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Early votes near 4,900 in St. Mary

14.7 percent of eligible voters cast ballots early

Nearly 4,900 St. Mary Parish voters had cast their ballots for the Nov. 6 election as of the end of early voting Tuesday, Parish Registrar of Voters Jolene Holcombe said in an email.

A total of 4,897 people, 14.7 percent of the parish’s eligible voters, have voted early for the election, Holcombe said.

By party, 2,092 Republicans, 1,987 Democrats and 818 other-party voters voted early.

On Tuesday, 826 voters cast ballots in St. Mary with 489 votes in Morgan City, 337 votes in Franklin and six votes by mail. Other daily early voting totals in the parish were as follows: 717 votes Oct. 23, 676 votes Oct. 24, 502 votes Thursday, 641 votes Friday, 578 votes Saturday, and 686 votes Monday.

The parish registrar’s office received 271 mail ballots before the start of early voting Oct. 23.

The sheriff and coroner races are the two parishwide races on the ballot. Other races in the area are for Berwick mayor and council, Patterson mayor, council and police chief, Morgan City Council District 4 and school board districts 7, 9 and 10. Area voters will also be able to vote for U.S. Representative 3rd Congressional District, 1st Circuit Court of Appeal.

Other items on the ballot are a 5-mill property tax renewal for St. Mary Parish Consolidated Gravity Drainage District No. 2 and 10-mill property tax renewal for Fire Protection District No. 3. Additionally, St. Mary Parish voters will be able to decide whether to allow fantasy sports gaming in the parish.

Secretary of state is the one statewide race on the ballot. Six state constitutional amendments are also on the ballot.

Radio logs for Oct. 31

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.

Tuesday, Oct. 30

7:04 a.m. 800 block of Front Street; Alarm.

9:11 a.m. Village Drive; Complaint.

9:16 a.m. La. 70 and Victor II Boulevard; Arrest.

9:47 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.

10:15 a.m. 500 block of Egle Street; Medical.

11:34 a.m. 1100 block of Marguerite Street; Arrest.

11:37 a.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Animal complaint.

12:33 p.m. Sixth and General Hodges streets; Crash.

1 p.m. 1000 block of La. 70; Medical.

3:24 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.

3:26 p.m. 1200 block of Onstead Street; Medical.

3:41 p.m. 2700 block of Sixth Street; Animal complaint.

3:59 p.m. 300 block of Garber Street; Alarm.

4:43 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.

5:40 p.m. 800 block of Brashear Avenue; Theft of goods.

5:59 p.m. Lawrence Park; Assistance.

7 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Arrest.

7:07 p.m. 1000 block of Hickory Street; Disturbance.

7:21 p.m. 7500 block of La. 182; Investigation.

7:39 p.m. 700 block of Myrtle Street; Investigation.

9:18 p.m. 3000 block of Allison Street; Noise complaint.

Vandebilt Catholic blanks MCHS 31-0

Drew Rios had two touchdowns and more than 100 rushing yards to lead a potent Vandebilt Catholic rushing attack in a 31-0 shutout victory against Morgan City Friday night at Buddy Marcello Stadium in District 7-4A play. Rios and the Terriers combined to rush for 242 yards and used Rios’ touchdown runs to sprint out to a three-touchdown halftime lead. Vandebilt Catholic (5-4 overall, 4-1 district) found the end-zone early against the Tigers’ defense, scoring on its first drive. The Terriers drove 67 yards on six plays in just 2 minutes, 13 seconds to take a 7-0 lead following a four-yard Rios ...

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Patterson drops District 8-3A heartbreaker to Erath 28-21

This loss might have hurt a little more than the other games the Patterson Lumberjacks lost earlier in the year. Patterson was on a seven-game losing streak entering the Erath High game Friday. The Lumberjacks were in need of a win, and they almost got one in Erath. However, on fourth-down and eight yards away from scoring with less than a minute remaining, Patterson tailback Dajon Richard was stopped behind the line of scrimmage to kill the possible game-winning touchdown, and Patterson (1-8 overall, 0-4 in district) fell 28-21. Despite the loss, Richard finished the game with 247 yards on 29 ...

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'Cajun John Wayne' among incumbents who appear to be safe

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Former sheriff’s deputy Clay Higgins galloped into Congress two years ago in part on the strength of viral anti-crime videos in which he displayed the cowboy swagger that earned him his “Cajun John Wayne” nickname.
Back then, his outsider image helped separate him from a pack of fellow conservative Republicans running for an open seat in southwest Louisiana. Now, he’s an incumbent with an endorsement from President Donald Trump.
He’s also a target. At a recent Lafayette forum, attorney Josh Guillory, a fellow Republican, chastised Higgins for votes Guillory said raised the federal debt and for living outside the district he represents — the 3rd Congressional District covering southwest Louisiana. Higgins responded with indignation. “I represent the culture and communities that the Higgins family has lived within for 200 years and it’s somewhat personally offensive to me to suggest otherwise,” said Higgins, whose home in Port Barre is north of the district line.
Guillory is one of six challengers facing Higgins on the Nov. 6 non-partisan ballot. Four Democrats and a Libertarian round out the field.
Higgins’ camp boasts polling that shows him with more than 60 percent support, plenty more than the majority needed to avoid a December runoff. Campaign finance records show him with a significant fundraising advantage with more than $816,000 raised. His closest money-raising competitors: Guillory, who reports more than $200,000 raised plus a $127,800 self-loan; and Democrat Mimi Methvin, an attorney and former U.S. magistrate judge, who has raised nearly $184,000 plus a $51,000 self-loan.
Higgins’ solid 93 rating from the American Conservative Union and his Trump endorsement haven’t stopped Guillory’s attack from the right. And Guillory also has an endorsement from Trump’s personal lawyer and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Giuliani told The Advocate newspaper he learned of Guillory through Guillory’s finance director, Jennifer LeBlanc. New York media have linked Giuliani and Leblanc romantically.
Methvin criticizes Higgins’s vote for a tax cut that Democrats have long labeled as weighted to the wealthy, as well as his vote to kill the health care law passed under former President Barack Obama. She insists she’ll have a strong enough get-out-the vote effort to make it to a runoff with Higgins.
The challengers face a tough path says Joshua Stockley, political science professor at the University of Louisiana-Monroe. “I think the chances are good that he’s going to win outright,” Stockley said of Higgins.
The other five incumbents also have more money and name recognition than their little-known opponents.

From the Editor: What happens when the feds are wrong?

As I’ve written before, old reporters like to tell old stories.
But here’s one that seems to have some relevance to today’s news. It’s about what happens when a federal bomb investigation lands on a small town, and when the feds decide you’re guilty.
And they’re wrong.
Cesar Sayoc has been accused of mailing homemade bombs to several political officials and media people last week. Aside from the presumption of innocence to which Sayoc is entitled, I've seen nothing to suggest that federal authorities didn't lay on a swift, effective investigation.
But that's not always the way things work out.
The events I'm thinking about began just before Christmas 1989. I was the news editor at the Enterprise, Alabama, Ledger, the daily paper in a small town with which some of you may be familiar.
Enterprise shows up in Ripley’s because the town’s main street features a statue of a Greek goddess holding up a boll weevil. The idea is that the weevil wiped out the local cotton production and forced farmers to grow what turned out to be more profitable crops, mostly peanuts.
The local hotel’s restaurant made a chocolate pie with a little peanut butter boll weevil on top. It was — excuse the expression — the bomb.
Enterprise also is next door to Fort Rucker, the post where the Army trains all its helicopter pilots. Lots of those pilots end up in Louisiana, flying back and forth between south Louisiana and offshore oil platforms.
I was alone at the office late on a Saturday night, finishing up Sunday’s paper. Just before deadline, The Associated Press moved a story about the death of a federal judge near Birmingham.
He and his wife were sitting at their kitchen table, opening a package that had arrived in the mail. The package exploded, killing U.S. District Judge Robert Vance and seriously injuring his wife.
Around the same time, another mailed bomb killed Robert Robinson, a civil rights attorney at an NAACP office in Georgia. Somewhere along the way, the FBI linked the bomb to a letter from thing called Americans for a Competent Federal Judicial System.
The NAACP bombing, the animus toward the feds and an unsuccessful NAACP bombing in Florida led investigators to think they were after a racist wacko.
A month later, on Jan. 22, 1990, then-Attorney General Richard Thornburgh held a press conference to announce a major break in the Vance case. That day, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, 150 agents strong, dropped on Enterprise like locusts, bringing the national press with them.
Their target was Robert Wayne O’Ferrell, who was in his 40s then. He was a junk dealer with a beaten-up shop full of not much of anything at all.
Two years earlier, O’Ferrell had sent a typed letter to a federal court, complaining about the outcome of a lawsuit he’d filed against a former boss. The feds seemed to believe his letter and the Americans for a Competent Federal Judicial System letter were typed on the same machine.
So the FBI picked up Enterprise, population 20,000, and gave it a good shake as they searched for the typewriter.
Agents held and questioned O’Ferrell. They searched his shop. They searched his house in nearby New Brockton. They searched under his shop and house.
O’Ferrell’s customers complained that they were being questioned by the FBI.
Agents even searched O’Ferrell’s septic tank. The Coffee County sheriff at the time, Bryce Paul, had a puckish sense of humor. He gave each of the FBI agents involved in the septic tank search a T-shirt saying, “Sewage Handling Investigation Team.” The artwork emphasized the acronym.
The Ledger ran a cartoon in which the boll weevil atop the famous statue was replaced with a typewriter. The artist made a couple of bucks from selling T-shirts featuring the artwork.
But for O’Ferrell, the episode wasn’t so funny. His name was connected with a heinous crime. Many of those customers who got hassled by the FBI never came back to his shop. O’Ferrell lost his business.
It’s easy to say now, but I had my doubts at the time that O’Ferrell was the bomber.
I talked to a young man who had been trained by O’Ferrell to be one of our paper’s motor carriers. The young man is black, and he told me he never heard O’Ferrell make disparaging remarks about African-Americans.
That’s one thing about bigots. Usually, they won’t shut up about it. That didn’t sound like O’Ferrell.
He was never charged but never really cleared, either, until the feds convicted someone else. In 1991, Walter Leroy Moody of Rex, Georgia, was found guilty by a federal jury in the death of attorney Robinson. Later, Moody was convicted of killing Vance.
Moody died by lethal injection in April 2018 at age 83, the oldest person to be executed in the United States since the death penalty was reinstated in the 1970s.
It’s still not clear why Moody sent the bombs.
His wife was badly hurt by a pipe bomb in 1972, but federal authorities couldn’t convict Moody directly. They did manage to put him away for a five-year prison sentence for possessing the bomb.
After Moody got out, he went on a letter-writing crusade, telling appeals court judges that his conviction was unfair and that it should be reversed. His campaign went nowhere.
To get his message across, Moody turned to pipes, powder and postage.
The NAACP bombings may have been a fake-out to point suspicious at white power groups.
As for O’Ferrell, he sued the federal government for $50 million. He even attracted some sympathy in 1996, after William Jewel was falsely accused of setting off a bomb at the Olympic Games in Atlanta.
But O’Ferrell’s lawsuit seems to have petered out. A story in Alabama’s Southeast Sun last April said O’Ferrell, in his 70s now, lives on his Social Security in a mobile home near the local senior citizens center.
Reporter Michelle Mann noted that there was a typed message in a typewriter in his trailer. The message begins, “The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want. …”
Bill Decker is managing editor of The Daily Review.

KENNETH McGILL

Kenneth McGill, 70, a native of Wheeling, West Virginia, and resident of Patterson, died Sunday, Oct. 28, 2018, at his residence.
He is survived by three children, Kevin McGill of Orlando, Florida, Kristen Fulton of Davenport, Florida and Kortney McGill of Evansville, Indiana; three grandchildren; two great-granddaughters; and a brother, Bill McGill.
He was preceded in death by his father, mother, a sister and a brother.
A Celebration of Life will be Saturday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m., at his residence.
Ibert’s Mortuary Inc., 1111 Lia Street, Patterson, LA 70392, (985) 395-7873, is in charge of arrangements.

Wheel House for Oct. 30

OCTOBER FEST
At Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church, 113 Federal Ave., Morgan City, 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 31. Ages 2-12 invited. Free food and games.

RUMMAGE SALE
At Patterson United Methodist Church, 1204 Main St., from 8 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Nov. 3. Includes clothes, shoes, linens, household items, books, toys, and fall and Christmas decorations.

DINNERS
Sold by New Zorah Baptist Church, 604 Julia St., Morgan City, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 3. Menu: barbecued chicken, rice dressing, baked beans, potato salad, cake and drink. Donation $7. Will deliver. Call Joyce Matthews, 985-253-4548 or Tim Matthews Sr., 985-255-9935.

AARP DANCE
St. Mary AARP Saturday Night Dance from 7-11 p.m. Nov. 17 at St. Mary Senior Citizens Center, 4014 Chennault St., Morgan City. Music by 5 O’clock Shadows. Tickets $8. For info call 985-384-2277.

JOYCE GATES

Joyce Gates, 73, a resident of Berwick, died Monday, Oct. 29, 2018, at her residence.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements, which are incomplete at this time.

Estay attends District 3 meeting

Patterson Garden Club President Evelyn Estay, center, attended the Louisiana Garden Club Federation District 3 meeting Oct. 25 in New Iberia. Hosting the meeting was Azalea Garden Club. The host presented a play, “Murder on Main Street,” followed by lessons on proper pruning of crape myrtle trees. With Estay are District 3 Director Patsy Hebert, left, and Director-elect Linda Brashear.

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ST. MARY NOW

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