the governor’s mansion in January 2016 and his presidential campaign sputtered shortly thereafter. Since then, he’s appeared sporadically on national news programs to discuss federal issues. He hasn’t commented about Louisiana’s finances, even as his name was invoked repeatedly during four years of budget debates in Edwards’ term, and he didn’t return Associated Press requests for comment about the governor’s race.
Republican political consultant Roy Fletcher said Edwards’ references to Jindal make sense.
“My guess is they polled it and they found out that negative was high and people continue to blame Jindal for the problems,” said Fletcher, who isn’t working on the governor’s race. “It’s compelling. People believe it.”
Across eight years in office, Jindal and the Legislature cut personal income taxes and allowed tax break programs to balloon. Public college financing was slashed more than nearly any other state in the nation, along with social services.
Jindal wouldn’t agree to anything perceived as a tax hike, but he and lawmakers also didn’t cut state operating expenses deeply enough to match annual revenue. Instead, the Jindal administration plundered savings accounts, sold off state property and delayed Medicaid bill payments to patch together budgets. That created new shortfalls annually, when those dollars disappeared or savings projections didn’t materialize.
“The way he ran his budget was the most dishonest, gimmicky, smoke and mirrors,” Edwards said. “We are doing so much better because we jettisoned all those irresponsible practices of the past.”
Edwards and the majority-GOP Legislature ended the use of piecemeal financing to pay for ongoing programs. And after three years of special legislative sessions, they agreed to a seven-year tax package in 2018 to bring more money into state coffers and stabilize the budget, raising public school teacher pay and pouring new dollars into higher education.
Abraham and Rispone deride the tax hikes as chasing away residents and businesses. They say Louisiana shouldn’t be amassing hefty surpluses.
“It’s the taxpayer’s money, that’s what it is. It’s over-taxation,” said Rispone, owner of an industrial contracting company from Baton Rouge who is largely self-financing his multimillion-dollar campaign.
Both Republican candidates pledge to undo the sales tax increase that formed the centerpiece of the tax compromise, which boosted Louisiana’s average state and local sales tax rate to one of the highest in the nation. But neither man specifically explains how he would cut spending in Louisiana’s $30 billion operating budget to match the lost revenue.
They broadly talk about making government more efficient and tackling wasteful spending — and Edwards notes that Jindal offered similar claims. Rispone wants a constitutional convention to make more budget areas open to cuts.
“We will cut a lot of issues, but they will be where the waste, fraud and abuse is. It won’t be services that the people need, I can assure you of that,” said Abraham, a third-term congressman and doctor from rural northeast Louisiana.
Abraham and Rispone donated thousands to Jindal’s campaigns. Rispone worked closely with Jindal on workforce development initiatives and an education overhaul that expanded charter schools and voucher programs. Abraham appeared in a campaign ad for Jindal in 2007.
Now, they try to keep their distance.
Abraham said the former governor represented core GOP principles “early in his career.” But he said: “He kind of went astray there toward the end, probably went away from some of those basic tenets that we Republicans embrace.”
Polls show Edwards well ahead of his competitors. Abraham and Rispone are vying to keep the incumbent from outright victory in the primary. All contenders run on the same ballot regardless of party. If Edwards doesn’t top 50% of the vote, he’ll face the second-place finisher in a Nov. 16 runoff.
___
Follow Melinda Deslatte on Twitter at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Governor avoids tricky national issues

Louisiana Spotlight

BATON ROUGE — Gov. John Bel Edwards’ bid for a second term hinges on his ability to make Louisiana voters feel comfortable pulling the lever for a Democrat where many people aren’t inclined to do so. He’s not getting much help from the polarization of Washington.
The Deep South’s only Democratic governor knows talk of national politics won’t help his reelection bid in a state where President Donald Trump won by 20 points, so he remains polite about the Republican president and sidesteps most national political issues, aware of the minefields they present.
“I’m about Louisiana first, as I said when I ran four years ago, and about putting state over party and working with everybody in order to move Louisiana forward. That’s what I’ve done,” Edwards said in an interview. “Any attempts to tie me to what’s going on in Washington are just really, as I mentioned, silly and contrived.”
Edwards skips talk of the 2020 presidential race. He calls the U.S. House Democrats’ impeachment inquiry a “distraction that’s going to keep the federal government from actually governing.” And he describes Trump’s tariffs as damaging to Louisiana, but says he wants the president to “be successful” in the trade dispute.
As if responding to the continued worsening of relationships between Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill, Edwards released a 30-second TV ad that touts support from some GOP lawmakers and Republican business leaders.
The spot talks of the governor’s work across party lines on the budget and tax deal and says “he put people over politics,” in an obvious attempt to soothe concerns that he’s a Democrat in a red-leaning state.
Campaign ads and mailers ahead of the Oct. 12 election typically don’t mention Edwards is a Democrat.
While Edwards defends his party affiliation, the moderate Southern Democrat falls out of step with national party leaders on issues such as abortion and gun rights. He’s signed some of the nation’s most restrictive abortion laws, and he doesn’t support limits on semi-automatic rifles, for example.
Republican Party leaders suggest Edwards’ election victory in 2015 was a fluke, with him defeating a flawed candidate in David Vitter, who was embroiled in a prostitution scandal and wounded from repeated hits on his character from fellow GOP candidates.
GOP leaders and their two main candidates in the governor’s race, U.S. Rep. Ralph Abraham and businessman Eddie Rispone, suggest Edwards is out of step with Louisiana voters on taxes and government spending. They describe him as liberal and anti-Trump.
Rispone, a Baton Rouge contracting company owner who is largely self-financing his campaign, tries to make Trump a wedge issue that differentiates him from both opponents, including his fellow Republican, Abraham.
In debates and an attack ad, Rispone notes that Abraham in 2016 suggested Trump should consider stepping aside from the GOP presidential nomination after a recording emerged in which Trump boasted about groping women. And Rispone notes that Edwards was a supporter of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.
“I’m the only one who supported Trump the whole time,” Rispone said at one debate. At another, he said: “I didn’t ask him to step aside. I’m so grateful he didn’t take the advice of Mr. Abraham.”
When faced with that criticism, Abraham, a three-term congressman from northeast Louisiana, doesn’t explain that 2016 statement, instead calling Trump “our wonderful president” and talking about how he votes with the president in Congress.
But while the two Republicans haggle over who has tighter ties to Trump, Edwards can exchange his own tales of working with the White House. The Democratic incumbent rarely criticizes the president, and he points to nine meetings with Trump, including for discussions about transportation and criminal sentencing law changes.
“I think it’s important to have a great working relationship with the president, no matter who he or she might be or what party they come from,” Edwards said during a debate.
Edwards likely will continue to steer the conversation away from national politics in the remaining weeks of the governor’s race. His success in doing so could determine whether he’s reelected. Early voting runs through Saturday.
Melinda Deslatte has covered Louisiana politics for The Associated Press since 2000. Follow her at http://twitter.com/melindadeslatte

Homecoming Week proclaimed

Morgan City Mayor Frank "Boo" Grizzaffi has signed a proclamation declaring this week as Homecoming Week at Morgan City High. Events include a parade at 5:30 p.m. Thursday, followed by a jambalaya dinner and pep rally at 7 p.m. Morgan City hosts Patterson at 7 p.m. Friday in the homecoming footballa game. The king will be crowned at the dance court presentation at 9 p.m. Saturday. Homecoming court members are, front row from left: Kameron Patereau, Aymie Pearce, Juliet Thibodeaux, Leah Stockstill, Hannah Adams and Mylin Wilson. Back row: Anaria Clark, Drew Angeron, Sarajane Nini, Tylor Mayon, Madison Williams, Myllah Brown, Mackenley Landry and Aaliyah Davis.

Reckless driving complaint leads to heroin charge

An officer responding to a complaint of reckless driving on U.S. 90 stopped a Morgan City man who was in possession of heroin and drug paraphernalia and had warrants for his arrest, Morgan City Police Chief James F. Blair said in a news release.
—Shade Suire, 26, of Chestnut Drive in Morgan City, was arrested at 1:16 p.m. Sunday on charges of resisting an officer, possession of Schedule I controlled dangerous substance (heroin), possession of drug paraphernalia, and a warrant for the City Court of Morgan City on the charge of resisting an officer.
Officers were called to the area of U.S. 90 and Martin Luther King Boulevard due to a reckless driver. The officer was given a description of the vehicle and located it on U.S. 90. The officer stopped the driver after a short time and found that he had warrants from the City Court of Morgan City. The officer also located suspected heroin and drug paraphernalia during the traffic stop. Suire was jailed.
Blair also reported the Morgan City Police Department responded to 123 calls for service and the following arrests were made:
—Scott Barbier, 49, of Florence Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 8:59 a.m. Friday on a charge of abuse of toxic vapors. Officers were called to a Florence Street residence after someone saw Barbier inhaling propane. Officers located Barbier passed out in a shed. After speaking with officers Barbier admitted to huffing propane. Barbier was jailed.
—Curtis Ray, 30, of Duke Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 1:45 p.m. Friday on charges of possession with intent to distribute Schedule I controlled dangerous substance (marijuana), possession of drug paraphernalia, violation of uniform controlled dangerous substance law drug-free zone, and transactions involving proceeds from controlled dangerous substance activity.
Detectives served a search warrant at a Duke Street residence. Ray was located at the residence. Detectives located suspected marijuana which was packaged for sale along with suspected paraphernalia. Ray was jailed.
—Wingler Garcia-Pinto, 22, of Coach Court in Houma, was arrested at 7:01 p.m. Saturday on charges of speeding and no driver’s license. An officer on U.S. 90 clocked a vehicle traveling 82 miles per hours in a 70 miles per hour zone and stopped the driver. Officers made contact with the driver, Garcia-Pinto, and it was learned that he did not have a driver’s license. He was jailed.
—Epigmenio Garcia-Sedano, 55, of Plant Road in Houma, was arrested at 12:20 a.m. Sunday on a charge of no driver’s license. An officer saw a vehicle strike a curb while making a turn. The officer stopped the driver and spoke with him to make sure he was not impaired. The officer learned that the driver, Garcia-Sedano, did not have a driver’s license. He was jailed.
—Cristobal Chilisna, 39, of Second Street in Amelia, was arrested at 8:33 p.m. Sunday on charges of traffic control signals and no driver’s license. An officer on La. 182 saw a vehicle disregard a red traffic signal. The officer stopped the driver, identified as Chilisna, and learned that he did not have a driver’s license. He was jailed.
Berwick Police Chief David Leonard Sr. reported the following arrests:
—Shawn Verdun, 20, of K Street in Patterson, was arrested at 3:37 a.m. Saturday for charges of second offense possession of Schedule I controlled dangerous substance (marijuana), possession of drug paraphernalia, and two counts resisting an officer.
An officer in the area of U.S. 90 west observed a vehicle without a visible light showing the license plate. A traffic stop was conducted and officers made contact with Verdun. Verdun consented to a search of the vehicle and officers located suspected marijuana and items of drug paraphernalia. Verdun was advised of the marijuana at which time he fled on foot. Verdun was apprehended and jailed with no bond set.
—William Reaux, 23, of Holly Lane in New Iberia, was arrested at 9:38 p.m. Saturday for charges of possession of Schedule II controlled dangerous substance (methamphetamine), possession of Schedule I controlled dangerous substance (marijuana), possession of drug paraphernalia, and violation of a controlled dangerous substance law drug-free zone.
The Berwick Police Department received a complaint of a suspicious vehicle in the area of Fourth Street. Officers made contact with Reaux who gave consent for officers to search his vehicle. Marijuana, methamphetamine and items of drug paraphernalia were located in the vehicle. Reaux was jailed with no bond set.
—Danyelle Morgan, 34, of Texas Street in Berwick, was arrested at 1:45 a.m. Sunday on warrants for failure to appear for the St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office. Berwick Police Department received information that Morgan, who had active warrants, was at a residence in Berwick. Officers went to the residence and located Morgan. She was jailed with no bond set.
—Daniel Alvarado-Lopez, 26, of La. 311 in Houma, was arrested at midnight Monday for charges of speeding 60 miles per hour in a 50 miles per hour zone, third offense driving while intoxicated refusal, open container, and driving under suspension.
An officer in the area of U.S. 90 observed a vehicle speeding. A traffic stop was conducted and contact was made with Alvarado-Lopez. Alvarado-Lopez showed signs of being impaired. Field sobriety tests were conducted which he performed poorly on.
Alvarado-Lopez was found to have an open alcoholic container inside the vehicle and it was learned that his driver’s license was suspended. He was placed under arrest and transported to the Berwick Police Department where he refused to submit to a breath test and was transported to a local hospital where he consented to give a blood sample. Officers learned that Alvarado-Lopez had two previous driving while intoxicated convictions since 2017. He was jailed with no bond set.
St. Mary Parish Sheriff Blaise Smith reported that the Sheriff’s Office responded to 85 complaints and the following arrests were made:
—Pedro Vazquez Garcia, 39, of Easy Street in Patterson, was arrested at 6:03 a.m. Friday on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of operating a vehicle while license is suspended/ revoked/ canceled. A deputy was patrolling the area of U.S. 90 West in Centerville when he observed a vehicle cross the center and fog lines multiple times.
The deputy conducted a traffic stop and made contact with the driver, Garcia, and was advised by dispatch that Garcia held an active warrant for his arrest. Garcia was jailed and released on a $1,000 bond.
—Mark Houston Buteau, 51, of Shady Grove Drive in Patterson, was arrested at 11:46 p.m. Friday on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of theft.
A deputy was dispatched to a residence on Pan Am Lane in Charenton in reference to the complainant’s dogs barking at something. The deputy made contact with the complainant who stated that she had seen Buteau and had asked him to leave the property. The deputy was advised by dispatch that Buteau held an active warrant for his arrest. He was jailed with bail set at $5,000.
—Travis Wayne Montgomery, 44, of Neptune Street in Bayou Vista, was arrested at 1:22 p.m. Saturday for charges of switched license plate/ stolen license plate, driving under suspension, no insurance, and on a warrant for failure to appear on the charge of criminal neglect of family.
A deputy patrolling the area of Saturn Road in Bayou Vista observed a vehicle with a switched license plate. The deputy conducted a traffic stop and made contact with the driver, Montgomery, who was driving under suspension and had no insurance on the vehicle.
Dispatch advised the deputy that Montgomery also held an active warrant for his arrest. Montgomery was jailed with bail set at $4,000.
—Ulyess John Boudreaux, 39, of Kemper Street in Patterson, was arrested at 8:15 p.m. Saturday on an active warrant for charges of theft, criminal trespass, and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. A deputy was dispatched to a residence on Kemper Street in reference to locating Boudreaux who held an active warrant for his arrest.
The deputy made contact with Boudreaux and advised him of the active warrant. He was jailed with no bail set.
—Christian Mark Rentrop, 44, of Cantrell Drive in Berwick, was arrested at 10:09 p.m. Saturday for charges of no lights in fog and possession of marijuana. A deputy was patrolling the area of U.S. 90 East near Thorguson Drive when he observed a vehicle traveling without running lights on.
The deputy conducted a traffic stop and made contact with the driver, Rentrop. Through the stop, marijuana belonging to Rentrop was located. He was arrested and released on a summons to appear Dec. 2.
—Timothy John Ohmer, 52, of Lake Palourde Road in Amelia, was arrested at 3:21 p.m. Sunday on warrants for failure to appear on the charges of obedience to officers/traffic signs, operating a vehicle with an expired license, and failure to honor a written promise to appear.
A deputy went to a residence on Lake Palourde Road in reference to locating Ohmer, who held an active warrant for his arrest. The deputy made contact with Ohmer and advised him of the active warrant. He was jailed and released on a $365 bond.
—John A. Anderson, 44, of Filmore Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 6:33 a.m. Sunday on a warrant for criminal trespass.
—Ronalyn S. Anderson, 31, of Filmore Street in Morgan City, was arrested at 6:33 a.m. Sunday on a warrant for criminal trespass.
A deputy went to a residence on Filmore Street in reference to locating J. Anderson and R. Anderson who had warrants for their arrest. The deputy made contact with J. Anderson and R. Anderson and advised them of the warrants. They were arrested and each released on a summons to appear Dec. 2.
Patterson Police Chief Garrett Grogan reported the following arrests:
—Travis J. Morin, 36, of Main Street in Patterson, was arrested at 11:15 a.m. Thursday on charges of second degree kidnapping and battery of a dating partner. He was jailed with no bond set.
—Desmond Richard, 38, of Mike Drive in Patterson, was arrested at 11:50 a.m. Saturday on charges of criminal trespass and criminal mischief. He was jailed with bail set at $532.
—Synisha Welsh, 28, of Carmen Street in Patterson, was arrested at 9:44 a.m. Saturday on a warrant for failure to appear on charges of resisting arrest or officer by giving false information. She was jailed with bond set at $307.
—Whitney Klein, 55, of Pecan Lane in Patterson, was arrested at 12:53 a.m. Sunday on charges of first offense possession of drug paraphernalia and improper lane usage. She was jailed with bond set at $1,750.

Radio Logs for October 1

The following are the radio dispatch logs from the Morgan City Police Department. To report unlawful or suspicious activity, call the police department at 985-380-4605.
Monday, Sept. 30
6:10 a.m. 3000 block of Carol Street; Alarm.
6:22 a.m. Third Street and Railroad Avenue; Water leak.
6:46 a.m. Roderick Street; Miscellaneous.
7:23 a.m. 200 block of Federal Avenue; Animal complaint.
7:33 a.m. Acorn Street; Suspicious vehicle.
7:51 a.m. 1100 block of Florence Street; Animal complaint.
8:41 a.m. 800 block of Fig Street; Intell.
8:45 a.m. 3000 block of Allison Street; Animal complaint.
9:09 a.m. 100 block of St. Clair Alley; Complaint.
9:27 a.m. 700 block of Franklin Street; Complaint.
10:24 a.m. 300 block of Garber Street; Theft.
10:34 a.m. 300 block of Onstead Street; Animal complaint.
11:06 a.m. 700 block of Justa Street; Hit and run.
11:28 a.m. 400 block of Bush Street; Animal complaint.
11:41 a.m. 2400 block of Tiger Drive; Speeders.
12:38 p.m. 500 block of Brashear Avenue; Medical emergency.
12:54 p.m. 700 block of Greenwood Street; Animal complaint.
1:11 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Medical emergency.
1:16 p.m. 3000 block of Allison Street; Complaint.
2:13 p.m. 700 block of Everett Street; Medical emergency.
2:15 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Warrant.
3:01 p.m. 300 block of Egle Street; Complaint.
3:02 p.m. Fig Street; Complaint.
3:08 p.m. 2400 block of Cypress Street; Animal complaint.
3:23 p.m. Old Bridge Westbound; Debris.
3:31 p.m. 7500 block of La. 182; Complaint.
3:38 p.m. 500 block of Egle Street; Animal complaint.
3:38 p.m. 500 block of Louisa Street; Medical emergency.
3:48 p.m. 300 block of Franklin Street; Juvenile.
4:19 p.m. 100 block of Chennault Street; Complaint.
4:35 p.m. 900 block of Youngs Road; Hang up call.
8:21 p.m. 7200 block of La. 182; Medical.
8:23 p.m. First Street and St. Clair Alley; Disturbance.
8:34 p.m. Walnut and Karen drives; Complaint.
8:50 p.m. Lakeside; Complaint.
8:55 p.m. 1300 block of Chestnut Drive; Juvenile problem.
9:15 p.m. U.S. 90 Up Ramp; Assistance.
9:18 p.m. Lakeside; Complaint.
9:29 p.m. Walnut Drive near Chatsworth Street; Juvenile problem.
9:59 p.m. 600 block of Martin Luther King Boulevard; Complaint.
Tuesday, Oct. 1
12:55 a.m. 7300 block of La. 182; Alarm.
4:46 a.m. 700 block of Fourth Street; Complaint.

Administrative assistant award

Morgan City Bank employees attended the St. Mary Parish Chamber of Commerce luncheon Wednesday to support their co-worker, Joyce Williams, as she received the Top Administrative Assistant monthly award given by the Chamber and presented to her by M C Bank President Jeremy Callais. Pictured from left Jason Pye, Jeremy Callais, Travis Richard, Tessie Dubois, Joyce Williams, Larry Callais, Brennan Daniels and Reina Fernandez.

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
Phone: 337-828-3706
Fax: 337-828-2874

Morgan City Review
1014 Front Street, Morgan City, LA 70380
Phone: 985-384-8370
Fax: 985-384-4255