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Chef Mario Batali gives up financial stake in restaurants

NEW YORK (AP) — Celebrity chef Mario Batali has given up financial stakes in all his restaurants, severing a 20-year business partnership with restaurateur Joe Basti-anich more than a year after several women accused Batali of sexual harassment and assault.
The move announced Wednesday comes months after the original target date for Batali’s divestiture. Bastianich and partners bought out Batali’s share in such high-end eateries as the Michelin-starred Babbo in Greenwich Village and Del Posto, a fine-dining Italian spot in the Meatpacking District.
In a two-sentence statement issued through a spokesman, Batali said simply he had reached an agreement with Bastianich and will “no longer have any stake in the restaurants we built together.”
Batali, known for his bright orange kitchen Crocs and ponytail, wished his former business partner the “best of luck in the future.”
Bastianich and his sister, Tanya Bastianich Manuali, said in a statement to employees that business ties with Batali are now fully severed. Other restaurants the two had stakes in had already closed. Manuali recently took over day-to-day operations and oversight of the Batali & Bastianich Hospitality Group, forming a new company to operate 16 remaining restaurants.
Batali and Joe Bastianich had originally been scheduled to part ways in July. They would not discuss additional details of their agreement. Bastianich and Manuali are the children of chef Lidia Bastianich, who will also be a partner in the new company.
In addition, the U.S. branch of Eataly with several locations, including a flagship in Manhattan, said in a statement Wednesday the Italian food emporiums are in the process of acquiring Batali’s minority stake.
At one time, Batali’s reach included restaurants in Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Boston and Singapore, among other locations. His splashy restaurants helped make him a food celebrity but he became a star through appearances on the Food Network shows “Molto Mario” and “Iron Chef America.” He was one of the hosts of ABC’s “The Chew,” which has been canceled.
Sexual harassment and assault allegations against Batali have not produced any charges. The accusations surfaced in late December 2017, crumbling his career. In an email newsletter he distributed at the time, Batali apologized for past behavior and wrote:
“I have made many mistakes and I am so very sorry that I have disappointed my friends, my family, my fans and my team. My behavior was wrong and there are no excuses. I take full responsibility.”
He did not detail what behavior he was referring to. He was heavily scorned online for a postscript in the email: “In case you’re searching for a holiday-inspired breakfast, these Pizza Dough Cinnamon Rolls are a fan favorite.”
The recommendation came complete with a link to the recipe.
Batali is said to be living in Michigan.

Wife is at breaking point with out-of-work attorney

DEAR ABBY: My husband and I moved from another state four years ago. He went a year and a half before getting a job after we moved. Now he’s out of a job again. It has been seven months. He sits on the sofa and lounges around the house. He looks briefly for alerts on new job postings. He does a few chores — not many. He was an attorney, but he doesn’t want to go back into the area of law he was in. He is getting no interviews, we’re blowing through our savings and my job doesn’t cover all ...

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Morgan City divers recover wreckage from fatal plane crash

Divers from a Morgan City-based company spent 22 hours recovering the wreckage of a small plane that crashed last week into the Red River. The pilot and one passenger were killed in the crash.

Divers recovered the bodies of the plane’s pilot, Richard C. Lennard, 61, of Shreveport, and passenger, Michael S. Hollis, 56, of Bossier City. Caddo Parish Coroner Dr. Todd G. Thoma identified the two men, the Shreveport Times reported.

CROSS Diving Services, based in Morgan City, was in charge of the salvage operation and battled strong currents and cold water in the Red River in a 22-hour recovery effort, company managing partner Creighton Burnett said.

The dive crew consisted of Burnett, Steve Struble, Sean Peters and Chad Grandstaff.

CROSS Diving worked with the National Transportation Safety Board, Federal Aviation Administration, along with Caddo and Bossier parish sheriff’s offices at the scene. Authorities in that area contacted CROSS Diving to help in recovery efforts.

Authorities had the plane hooked up by about 7 p.m. Saturday but weren't able to the set the plane on the deck of a barge until shortly before midnight, because they only had access to an excavator on site and not a crane, Burnett said. The bodies were recovered not long after the plane was placed on the deck, he said.

The Shreveport Times reported that the downed aircraft was recovered from the Red River at 11:30 p.m. Saturday. It was identified as the plane that disappeared after take-off from the downtown Shreveport airport Feb. 28. The airport lost contact with the small plane the morning of Feb. 28 following take-off from the downtown airport, the newspaper reported.

Officials are still investigating what may have caused the crash.

CCHS powerlifters qualify for state meet

Central Catholic High School's powerlifting team had several members qualify for the Division V (Classes 1A, B and C) state meet during regional competition at Assumption High School Feb. 23. Participants qualifying or the state meet, which will be held March 16 in Alexandria, were eighth-grader Caleb O’Con, 114-pound class; seventh-grader Thomas Nini, 132-pound class; junior Khyre Willis, 148-pound class; junior Andrew Duval and freshman Drayton Keller, each in the 181-pound class; junior Korey Kincade, 242-pound class; junior Grant Cheramie, 275-pound class; and junior Michael- Anthony Hill, Super Heavy Weight class.

Patterson Lumberjacks fall to Comeaux 10-0

Patterson High School fell to Comeaux 10-0 in five innings on the road Wednesday. Comeaux jumped out to a 5-0 lead in the bottom of the first, added three runs in the third and two more in the fifth to end the game via the 10-run mercy rule. Joseph Larson suffered the loss for Patterson. He was unable to record an out and surrendered five runs (five earned) on one hit with three walks and one hit batter. The Lumberjacks’ offense was held hitless. Monday, Patterson fell to Albany 10-6 on the road. While Patterson took leads of 1-0 in the top of the first,

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Hamilton Christian defeats CCHS 55-42

Entering Tuesday’s Division IV semifinal contest, No. 3 Hamilton Christian was making its third appearance in as many years at Burton Coliseum, while Central Catholic was in its first semifinal appearance in 18 years.
Ultimately, a lack of semifinal experience proved to be Central Catholic’s downfall as Hamilton Christian (27-10) shot better in a facility much bigger than a high school basketball gym en route to a 55-42 victory.
The Warriors connected on 41 percent of their field goals, while Central Catholic made 33.3 percent.
More telling, though, the Eagles (22-10) were 0-for-15 from the three-point line, while Hamilton Christian made six three pointers, two of which came in a third-quarter run that ultimately sealed the game and a finals berth for the Lake Charles school. It will face top-seed and two-time defending champion Lafayette Christian, who overcame an upset bid by Opelousas Catholic to advance to the finals.
“I thought we played hard,” Central Catholic Coach Ree Case said. “We just could not put enough possessions (together) in a row offensively, and then we had couple breakdowns on defense. They got a lead, and we just couldn’t catch them.”
While Central Catholic trailed just 24-18 at halftime, Hamilton Christian took a 31-20 lead early in the third quarter after Zion Stewart connected on a three pointer with a little less than 6 minutes remaining, and then Hamilton Christian converted a layup off a turnover for a 31-20 lead with 5:25 remaining.
The closest the Eagles would get the rest of the way in the third quarter was seven points on two occasions, the last when Taylor Blanchard converted a three-point play at the free-throw line with about 3:12 remaining to cut Central Catholic’s deficit to 34-27.
Hamilton Christian ended the quarter ahead 39-27 after a three-pointer by Nick Forsyte with about 2:10 remaining gave the Warriors their final points of the period.
“The third quarter, we came out, and they hit a couple of shots,” Case said. “We leave a guy wide open in the corner, and he hits a three, and then (Zion Stewart), who is a really good shooter, we leave him wide open in the top of the key in transition and he hits a three, so it goes from four or six (points) to 11 that fast and just couldn’t catch them. … We couldn’t make enough shots in a row to cut the lead.”
Hamilton Christian Coach Dexter Washington said the three-point shot is part of the Warriors’ offensive philosophy.
“That’s our game,” he said.
Washington said he has confidence in his players that when they shoot three-pointers, they will make them.
In the fourth quarter, the lead grew to as much as 18 at 53-35 when Stewart connected on two free throws after being fouled with 1:36 remaining.
Defensively, Hamilton Christian limited Central Catholic’s leading scorer this season, Brooks Thomas, to just two points. He added two assists and six steals.
Washington credited Adrian Brown’s play against Thomas on defense.
“Adrian did a superb job,” Washington said.
D.J. Lewis had a solid day against the smaller Warriors as he recorded a double-double with 18 points and 14 rebound. He added one assist and two steals.
Central Catholic never led and the game was tied just once at 2 after Davidyione Bias’ bucket.
However, Stewart responded with a three-pointer for a 5-2 Hamilton Christian lead, and the Warriors’ advantage would swell to 17-6 at the end of the first quarter following a free-throw by Corbin Mcentire.
Central Catholic responded in the second quarter, though, as the Eagles outscored Hamilton Christian 12-7.
Lewis’ put back off an offensive rebound with about a minute left cut Central Catholic’s lead to 21-18, but Hamilton Christian closed the quarter’s scoring with a three-pointer with about 30 seconds remaining to increase its lead to 24-18 at halftime.
“We switched and went (to a) zone, which I really thought turned the game,” Case said.
However, he said the lead should have been smaller, but the Eagles missed two layups on consecutive possessions just before halftime.
Washington said his team didn’t “collapse” in the second quarter when the Eagles made their run.
“We kept the lead,” he said. “We went into halftime, and our thoughts were everybody has to go to the boards. Everybody has to rebound, and I thought we did a better job the second half rebounding.
“We got some loose balls, and as the game progressed, I think the pressure became on them, and they started shooting some shots that we hadn’t seen them shoot before and we started getting down there and rebounding,” Washington added.
Other Central Catholic contributors were Elijah Swan, eight points, six rebounds, two assists and one steal; Blanchard, seven points, nine rebounds, one assist and two steals; and Davidyione Bias, seven points, six rebounds, one assist and one steal.
Brown and Michael Thomas, a Louisiana Ragin Cajun commit, led Hamilton Christian. Brown had 18 points, five rebounds, one block and two steals, while Thomas had 14 points, six rebounds, six assists and two steals. Stewart had 10 points, six rebounds and one assist.
Central Catholic will say goodbye to two seniors, Thomas and Swan.
“They’ve done a fantastic job for us. … I guess the biggest disappointment this year from last year is last year we had no seniors, so we were disappointed we lost, but like I always tell them I hate losing kids a lot more than losing games,” Case said. “I can deal with losing games, but losing kids never gets easy. It’s the worst thing about my job.”

CCHS baseball tourney to begin Thursday

Central Catholic’s annual baseball tournament will begin Thursday and continue through Saturday. The tournament will be played at two sites as both the Eagles will host games in Amelia as well as Morgan City High School at Tiger Diamond. In addition to host Central Catholic and Morgan City, the 10-team field features Patterson, Berwick, Central Lafourche, Houma Christian, Loreauville, H.L. Bourgeois, St. John and Ascension Catholic. The tournament features three state champions from 2018 (Berwick in Class 3A, Loreauville in Class 2A and Ascension Catholic in Division IV), one state finalist (St. John in Division IV) and one semifinalist (Houma Christian in ...

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Police: Patterson man charged with forcible rape

A 55-year-old man has been charged with forcible rape in Patterson, Police Chief Garrett Grogan said in a news release.

—William Fullwood Jr., 55, of Fern Street in Patterson, was arrested at 2:20 p.m. Wednesday on a charge of forcible rape and a St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office warrant charging him with simple battery. No bail was set.

Grogan reported the following arrests:

—Braxton Alcina, 19, of Easy Street in Patterson, was arrested at 6:09 a.m. Wednesday on charges of speeding 42 mph in a 35 mph zone and suspended driver’s license. Alcina posted $582 bail.

—Javontrae Levine, 25, of Mill Road in Patterson, was arrested at 1:23 a.m. Wednesday on charges of resisting an officer by flight, suspended driver’s license, improper display of a temporary registration license plate, a Morgan City police warrant charging him with failure to appear for loud music and a St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office warrant charging him with two counts of criminal neglect of family. Bail was set at $36,362.40.

—Christopher Brown, 32, of Hendricks Street in Patterson, was arrested at 8:09 p.m. Wednesday on charges of stop sign violation, suspended driver’s license and a St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office warrant charging him with failure to appear for speeding. Brown posted $77 bail.

—Quandron Favors, 31, of Mill Road in Patterson, was arrested at 4:38 p.m. Wednesday on charges of three counts of criminal damage to property and one count of domestic abuse battery. No bail was set.

—Zoey Griffin, 22, of West 222nd Street in Golden Meadow, was arrested at 12:52 a.m. Thursday on a charge of possession of drug paraphernalia. Griffin posted bail.

—Elliott Robinson, 23, of West 222nd Street in Golden Meadow, was arrested at 12:46 a.m. Thursday on a charge of possession of marijuana. Robinson posted bail.

Morgan City Police Chief James Blair reported that officers responded to 29 calls and reported the following arrests:

—Johnathon P. Metrejean, 30, of North Bay Road in Pierre Part, was arrested at 9:22 p.m. Tuesday on charges of criminal trespassing, resisting an officer and disturbing the peace intoxicated.

Officers were dispatched to a business on La. 70 to remove an unwanted person from the property. Officers came into contact with Metrejean. He was suspected to be under the influence of illegal narcotics, Blair said.

He began to pull away from officers as they attempted to arrest him, but officers were able to handcuff him, Blair said. He was jailed.

—Arthur Joseph Cole, 60, of La. 182 in Morgan City, was arrested at 8:56 p.m. Wednesday on a charge of possession of crack cocaine.

Narcotics detectives patrolling La. 182 came into contact with Cole. During the stop, officers located suspected crack cocaine in his possession, Blair said. He was jailed.

St. Mary Parish Sheriff Blaise Smith reported that deputies responded to 42 complaints in the parish and reported the following arrests in east St. Mary Parish:

—Burkin Jerome Dupre, 33, of Cross Road #2 in Bayou Vista, was arrested at 12:13 a.m. Thursday on Morgan City police warrants charging him with failure to appear in court.

—Mary Janet Frisco, 37, of Camelia Street in Jeanerette, was arrested at 12:13 a.m. Thursday on a charge of possession of marijuana.

Deputies were dispatched to a business in Bayou Vista in reference to a suspicious vehicle. Upon arrival, deputies located the vehicle and then located two subjects in the vehicle.

A check revealed Dupre had failure to appear warrants from Morgan City police. Frisco admitted there was marijuana in a box located inside the vehicle, Smith said.

Deputies retrieved the box and confirmed marijuana was inside the box. Frisco was issued a summons to appear in court June 19. Dupre was booked into parish jail and then transported to the Morgan City Police Department.

Berwick Police Chief David Leonard Sr. reported no arrests.

Radio logs for March 7

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.

Wednesday, March 6

8:09 a.m. Fourth Street and Brashear Avenue; Animal.

9:40 a.m. 500 block of Roderick Street; Medical.

10 a.m. 1500 block of Chestnut Drive; Alarm.

2:01 p.m. La. 182 and U.S. 90; Accident.

2:45 p.m. 1100 block of Marguerite Street; Accident.

3:16 p.m. 300 block of First Street; Medical.

4:45 p.m. 200 block of South Railroad Avenue; Medical.

5:02 p.m. 500 block of Roderick Street; Medical.

5:46 p.m. 1100 block of Victor II Boulevard; Disturbance.

6:10 p.m. 800 block of Marshall Street; 911 hang up call.

6:16 p.m. 900 block of David Drive; Alarm.

6:27 p.m. 7100 block of Park Road; Officer stand by.

6:38 p.m. 200 block of Mallard Street; Medical emergency.

8:11 p.m. U.S. 90 West; Assistance.

10:30 p.m. 1500 block of Victor II Boulevard; Animal complaint.

10:33 p.m. Martin Luther King Boulevard off-ramp; Stalled vehicle.

11:53 p.m. 400 block of Sixth Street; Complaint.

Thursday, March 7

2:43 a.m. 7700 block of La. 182 East; Suspicious person.

From the Editor: Bad news, good news for offshore

What’s up with offshore? The oil and gas industry employs nearly 1,800 people directly in the St. Mary region, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. And that doesn’t count the shipbuilders and other businesses whose well-being relies on work in the Gulf of Mexico. Just as important for Morgan City, a city with an oil rig in the middle of the main drag, offshore is about history, Mr. Charlie, and working seven-and-seven. Offshore work is in the heart of the people. And offshore was once the be-all-and-end-all of energy growth. As recently as a decade ago, thinking about the future of oil ...

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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