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ROBERT FAVORS

Robert Favors, 55, a native and resident of Patterson, died Thursday, July 26, 2018, at Rapides Regional Medical Center in Alexandria.
Visitation will be Saturday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Good Hope Baptist Church in Patterson. Burial will follow in Home Industrial Cemetery.
He is survived by his father, Samuel Cross of Patterson; two sisters, Yvonne Williams and Missy Cross, both of Patterson; brothers, Rickey Favors, Wayne Favors, Jerry Favors, Ray Favors, Sammy Cross and Jerry Cross, all of Patterson, Alfred Favors of Alexandria and Terry Singleton of Franklin; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his mother, two brothers, and maternal and paternal grandparents.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

JAMES LYONS JR.

James Lyons Jr., 82, a native of Terrebonne Parish and resident of Houma, died Sunday, July 29, 2018.
Visitation will be Friday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Residence Baptist Church in Houma. Burial will follow in Union Benevolent Cemetery.
He is survived by four sons, James Lyons III, Eric Lyons, Andre Lyons and Cordell Lyons, all of Houma; three daughters, Katherine Sims of Franklin, Carla Joseph of Morgan City and Lucretia Carter of Houma; a brother, Gerald Lyons of Houma; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by a grandson, his parents, a brother and a sister.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

VIRGIL ALLEN SR.

Virgil Allen Sr., 57, a resident of Franklin, died Thursday, July 5, 2018, at Franklin Foundation Hospital.
Services will be Saturday at 11 a.m. at Spirit of Liberty Church in Franklin.
He is survived by three sons, Virgin Allen Jr. and Vann Gaut, both of Hesperia, California and Kristopher Allen of California City, California; three daughters, Virchelle Allen, Rachelle Allen and Michelle Allen, all of Hesperia, California; two brothers, Larry West of California and James Allen of Franklin; four sisters, Patricia Clark of Houston, Robin Young of Morgan City, and Margie White and Monique Smith, both of Franklin; seven grandchildren; and a host of other relatives.
He was preceded in death by his parents, a brother and a sister.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

BETTY JOHNSON JACKSON

Betty Johnson Jackson, 74, a native of Terrebonne Parish and resident of Houma, died Wednesday, July 25, 2018.
Visitation will be Saturday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Dularge Community Baptist Church in Houma. Burial will follow in Garden of Memories Cemetery in Gray.
She is survived by nine sons, Kevin Johnson, Isaac Green, Gerald Butler, Vernell Johnson, Ronald Johnson, Donald Johnson, Samuel Jackson, Germaine Johnson and Isaac Ricks, all of Houma; six daughters, Michelle Walker of Franklin, Sharon Perio of Morgan City, and Cynthia Newman, Tina Taylor, Latasha Moore and Shawand Moore, all of Houma; 72 grandchildren; 31 great-grandchildren; brothers, Herbert Johnson, John Johnson and Kevin Johnson, all of Houma; sisters, Barbara Harris, Eula Vickers, Letha Johnson and Yvette Butler, all of Houma; and a host of other relatives.
She was preceded in death by her sons, three great-grandchildren, parents, brothers and sisters.
Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Wheel House for Aug. 3

FEEDING PROGRAM
For needy and senior citizens at Mt. Pilgrim Baptist Church, 113 Federal Ave., Morgan City, at noon Saturday, Aug. 4. For info call 985-384-6800.

DINNERS
Sold to the public by St. Mary Council on Aging at Franklin Activity Center, 302 Iberia St., Saturdays in August. Cost $8. Menu: Aug. 4, shrimp stew; Aug. 11, barbecued chicken; and Aug. 25, meatloaf. For info call Patterson Senior Center, 985-395-4800 or Morgan City Senior Center, 985-384-3324.

COUNCIL ON AGING
St. Mary Council on Aging seeking volunteer board members to plan, implement and evaluate various programs for persons 60 and older. For info call 985-907-6321.

Jim Bradshaw: Plantation on Bayou Teche had a golden secret

This is the way the story about disappearing tenant farmers on a south Louisiana plantation has been handed down in the Mouton and Martin families.
I found it in the Martin family history, “Remember Us,” by Lucien and Melba Martin
When Victor Martin’s first wife, Cidalise Mouton, died, he sent his five children to live with her parents, Louis Alexandre Sidney Mouton and Marie Coralie Mouton, on their plantation on Bayou Teche near Parks.
Victor, who was the son of Valsin Martin and Marie Azelie Guidry, remained on his own plantation in north Lafayette Parish but visited his children regularly.
During these visits he fell in love with Noemie Mouton who was his late wife’s sister.
Victor and Noemie were married, and so the children’s aunt also became their stepmother. Victor and Noemie also had two girls of their own
It was a struggle with all of the mouths to feed, but the family was finally getting on its feet when Victor died at the young age of 42 — leaving Noemie with seven children and a sprawling plantation to manage.
She did just fine.
Noemie ran the plantation at a profit until 1910, when one of her stepsons, Sidney Martin, and his wife, Anaise Mouton, took over everyday operations, including working with several tenant farmers.
None of the tenants seemed to have any big complaints and each of them seemed to be doing reasonably well, so it was a real puzzle when one of the tenants suddenly quit and moved away, leaving a good crop standing in the field. It took Sidney a while to figure why someone would give up a nice crop like that.
It seems that the tenant lived in a house that had once been the home of an old man called Richman.
People jokingly called him that because he lived very simply and nobody believed his story that he’d found a cache of gold and had it hidden somewhere.
When he was on his deathbed, Richman called for Sidney.
He said he wanted to tell him something. But Sidney got there too late.
Sidney didn’t think any more about Richman’s gold until his next tenant also disappeared without any apparent reason.
Sidney asked some questions, and finally understood what Richman had wanted to tell him, before he died.
He found out that just before the second family left, the tenant’s son had crawled under the house looking for eggs the chickens sometimes laid there.
He came out with an egg in one hand and a gold coin in the other.
The disappearing tenant sent Junior back under the house, where he found a lot more than hen’s eggs.
Richman’s gold was real, or, at least, that’s how the story has been told.
A collection of Jim Bradshaw’s columns, "Cajuns and Other Characters," is now available from Pelican Publishing. You can contact him at jimbradshaw4321@gmail.com or P.O. Box 1121, Washington LA 70589.

Jim Brown: A new furor over capital punishment in Louisiana

Down in the Bayou State, there’s a clamor for more executions. Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry makes no bones about his feelings. More executions -- including nitrogen gas, hangings, firing squads, electrocution and lethal injection. But a federal judge has put all executions in Louisiana on hold for another year.
There is a reason the death penalty is rarely enforced anymore, particularly in the federal judicial system. Too many innocent victims are being convicted, based on cover-ups and the withholding of exculpatory evidence by some federal and state prosecutors. A recent study published in the National Academy of Sciences concludes that some 4.1 percent of inmates on death row are innocent. More than 4 percent! If that were the rate of airplanes crashing, would you fly?
My alma mater, the University of North Carolina, completed a death penalty study in 2016, and found that in Louisiana, 127 of 155 death penalty cases over the past 40 years ended in reversal, some 10 points above the national average.
Since 2000, there have been only two executions while seven people in Louisiana, about to be put to death, were found to be innocent. The main reason? Prosecutorial misconduct.
For years, the Bayou State has held the title of having the highest incarceration rate in the world. It now has taken on the dubious title of having case after case of death row inmates being convicted based on the withholding of evidence that would prove their innocence.
New Orleans has become the cesspool for the innocent being convicted of capital crimes and sentenced to death. One of the most egregious is the case of New Orleanian John Thompson, who was convicted back in 1982 of first-degree murder and given the death sentence.? He came within days of being executed after spending 14 years on death row and 18 years total in prison. Five different prosecutors were involved in the case and all knew that a blood test, and other key evidence that showed Thompson was innocent, had been withheld by the prosecution.
On his deathbed and dying of cancer, one of the prosecutors confessed to a colleague that he had hidden the exculpatory blood sample.
The colleague waited five more years before admitting that he too knew of the hidden evidence. Thompson, after 18 years, received a new trial, and his lawyers were finally able to produce pieces of evidence that had been kept from Thompson’s defense attorneys, that overwhelming showed he was innocent. The new jury took less than 35 minutes to find him not guilty.
Hiding evidence that can find the accused innocent is nothing new for prosecutors in New Orleans, both in state and federal court as well as with the FBI. The Innocence Project of New Orleans reviewed a number of convictions over the past 25 years in the city and concluded that prosecutors have a “legacy” of suppressing evidence. The Project said 36 men convicted in Orleans Parish alleged prosecutorial misconduct. Nineteen have since had their sentences overturned or reduced as a result. In 19 of 25 capital cases, the prosecutors withheld favorable evidence.
Then there is the chilling case of Dan Bright, convicted and put on death row for a murder he did not commit. Evidence came out years after his conviction that the FBI, thanks to a credible informant, had been in possession of the name of the actual killer all along. Luckily for Bright, because of the unconstitutional withholding of key evidence by the prosecution and the FBI, his conviction was thrown out, and he now is a free man.
The foreman of White’s jury, who recommended that he be put to death, was Kathleen Norman. She was so in-censed over White’s wrongful conviction and the hiding of evidence that would have cleared him by the FBI, that she became head of the Louisiana Innocence project, helping others like White mount a credible defense.
Questionable conduct by rogue prosecutors who withhold information that could prove the innocence of an accused is far too prevalent. Whether one is for or against the death penalty, there is ample evidence that convictions of a capital crime can be a crapshoot based on the whims of some prosecutors who too often withhold evidence that shows the accused is innocent. Bobby Lee Swagger says in the movie Shooter, “This is the world we live in, and justice is not always fulfilled!”
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all of his columns at www.jimbrownusa.com.

USDA issues alert about salads, wraps due to parasite worry

WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal authorities have issued a public health alert about more than two dozen beef, pork and poultry salad and wrap products as a precaution due to possible parasite contamination.
The Agriculture Department’s Food Safety and Inspection Service says the products, distributed by Indianapolis-based Caito Foods may be contaminated with cyclospora. The parasite causes intestinal illness.
The USDA says Caito Foods was notified from their lettuce supplier, Fresh Express, that the chopped romaine used in some of the salads was being recalled.
The products were sold by grocery stores including Trader Joe’s, Walgreens and Kroger. They have the establishment number “EST. 39985 or P-39985.” The USDA has posted a complete list online. Consumers are urged to throw them away.

Dunkin’ Donuts offers first gluten-free product

BOSTON — A larger portion of America’s population can say they run on Dunkin’s.
Massachusetts-based Dunkin’ Donuts recently updated its menu with the company’s first nationwide gluten-free product — a fudge brownie.
The individually wrapped snack is among several new ones, including Donut Fries, ham and cheese roll-ups and waffle-breaded chicken tenders.
The company’s spokesman said it wants to recognize the importance of providing alternative choices for people with dietary restrictions.
Angela Schiavon, of Chicago, says she has celiac disease and was excited to hear about the menu change.
“I’m happy a major chain is finally starting to accommodate those of us in the gluten-free community, and that they’re doing so safely,” the 23-year-old said.
Celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder that can cause damage to the small intestine with the ingestion of gluten.
The brownie is gluten-free certified, and packaged individually to reduce the potential for cross contamination. It is now available in all of Dunkin’s U.S. shops for $2, according to the company’s site. The company lists the only allergen as eggs, although it is manufactured on shared equipment that may contain soy.
The brownie is loaded with 350 calories and 34 grams of sugar. That tops even the Boston Kreme Donut, which is 300 calories.
Chief Marketing Officer for Dunkin’ Donuts U.S. Tony Weisman said “we’re excited to launch a new menu offering fresh ways to satisfy any craving any time of day.”
The new menu went into effect Monday at some locations.
The chain recently underwent several changes, including naming 50-year-old David Hoffman as its new CEO in July.
Dunkin’ Donuts is based out of Canton, which is about 20 miles south of Boston.
Schiavon said her local Dunkin’ doesn’t have the brownies yet, but will next week. “I’m excited to try it,” she exclaimed.

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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