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Morgan City police arrest three on drug charges

(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 reported three arrests on drug-related charges, including one involving possession with intent to distribute cocaine.

Morgan City

Police Chief Chad M. Adams reported that over the last 72-hour reporting period, the Morgan City Police Department responded to 142 calls for serviced and made these arrests:

--Charlie Kelly, 44, Catherine Street, Patterson, was arrested at 6:02 p.m. Friday on charges of possession with intent to distribute cocaine, possession of marijuana, resisting an officer, improper lighting, transactions involving proceeds from controlled dangerous substance activity and possession of drug paraphernalia.

--Demetrius Owens, 30, Orange Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 2:28 p.m. Friday on a charge of remaining after forbidden.

--Telisa Ann Kenner, 57, Chennault Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 2:44 a.m. Saturday on charges of failure to appear to pay fine (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

--Hailey Yizel Lozano, 20, Rainbow Granie Drive, Richmond, Texas, was arrested at 7:37 a.m. Saturday on charges of possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

--Gilbert Roland Lacombe Jr., 33, Walnut Drive, Morgan City, was arrested at 3:36 a.m. Saturday on charges of possession of testosterone and improper equipment.

--Linda Mire, 55, Laurel Street, Patterson, was arrested at 6:17 p.m. Saturday on a charge of theft (under $1,000).

--Quintin Dewayne Douglas, 31, Tiffany Street, Patterson, was arrested at 9:39 p.m. Saturday on a charge of failure to appear to pay fine (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

--Olvin Javier Flores-Funes, 33, Fifth Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:07 a.m. Sunday on charges of driving while intoxicated (first offense), possession of alcoholic beverages in a motor vehicle, improper lane usage, reckless operation of a motor vehicle and no driver’s license.

--Zacharieth Paul Lopez, 32, Tower Tank Road, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:42 a.m. Sunday on a charge of failure to appear to pay fine (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

--Mark Anthony Hilliard, 39, Live Oak Street, Patterson, was arrested at 2:48 a.m. Sunday on a charge of failure to appear for trial (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

--Joshua Steven Miller, 26, Boudreaux Lane, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:15 p.m. Sunday on charges of probation violation (6th Ward Morgan City Court) and failure to appear for executory sentence (16th Judicial District Court).

--Brennan Paul Cenac, 33, La. 182, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:40 p.m. Sunday on a charge of criminal damage to property.

Chitimacha

Police Chief B.C. Trahan reported these arrests:

--Michael J Reynolds, 28, South Lasalle, New Iberia, was arrested for Dec. 27 on charges of possession of marijuana and speeding.

-- Jordan P Istre, 33, Oneida Street, Charenton, was arrested Saturday on a charge of driving under the influence (second offense), speeding, no insurance, expired registration, driving under suspension and possession of alcoholic beverage in vehicle.

He was transported to the St Mary Parish Law Enforcement Center.

The Rev. George Thomas Roy

Dec. 28, 1931-Dec. 23, 2022

The Rev. George Thomas Roy, 90, a former resident of Morgan City, passed away Dec. 23, 2022, at his residence in Ashville, Alabama.

He is survived by three daughters, Deborah Roy LaCoste, Donna Roy Sons and Dianna Roy LaCoste; a son, Drexel Roy; two sisters, Marian and Rosie; a brother, Robert; 15 grandchildren; 34 great-grandchildren; and 15 great-great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Mercedes Faith Hotard Roy, and an infant son, George Thomas Roy Jr.
Rev. Roy met the love of his life (Mercedes) in 1948 and they were married for 66 years.

They accepted Jesus as their Savior March 22, 1959. They moved to Morgan City in 1963, where he founded “Faith Temple Church” and pastored there for over 20 years. They moved to AL and continued his ministry of teaching the Word of God, until shortly before his passing. His true passion was sharing God’s Word. He loved to study the Word of God every day and could still quote scripture, chapter and verse. He read and accepted every scripture as “The Truth.” Many souls were added to the Kingdom of God due to his teachings. He believed that was his purpose. He had an unwavering faith that was unshakable. He will be remembered and greatly missed by the many lives he touched.

UPDATED WITH STORY: Patterson mayor, chief, council sworn in for new term

PATTERSON — The 2023 political year got underway in earnest on the last day of 2022.

District Judge Curtis Sigur and City Magistrate Edward B. Jones swore in Patterson’s incumbent mayor, police chief and two council members, plus three new council members, in a more elaborate-than-usual ceremony Saturday morning at the Patterson Area Civic Center.

Also Saturday in a separate ceremony, Terri Foulcard took the oath as St. Mary Parish’s new registrar of voters.

Still to come are oaths of office for the five incumbent Berwick Town Council members and Mayor Duval Arthur. That will happen at Berwick’s scheduled Town Council meeting Jan. 10.

Patterson elected for a separate ceremony, and it attracted a crowd of more than 100 people on the morning of New Year’s Eve. Clergymen Ronnie Mabile and Jaylen Grogan offered prayers, Jacqueline
Lewis-Langston sang “America the Beautiful,” and members of Cub Scout Pack 242 and Girl Scout Troop Louisiana East 20890 carried in the flags and led the Pledge of Allegiance.

Mayor Rodney Grogan, Police Chief Garrett Grogan and all five council members qualified without opposition for the 2023-27 term.

A council that has had long-serving members in recent years, including Larry Mendoza, John Rentrop and Joe Russo, suddenly has only one returning incumbent, Lee Condolle, who has served a full four-year term.

The other incumbent returning to office is Ray A. Dewey Sr., who filled the seat left vacant by the resignation of Sandra K. Turner.

Three newcomers joined the council Saturday: Mamie S. Perry, Miranda K. Weinbach and R. DeMale Bowden Jr.

Rodney Grogan, the veteran of the group after serving 12 years as mayor, encouraged the new council members to find and read the city charter and the city ordinances. Residents will come to them with problems, Grogan said, and the council members will have to know what they can and cannot do.

The mayor joked with Bowden about an email in which Bowden asked to have a pothole fixed on the apron of U.S. 90.

That’s something the state Department of Transportation and Development has to do, Grogan said.
Bowden wasn’t having it.

“That email was forwarded to the DOTD,” Bowden said. “And the pothole was fixed.”

Universally among the newly sworn officials was an offering of thanks to God for the chance to take part in the city government.

“Thank you, Jesus,” Perry told the audience. “Thank you, Lord, thank you, Lord, thank you, Lord. ... I wanted a chance to serve the community.”

“I’m here today,” Weinbach said, “because I want to be part of something bigger.”

Condolle said his platform will stay the same: “To continue to serve as well as be a voice for the city. ... I’ve learned that the more you put into it, the more you will get out of it.”

Dewey referred to a recent series of town hall meetings in which public officials pointed to an increase in juvenile crime, while young people talked about the challenges they face. Dewey said he wants to bring young people together to find out how adults can help them.

And he wants to work with the Council on Aging to find ways to help the elderly.

Chief Grogan thanked voters and members of the Patterson Police Department.

“Now you’ve given me another four years to serve,” he said.

Foulcard had served as interim registrar after the resignation of Byron Stelly in September after Stelly had been on the job for a year. Foulcard received the official appointment from the Parish Council last month.

In Berwick, council members Raymond Price, Colleen Askew, Lud Henry, Kevin Hebert and James Richard all qualified without opposition. Arthur won easy re-election in the Nov. 8 primary.

Also for the 2023-27 term, five new members will soon join the 11-member St. Mary Parish School Board.

Twisters, stolen canoe, flooded camp made river journey 'way too eventful'

And Mark Twain thought he saw adventures on the Mississippi River.

Jordan Brucklacher, a 24-year-old North Dakota college student, was at the Mr. Charlie rig museum in Morgan City on Friday, tying a kayak to the top of the friend’s car that will take him home after his 2,100-mile trip down the Mississippi, into the Atchalafaya and to the Gulf of Mexico.

The three-month journey started out as a two-man canoe trip down the length of the river. It finished as a one-man kayak trip. And thereby hangs a tale.

“Everything that could go wrong has gone wrong,” Brucklacher said, laughing. “It was one of those trips.”

“Everything” includes thievery, twisters, a flooded campsite and a leaky kayak. But Brucklacher went with the flow and become one of the 50 or so people who make the trip down the Father of Waters each year.

Brucklacher lives in Fargo, North Dakota. He planned the trip as he was completing his studies in environmental sustainability at the University of Minnesota Moorhead. He and a friend would start their journey at Itasca State Park in Minnesota at the headwaters of the Mississippi.

No physical conditioning was required, he said.

“It’s not too hard,” Brucklacher said. “It’s more monotonous than anything else. After a while you build up your muscles.”

They set out Sept. 28. The two-man part of the two-man expedition lasted only two weeks, after which his friend bailed on account of weather.
“I told him it was going to be cold,” Brucklacher said.

Brucklacher went on alone, reaching Dubuque, Iowa, on Nov. 6. That’s the night when, as he stayed over at a home, his canoe was stolen.

Still, he was able to continue. A neighbor of his Dubuque host lent him a kayak, although that sort of craft wasn’t the best choice for this trip.

“When a wave comes,” Brucklacher said, “a canoe, because of its shape, can take it better.”

The next leg of the journey took him near Caruthersville in Missouri’s Bootheel, just south of the confluence of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers. On the night of Nov. 30, he camped on a sandbar and went to sleep.

Overnight, the river rose.

“When I woke up, I was covered in water,” Brucklacher said. “My sandbar was an island. And my kayak was gone.”

He waded to shore and hitched rides with two police officers and a trucker, finally arriving at a sporting goods store in Caruthersville. There, he acquired another kayak. The store’s owner gave him a paddle.

“I lost a day,” Brucklacher said. “It wasn’t too bad.”

He actually got some good news. The Coast Guard notified him that his stolen canoe had been recovered.

On Dec. 14, Brucklacher was near Mayersville in west central Mississippi – just in time for a tornado outbreak. A twister touched down 20 miles to the east as he stayed in Mayersville, and funnel clouds were sighted to the south.

“It was way too eventful,” Brucklacher said.

Again, Brucklacher pressed on. He’d planned to stay on the Mississippi all the way to Venice, but big vessels at that end of the river generate wakes that didn’t sound inviting to a kayaker. So he detoured at Old River, moving into a navigation channel to get into the Atchafalaya.

That’s where he discovered a leak. His kayak had a hole in the bow. He was 137 miles from completing the trip.

“I was like, come on,” he said. “Really?”

But the hole was easily patched and, the day after Christmas, Brucklacher reached the Gulf.

Since the end of the journey, he has spent some time in Morgan City and is impressed by the city’s connection with the first true offshore oil rigs.

That was one lesson. There was another, too.

“One of things you learn is that there are beautiful people all along the river,” Brucklacher said. “I haven’t had one bad experience.”

Infrastructure projects, elections, NERR site designation made news here in 2022

No news is good news, they say. And for St. Mary Parish, two of the big stories of 2022 were things that didn't happen.

After the deadly Delta outbreak late in 2021, there was no new COVID-19 surge in St. Mary as vaccinations and boosters became widely available and the COVID restrictions of 2020 and 2021 faded away. The most visible sign that life was returning to normal was the return of the Louisiana Shrimp and Petroleum Festival after two straight coronavirus cancellations.

After the devastating hurricanes of 2020 and 2021, the 2022 tropical weather season turned out to be a breeze, at least for Louisiana. Florida and the Carolinas weren't so lucky.
So much for things that didn't happen. Speaking in the active voice, the area saw the completion of important infrastructure projects, including the new Bayou Chene Flood Control Structure and the end of the long-delayed rehabilitation of the U.S. 90 bridge over Berwick Bay.

On the government scene, 2022 was a year of changes. Morgan City got a new police chief after Chief James F. Blair retired at the end of a three-decade career in law enforcement.

More changes are on the way. St. Mary Superintendent Dr. Teresa Bagwell announced that she won't seek an extension of her contract when it expires in June. Her successor will be chosen by a School Board in which five of 11 members will take office for the first time as a result of November's primary.

Sheriff Blaise Smith announced that he won't seek re-election. And three members of the five-member Patterson City Council will also be new in 2023 as a result of this year's elections.

More changes may be on the way in 2023, when St. Mary Parish Council and state legislative races are on the ballot. State Sen. Bret Allain, R-Franklin and chairman of the Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Committee, is term-limited and won't seek re-election.

Sports provided plenty of chills and thrills. Berwick High's baseball team finished as the state runner-up in its division, while the football Panthers and Patterson High hosted state quarterfinals on the same November night. Central Catholic also reached the football quarterfinals, and the school's volleyball team made it to the Cajundome for the second straight year.

Here are some of the year's top stories.

COVID: Almost
back to normal

St. Mary entered the year having experienced the low point and the high point in the COVID pandemic in the second half of 2021.

The Delta variant was first detected in Louisiana in July 2021. Within two weeks, St. Mary was identified by the state Office of Public Health as being at "highest risk" for COVID's spread.

Between Aug. 1 and October, 74 St. Mary COVID fatalities were recorded.

But the Delta surge seemed to burn out quickly. By October, Gov. John Bel Edwards was ready to lift most mask and occupancy requirements, and the St. Mary Parish School
Board and the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux made masks optional at schools by the end of 2021.

The total number of COVD deaths in the parish reached 250 in spring 2022. By Wednesday, the number was at 283. Delta claimed more St. Mary lives in two months of 2021 than all COVID variants claimed in the last nine months of 2022.

The widespread availability of vaccines and frequently updated boosters helped stem the tide. As of Wednesday, more than 26,000 St. Mary people had at least started their vaccination series.

Dining at restaurants has become normal again. While masks are still recommended for vulnerable populations, they're no longer obiquitous.

But the virus can't be said to have been conquered, as we learn to our sorrow occasionally. One such occasion came in March, when longtime Patterson City Councilman John C.
Rentrop died from COVID-related complications. His wife, Dawn Rentrop, was appointed to fill his place on the council.

Hurricane season:
A welcome dud

The pre-June predictions sounded dire, especially after the frequent threats and occasional blackouts of 2020 and the devastation of Hurricane Ida in 2021.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecast was typical: up to 21 named storms, up to 10 hurricanes and up to six storms of at least Category 3 strength.

What were the odds that all of them would miss Louisiana?

But we spent little time cone-watching during the June-November hurricane season and didn't get so much as a close call.

Our neighbors to the east didn't share our good fortune. Hurricane Ian was the biggest storm to hit the United States this year, coming ashore in Florida in late September with Category 4 winds of at least 136 mph. Ian killed 146 people in Florida alone, plus five more in North Carolina.

Meanwhile, Louisiana continues to rebuild after the hurricanes of 2020 and 2021. This month alone, three press releases from the office of U.S. Rep. Clay Higgins, R-Lafayette, announced a total of more than $30 million in recovery funding that had been approved by Congress.

Political changes

Local boards will have plenty of new faces in 2023.

Longtime St. Mary Parish School members Michael Taylor and Wayne Deslatte decided not to run for re-election, as did first-term incumbent Dwight Barbier.
Board President Kenneth Alfred lost his re-election bid to Lindsey Anslem, and Rhonda Dennis beat incumbent Roland Verret. Incumbent Ginger Griffin won her re-election bid.
Murphy Pontiff won the election for Deslatte's seat. Newcomer Andrew Mancuso qualified without opposition, as did incumbents Joseph Foulcard, Tammie Moore, Marilyn Lasalle and Alaina Black. Debra Jones continues to serve as an interim member until a March election. Jones was appointed to fill the post left vacant by the resignation of Pearl Black.

In Patterson, incumbent City Council members Joe Russo and Travis Darnell decided not to run for re-election, and interim appointment Dawn Rentrop steps down at the end of the year. Lee Condolle, now completing his first term, finds himself the senior member of the council. He and Ray Dewey Sr. qualfied without opposition, along with newcomers R. Demale Bowden, Mamie Soudelier Perry and Miranda Knott Weinbach.

Mayor Rodney Grogan and Police Chief Garrett Grogan qualified for re-election unopposed.

They and the council members will be sworn in at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Patterson Area Civic Center.

Any sentiment for change didn't affect the Berwick Town Council, where Mayor Duval Arthur was elected to a second term and council members Raymond Price, Colleen Askew, Lud Henry, Kevin Hebert and James Richard qualified without opposition for the five-member board.

Nor did voters go along with a proposed charter amendment on the Dec. 10 St. Mary ballot. The amendment would have allowed any Parish Council member to serve as council chair and vice chair. Currently, the charter restrictions those positions to members elected from the three at-large districts, where representatives are elected by parishwide votes.

The amendment failed by a 61%-39% margin.

The three federal officials representing St. Mary were re-elected by big margins, and St. Mary went along by voting to re-elect U.S. Sen. John Kennedy and U.S. Reps. Clay Higgins and Garret Graves, all Republicans.

Higgins represents the 3rd Congressional District, which covers most of St. Mary. This year's redistricting put a portion of eastern St. Mary into Graves' 6th District.

A NERR here

More than a year of promotion by the St. Mary Excel citizens group, plus public support by local governments, paid off in June when the governor nominated a Atchafalaya Basin site, still to be determined, for a National Estuarine Research Reserve.

The NERR -- pronounced "near" -- system is a network of reserves in U.S. coastal zones where fresh water meets salt water. Louisiana has been conspicuously absent from the list of states that host NERRs.

The network, overseen by NOAA and funded by the federal and state governments with a 70-30 split, is dedicated to research of and education about estuary ecology.
Edwards put Louisiana in the running for a NERR with a letter in 2019, the beginning of a lengthy review that identified six potential Louisiana sites, later winnowed to three.

The unique nature of the Basin and public support tipped the scales in the Atchafalaya's favor. The Basin features two deltas that are building wetlands at a time when most of Louisiana is battling coastal land loss. And the St. Mary region was the leaders in support for a local NERR, symbolized by blue pro-NERR T-shirts, feedback to NOAA and resolutions from local governments.

The shape the Atchafalaya NERR will take is up to plans negotiated by the federal and state governments. That and the permitting process is likely to take years.

But locals are hoping a NERR will put people in touch with the region's natural history, provide educational opportunities hundreds of thousands of K-12 students within a day's drive of the Basin, and generate economic benefits through tourism and employment.

“The addition of Atchafalaya Basin to the NERR System provides Louisiana the opportunity to tell our story at the national level of the unique and spectacular environment and culture that a delta estuary represents compared to other estuaries in the nation and around the world,” said Dr. Robert Twilley, chair of the Louisiana designation team.

A new chief

Following the retirement of seven-year Chief James F. Blair, Morgan City Mayor Lee Dragna appointed and the City Council confirmed the choice of Chad M. Adams as the new chief on Oct. 25.

Adams, first hired by the Morgan City Police Department in 1996, knew all about the MCPD. He had worked as a corrections officer, patrol officer, K-9 officer and in investigations.

Adams came in with the goal of re-establishing personal contact between officers and the public after the years of COVID restrictions. He has another task, too, a task outlined by Blair as he retired.

Blair told the council that starting pay in the department was $4 less than the average for departments from Franklin to Houma. Forty percent of the department's position had turned over in three years, an unsustainable rate.

The council voted for a $1-an-hour raise in the starting pay and vowed to look for more. That process continues.

Back to four
lanes at last

October's reopening of all four lanes of the U.S. 90 generated collective "about time!" in local social media posts.

The $12 million rehab project was supposed to replace structural metalwork along with sandblasting and repainting the bridge. But the work required reducing traffic on the bridge from two lanes to one in either direction. The job was expected to take less than two years, and the onramps in Berwick and at Morgan City's Federal Avenue were closed in September 2019.

But then came the delays. The work was halted or slowed by the threat of hurricanes, by the COVID pandemic and a shortage of paint.

Meanwhile, the reduced traffic flow created minor headaches during rush hours and major ones in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, when accidents blocked lanes on either the old or new bridges, and after a series of truck strucks on the height-limit beams guarding the old bridge.

At least three different expected completion dates were announced in the second half of the year before the October reopening of all four lanes.

On the upside, the new paint job is beautiful.

Drivers will get a short reprieve before the old bridge is closed in February for cleaning and painting and to accommodate any repairs on the bridge deck and surface, the superstructure above the deck, and the pilings and abutments below. That work is expected to cost $26 million and take at least 2-1/2 years.

The world of sports

Central Catholic entered the LHSAA Select Division IV playoffs as the second seed, but Eagle hopes were dashed in the quarterfinals with a 52-12 loss to Opelousas Catholic.

But Central Catholic still provided what was arguably the most thrilling moment of the season on Sept. 9. Trailing Abbeville 34-28 with 16 seconds left and a fourth and 10, quarterback Caleb O'Con heaved a desperation pass to the goal line.

Abbeville batted down the pass, but the ball floated into the arms of Eagle running back Damondrick Blackburn, who would go on to set school rushing and touchdown records.
Blackburn took a step into the end zone, and Channing Rivere's kick gave Central Catholic the 35-34 win.

On the other side of the river, Berwick and Patterson scored two playoff wins and would have clashed in the Non-Select Division III semifinals had they scored quarterfinal wins.

It didn't work that way. Patterson, behind the state-leading passing duo of Caylon Davis and Howard Kinchen, beat Port Allen 44-28 and Winnfield 36-12 before falling to eventual runner-up Union Parish 38-14.

Berwick, relying on Jayden Milton's rushing and Cru Bella's passing, beat Jewell Sumner 38-26 and Bogalusa 33-30 before falling to Amite 42-14 in the state quartefinals.

Berwick's baseball Panthers created some thrills of their own, tearing through the Non-Select Division III playoffs before falling to Lutcher 5-4, stranding a runner on third, in the state finals.

Players from the team were recognized by the School Board, and the school's baseball field was named for longtime coach and former BHS baseball player Lud Henry.

And, after reaching the quarterfinals in 2021, the Central Catholic volleyball team scored playoff wins over M.L. King Charter, St. Edmund and, in the quaterfinals in Lafayette, Ascension Catholic without losing a game.

In the semifinals, the Eagles fell 25-21, 25-11, 22-25, 25-15 to Westminster Catholic, which was defeated 3-2 by Metairie Park Country Day in the finals.

Bayou Chene

For years, high water in the Atchafalaya River meant back-flooding for Bayou Chene, threatening property in east St. Mary, lower St. Martin and portions of four other parishes in the region. And since 2015, Atchafalaya flooding has been a regular feature.

The frequently used and expensive remedy had been to sink a barge in Bayou Chene to block the flooding. What was needed was a permanent flood gate that could be deployed in hours rather than the days required to plan and execute the temporary.

But, despite pleas from lawmakers and other local officials, the permanent solution was delayed again and again.

Finally, in 2019, the word came down: $80 million in funding had been obtained through the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority for a permanent flood control structure.

In April, state and local officials marked the completion of the project with a ribbon-cutting on the gate at the center of the structure.

That gate is a barge, more than 400 feet wide, that can be swung into place across the bayou and filled with water to settle it into place. The major contractor was Sealevel Construction Inc. The barge was manufactured at Bollinger's Amelia facility.

The lead agency for the project was the St. Mary Parish Levee District, which also marked the completion of the Yokely Levee extension project in November.

The extension fills a gap in the levee system in the Franklin-Charenton area with removable flood walls that can be deployed in eight hours.

Those projects followed the 2021 completion of the Bayou Teche Flood Control Structure, another movable gate designed to block storm surge flooding from running up the Charenton Canal into the Teche.

Patterson officials to take oath Saturday

Patterson’s Inaugural Ceremony for the mayor, council and chief of police is set for 10 a.m. Saturday at the Patterson Area Civic Center.

The event is open to the public.

Woman arrested on bank fraud, identity theft charges

(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.)

A Pierre Part woman has been arrested on bank fraud and identity theft charges, and Morgan City police reported arrests on battery and drunkenness charges.

Assumption

Sheriff Leland Falcon reported this arrest:

--Lee Ann Richard Gourgues, 46, Belle River Road, Pierre Part, was arrested on two counts of bank fraud and two counts of forgery, and on single counts of identity theft, illegal transmission of monetary funds and monetary instrument abuse.

Deputies were dispatched to a Pierre Part address Aug. 29. The complainant advised that three personal checks and one business check had been stolen from her. The victim went on to advise that during the relevant period, Gourgues was helping her out at her business.

Deputies developed the case and were able to positively identify Gourges as the suspect.

Investigators determined that Gourges had stolen the checks, written them to herself and forged the victim’s signature. The one business check in the amount of $400 and one personal check in the amount of $300 were cashed, thus benefitting Gourgues.

Lee Ann Richard Gourgues was booked into the Assumption Parish Detention pending a bond hearing.

Morgan City

Police Chief Chad M. Adams reported that over the last 24-hour reporting period, the Morgan City Police responded to 34 calls for service and made these arrests:

--Therold L. James, 38, Teche Road, Morgan City, was arrested at 10:32 a.m. Thursday on charges of battery on emergency room personnel and remaining after forbidden.

--Shanika S. Guidry, 40, Wren Street, Morgan City, was arrested at 11:44 a.m. Thursday on a warrant alleging three counts of failure to appear to pay fine (6th Ward Morgan City Court).

--Victoria Doblack, 22, Patton Street, Morgan City, was arrested at midnight Friday on charges of aggravated battery and disturbing the peace (drunkenness).

--Ashley Doblack, 27, Patton Street, Morgan City, was arrested at midnight Friday on charges of simple battery and disturbing the peace (drunkenness).

EDWIN THOMAS OURSO

Edwin Thomas Ourso , Jr. died Friday, Dec. 23, 2022, at the age of 69.

He was one of eight children born to Edwin Thomas Ourso Sr. and Sophie Pearce Ourso. He was born on Sept. 27, 1953, in Morgan City, Louisiana, where he became a lifelong gresident.

He is survived by his three children, Edwin Ourso, III, Eric Ourso and wife Nikki and
daughter Antoinette Ourso; six grandchildren; one great grandchild; siblings, Sheila Ourso Burdick and husband Ed, Aubrey Ourso and wife Janell, Ginger (Sophie) Ourso Rodriguez and husband David, Gianna Ourso Broussard, Sabena Ourso Crochet and husband Wilton, Dana Ourso and wife Jenny and Monessa Ourso Broussard and husband Dwight.

He is proceeded in death by his parent; and his grandparents.

He will be cremated, and his family will have a memorial service at a later date.

ALLEN 'POP' BERGERON

Allen "Pop" Bergeron born on January 30, 1933, a native of Houma, LA and long-time resident of Bayou Vista, LA. He was the 11th child of 15 born to John Baptiste Bergeron and Elisca Foret Bergeron.

Pop, as he was called by most, passed away on December 25, 2022 at Legacy Nursing Home in Morgan City at the age of 89.

Pop lived a long, happy life filled with hunting and fishing, and he loved spending time at the casino. His soul was one of a kind; He was the most loving, generous, and selfless person to know. He was loved by everyone who was fortunate enough to have known him. He was known to his nieces and nephews as Uncle T and by all others as Pop.

In 1975, his childhood best friend (Lawrence Frederick Sr.) unexpectedly passed away, leaving behind three young children and his widower (Sandra Jean Frederick). Pop didn’t hesitate to assist in raising his extended family and caring for them as his own.

From a young age he was never without a job, and he took pride in all the work he did. His three longest jobs consisted of Louis Mahfouz General Merchandise Store (20 yrs.), Pic-A-Pac Convenience Store (14 yrs.) and Wal-Mart (28 yrs.) where he then retired at the age of 85.
Pop was preceded in death by his parents, John and Elisca Bergeron, six brothers: Dalton Bergeron, Sheldon Bergeron (Winnie), Milton Bergeron, Warner Bergeron, Alvin Bergeron (Doris), Bobby Bergeron; eight sisters: Grace Businelle (Dave), Meona Bruce (Lester), Dorothy Cheramie (Joe), Mary Ann Clark (Joe), Anna Falgout (Dudley), Mary Ruth Schexnider (Linus), Helen Foret (Jeffery), Janice Bergeron.

He will be sadly missed and lovingly remembered by his numerous nieces and nephews, and, by his extended family:

Susan Alfred (Bede), their children Austin Alfred, (Megan), Dusty Alfred (Jessica), Megan Garner (Steven); Connie LaCombe (Gilbert), their children Gilbert LaCombe Jr., Kassi Jones (Ivan), Halli Ramirez (Brianna); William Frederick, his child Hunter Frederick, and a host of other family members and very close friends.

His family wants to thank the staff of Legacy Nursing Home, Ochsner Saint Mary, St. Joseph Hospice, Hargrave Funeral Home and St. Stephen’s Church for their compassion and service.

The pallbearers are Austin Alfred (Godchild), Gilbert LaCombe Jr., Hunter Frederick, Brianna Ramirez, Ivan Jones, and Lloyd Cancienne

Funeral arrangements will be as follows: Visitation will be held from 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM, Monday, January 2, 2023, at Hargrave Funeral Home. Visitation will continue Tuesday, January 3, 2023, at St. Stephen Catholic Church from 8:00 a.m. until the time of Mass at 10:00 AM. After Mass, Pop will be laid to rest in the Berwick Cemetery.

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