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LSD, meth possession alleged in Wednesday arrests

(Editor’s note: The charges listed here and the narratives that go with them are provided by the police agencies that made the arrests. Guilt or innocence has not been determined in court.)

Morgan City police and Assumption deputies reported arrests Wednesday on drug charges, including possession of methamphetamine and LSD.

Morgan City

Chief Chad M. Adams reported that the Morgan City Police Department responded to 53 calls for service over the last 24-hour reporting period and made these arrests:

--Myles Anthony Morgan, 35, Front Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:53 a.m. Wednesday on charges of domestic abuse battery, possession of methamphetamine, introduction of contraband into a penal facility and disturbing the peace (intoxicated).

--Amy Benoit, 33, Moffett Court, Morgan City, was arrested at 3:25 p.m. Wednesday on a charge of criminal conspiracy to distribute hydrocodone and criminal conspiracy to introduce contraband into a penal facility.

--Deshaun Blake Montgomery, 31, Case Lane, Lafayette, was arrested at 8:48 a.m. Wednesday on a charge of failure to appear for arraignment (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

--Francis Lee Boudreaux, 38, Legnon Court, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:57 a.m. Wednesday on a charge of failure to appear for arraignment (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

--Dane Anthony Farrington Jr., 40, Keith Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:57 p.m. Wednesday on three counts of simple battery.

St. Mary

Sheriff Blaise Smith reported that over the last 24-hour reporting period, the Sheriff’s Office responded to 34 complaints and made these arrests:

--Jakhyri Carbin, 20, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:47 a.m. Wednesday on a Morgan City Police Department warrant alleging failure to appear on charges of indecent behavior with juveniles, computer aided solicitation of a minor and obscenity. Carbin is being held for another agency.

--Noah Matthew Partin, 46, Houma, was arrested at 4:50 p.m. Wednesday on a warrant alleging failure to appear on charges of possession of methamphetamine, driving under suspension, and operating a vehicle in an unsafe condition. Bail has not been set at this time.

Assumption

Sheriff Leland Falcon reported these arrests:

-- Joshua Paul Barnes, 18, Porkridge, Benton, was arrested Wednesday on charges of possession of LSD, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and following too closely.

--Ryienne Chantal Barnes, 18, Jamestown Boulevard, Benton, was arrested on charges of possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

A uniformed patrol deputy observed a vehicle commit a traffic violation on U.S. 90 near Amelia and initiated a stop of that vehicle. The deputy made contact with the driver, now identified as Barnes, and one passenger, identified as Barnes.

The deputy conducted interviews of both subjects and at the conclusion of that process, the deputy believed additional investigation was warranted.

The deputy requested consent to search the vehicle which was granted. During the subsequent vehicle search, a quantity of LSD (lysergic acid) and drug paraphernalia was seized. Barnes turned over a quantity of marijuana to the deputy.

Barnes was arrested and booked into the Assumption Parish Detention Center and remains incarcerated pending a bond hearing.

Brown was issued misdemeanor summonses and released with a court date.

John K. Flores: April is a great month to take up birding

Nearly 20 years ago I took my first picture as a nature photographer. As part of the outdoor media, carrying a camera was normal for taking pictures of guys while covering a story about a big deer, big fish, or fishing tournament.

I was content doing that sort of photography, that is until I met an electrical salesman from Lafayette, named Danny Womack. Danny happened to be an avid duck hunter who invited me a few times to hunt with him on his lease in Forked Island. During one of our hunts, he suggested I join him after the season to take pictures of ducks. It sounded like fun and something different, so I agreed to go with him.

It was in late February when we got together. Blue winged teal migrate from Central and South America through Louisiana heading north to the breeding grounds at this time of year. What’s more, it’s normal to see big wads of 50 to 100 birds or more fly over the marsh and settle in a pond to feed.

Danny dropped me off in his duck blind and then went and set out a few dozen decoys. It was exactly as if we were hunting them, but without guns.

When Danny got back to the blind, he began setting up a tripod and fixed a Canon 500mm F4 telephoto lens on top with a gimbal mount. The whole thing looked like a big bazooka to me and dwarfed my little Pentax camera and Tamron 24-300mm lens.

I managed to capture “one” picture of teal passing and with that one click of my shutter I was hooked.

The next time Danny and I got together, he invited me to Sherburne Wildlife Management Area to take pictures of neotropical songbirds. It was mid-April and once again he broke out his heavy equipment, while I shot with my little Pentax.

I managed to capture a few pictures of a prothonotary warbler and it was the most amazing thing in the world to me. What beauty, I thought.

The truth be known, up to that point in my life, with countless hours in the marsh, woods, mountains, and water, I had never seen or heard this bird. What a shame.

Over the past two decades I’ve worked hard honing my skills with my camera and studying a variety of bird books to become somewhat of an amateur birder in the process.

Birding does a few things for me. One, I never stop learning. Two, it gets me outdoors during a time of year that otherwise would be the off season. And three, it’s some of the most challenging nature photography there is. You never know what you’re going to see or what the bird is going to do on an outing; let alone what the conditions will be.

If there’s a fourth thing, I’d have to say, it’s the exercise. I regularly walk several miles when birding.

April is the biggest month of the year for Louisiana birders. Essentially, everything is coming or going when it comes to the migration be it songbirds, shorebirds, raptors or waterfowl.

This past week, I saw two swallow-tailed kites flying over Gibson. I was west bound on La. 182 doing about 55 mph and practically stopped the truck in the middle of the road looking for a place to turn around to double back and go see them.

My brother, sister-in-law and niece were down from Michigan visiting. Along with my wife, they were my passengers. It’s a good thing they all tolerated my impulsiveness, because we all got to see these magnificent birds hovering over an open farm field. They looked to be some of the first arrivals of the year.

This past weekend, I took a walk on Bayou Teche National Wildlife Refuge and took several beautiful photographs of a prothonotary warbler. And, at Brownell Memorial Park and Carillon Tower I found a very friendly northern parula along the walking trail.

These were the most colorful that I was interested in. If I were keeping a list this past weekend, I’d have reported seeing about 50 cedar waxwings, a couple of Carolina wrens, a few Carolina chickadees, several swamp sparrows, a barred owl, hairy woodpecker, red-breasted woodpecker and a pileated woodpecker, but the best is yet to come.

Grand Isle will be holding its annual Migratory Bird Celebration Friday and Saturday, April 14-15. The festival is typically scheduled during the peak neotropical songbird migration period.

On Friday and Saturday, May 5-6, St. Bernard will be holding its Bird Festival at the Los Islenos Museum Complex.

Whether you’re a beginning or seasoned birder, a trip to southwest Louisiana to Peveto Woods Bird and Butterfly Sanctuary is a must during the month of April. And, after Peveto, a trip up the road to Sabine National Wildlife Refuge south of Hackberry won’t leave you disappointed.

During the April migration, these coastal communities offer opportunities to see scarlet tanagers, rose-breasted grosbeaks, numerous wood warblers, vireos and orioles.

It doesn’t take much to become a birder. A pair of binoculars, some rubber boots (ankle or knee), and a field guide to birds is all you need.

There’s also birding apps you can download to your phone like eBird Mobile App, Merlin, Audubon Bird Guide, BirdsEye Bird Finding Guide and EyeLoveBirds.

There’s no better time than April to start birding. All you have to do is look up in the air. Have a Happy Easter everyone …

John Flores is the Morgan City Review’s outdoor writer. He can be contacted at gowiththeflo@cox.net.

Early voting on tax proposition opens April 15

Early voting for the April 29 election will open April 15 with a single proposition on St. Mary ballots, a proposed Morgan City sales tax to raise police and firefighter pay and to train new hires in those departments.

If passed, the measure would levy a 0.5% sales tax in perpetuity for those purposes. The tax is expected to raise $1.3 million a year.
Morgan City officials say pay in the police and fire departments falls badly short of the average for colleagues from Franklin to Houma.

The result, outgoing Police Chief James F. Blair told the City Council before he retired last year, is that 40 police officers had left the department in the previous three years, a rate he called unsustainable.

In an interview last month, Mayor Lee Dragna said hiring each new employee can cost the city thousands of dollars. The city government must pay officers while they’re trained, pay for the training itself and assign a supervisor for officers who have recently completed training.

The Morgan City Fire Department has its own struggles with low pay and high turnover. Chief Alvin Cockerham told the Review recently that, short of firefighters and without funds for overtime, he has been forced to close a fire station at times because he didn’t have the people to meet state requirements for operating firetrucks.

Dragna said the sales tax is a way to put fire and police pay on a firm footing for the future and to provide for the training of new hires.

In St. Mary, only registered Morgan City voters will take part in the April 29 balloting and its early voting period. In-person voter registration has closed, but you have until Saturday to register using the geauxvote.com app.

Early voting will run April 15-22, excluding Sunday, April 16. Early voting hours are 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. Registered Morgan City voters may vote at either the Parish Courthouse in Franklin or 301 Third St. in Morgan City.

On April 29, election day, Morgan City voters can cast ballots at their precincts 7 a.m.-8 p.m.

KENNETH ANTHONY DUGAN

Kenneth Anthony Dugan, 52, a native and resident of Morgan City, died Sunday, March 26, 2023, at Tulane University Medical Center.

Visitation will be Saturday from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. at Jones Funeral Home Chapel in Morgan City. Burial will follow in Morgan City Cemetery.

He is survived by five sisters, Peggy Turner, Mary Dugan and Clara Dugan, all of Morgan City, Jacqueline Dugan of Indianapolis and Alice Derouen of Dallas.

He was preceded in death by his parents, a sister, a brother and grandmother.

Jones Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

JOSEPH ALCINA

Joseph Alcina, 88, a resident of Franklin, died Tuesday, April 4, 2023.

He is survived by children, Mary Alcina, Joseph Alcina Sr., Joseph Alcina, Alisa Alcina and Allen Alcina; numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren; one brother, John Alcina; and two sisters, Ann Gerarve and Frances Chauvin.

He was preceded in death by his parents, wife, son, daughter and two brothers.

Visitation will be Monday from 10 a.m. until services at 2 p.m. at Victory Tabernacle in Jeanerette. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.

Twin City Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

MINNIE LEGE JAET

February 13, 1944 — April 4, 2023

Minnie Lege Jaet, age 79, of Berwick, LA passed away on Tuesday, April 4, 2023. She was born on February 13, 1944 to the late Milton Joseph Lege and Mary Vastine Brown Lege in Abbeville, LA.

She enjoyed traveling and watching television in her spare time.

Family and friends of Minnie are invited to attend the Visitation on Monday, April 10, 2023 at Hargrave Funeral Home from 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Visitation will resume on Tuesday, April 11, 2023 from 10:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will follow at 2:00 p.m. at St. Joseph Catholic Church. She will be laid to rest in Ibert’s Memorial Park.

She is preceded in death by her parents; brothers, Milton “Brother” Charles Lege and William Joseph Lege; sister, Naomi Cynthia Lege.

She is survived by her loving husband George H. Jaet; daughter, Sandra Gail Clostio McQueen; son, Braden Kent Clostio; granddaughter, Ashley Gail McQueen; sisters, Ouida Pierson Roy and Anna Ruth Stelly. She is also survived by her beloved dog, L’Boone, whom she loved very much and a host of other relatives and friends.

Fond memories and expressions of sympathy may be shared at www.hargravefuneralhome.com for the Jaet family.

BERTHA BOUDREAUX GLYNN

June 1, 1934 — April 4, 2023

Bertha Boudreaux Glynn, age 88, of Morgan City, LA passed away on Tuesday, April 4, 2023 surrounded by her loving daughters. She was born on June 1, 1934 to the late Adam and Edith Knoblock Boudreaux in Houma, LA.

Family and friends of Bertha are invited to attend the Visitation on Thursday, April 13, 2023 at Holy Cross Catholic Church from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. with a Mass of Christian Burial immediately following at 11 a.m.

Bertha had a big, beautiful heart. She was a thoughtful and loving wife, mother, grandmother and great-grandmother. Her mastery of the culinary arts was a gift she shared with family and friends. Friends and family were blessed with her cookies around the holiday times. Bertha was a blessing to thousands of children at M.E. Norman Elementary School during her career there nurturing children with food. She always said she was in heaven while she tended her garden filled with pass-along plants. She volunteered at Holy Cross Catholic Church and tended their garden as well. She was a faithful member of the Bereaved Meals Ministry and helped in the church office.

She is preceded in death by her husband, Hilbert David Glynn, and her parents.

She is survived by her daughters, Peggy Coates and her husband Charles Hunter Coates, Jr. and Tammy Cline and her husband Bobby Paul Cline. She also leaves to cherish her memory to her three grandchildren, Margaret Claire Santiago, Mary Davis Camp and Ethan William Cline and one great-grandchild, Davis Oley Camp.

The family would love to extend their heartfelt gratitude to the Doctors, Nurses and Staff at Ochsner St. Mary for their extraordinary care.
Fond memories and expressions of sympathy may be shared at www.hargravefuneralhome.com for the Glynn family.

JAMES LOUIS SPIRROS

December 1, 1939 — March 30, 2023

James Louis Spirros died on March 30, 2023 from a long illness at his residence in Morgan City, Louisiana surrounded by his family. James was born on December 1, 1939 in Athens, Greece to his parents Leonidas and Sofia Spirros who predeceased him.

James is survived by his loving wife Monya of 54 years and his children Catherine and Louis; his siblings, Magdalene Maag and her husband Richard and Constantina Vatranis and her husband Dimitrios and their families of Metairie, Louisiana. He is also survived by his great aunt, Barbara Christakos Wagner of Fort Pierce, Florida as well as numerous cousins, nieces and nephews in Chicago, Boston, New York and Greece.

James attended New Iberia High School where he was an athlete. He earned a track scholarship to the University of Southwestern Louisiana-USL, where he received a Business Degree.

He began his long professional career in the insurance industry in New Orleans, Louisiana but in 1971 moved to Morgan City, Louisiana and a few years later opened Atchafalaya Insurance Agency. In later years Atchafalaya would become affiliated with Stiel Insurance Services.

A family gathering will be held at a later date in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Wheel House for April 7

AUDITIONS
Children’s Theatre of Morgan City holding auditions 3-6 p.m. Friday, May 5, at Morgan City Municipal Auditorium for children 7 years old (by audition date) to children 18 years old (or the summer before their senior year, whichever comes first). Cost: $50 per child (payment due at auditions) along with a separate check for $90 that will be returned once chaperone duties are complete. All new students must bring a copy of their birth certificate.

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Morgan City Review
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