RSS Feed

Ten arrests reported by local agencies

(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.)
Law enforcement agencies in the region reported 10 arrests this week.
St. Mary
Sheriff Blaise Smith reported these arrests:
--Gabriel Damazo Cardenas, 21, Gray, was arrested at 9:56 a.m. Tuesday on a charge of parole violation in Terrebonne Parish. Cardenas is being held for another agency.
--Kyle Austin Baudoin, 30, Duson, was arrested at 3:05 p.m. Tuesday on a warrant alleging failure to appear on charges of possession of heroin, possession of drug paraphernalia, reckless operation of a vehicle and failure to maintain automobile liability insurance.
Bail has not been set.
--John Serrano Garcia, 32, Franklin, was arrested at 10:40 p.m. Tuesday on a warrant alleging failure to appear on the charges of operating a vehicle while intoxicated and improper
lane usage. Bail has not been set.

Patterson
Police Chief Garrett Grogan reported these arrests:
--Dustin R. Harmeyer, 38, Fanwick Court, Tomball, Texas, was arrested at 3:25 a.m. Wednesday on charges of speeding more than 25 mph over the speed limit and careless operation. Harmeyer was released on $686 bond.
--Malissa A. Guillory, 33, Shady Grove Drive, Patterson, was arrested at 2:26 a.m. Thursday on a St. Mary Parish Sheriff’s Office warrant alleging possession of marijuana less than 14 grams. Guillory was incarcerated at the Patterson PD Jail with bond set at $100.
--Mark A. Eugene, 58, Terrebonne Street, Morgan City, was arrested at noon Thursday on charges of hit and run, operating a vehicle with a suspended license and expired license plate. Eugene was incarcerated at the Patterson PD Jail and released on his own recognizance.
--Keyandre V. Polidore, 31, Clements Street, Patterson, was arrested at 9:58 p.m. Thursday on charges of obstruction of justice (evidence tampering), disturbing the peace, three counts of threatening a public official, criminal damage to property and resisting an officer. Polidore is incarcerated at the Patterson PD Jail with no bond set.

Franklin

Police Chief Morris Beverly reported these arrests:

--Troy Lumpkin, 32, Willow Street, Franklin, was arrested at 8:23 p.m. Tuesday on a warrant for 3rd Ward City Court alleging failure to appear on the charges of driving under suspension and general speed law. Lumpkin was booked, processed and released on a $350 bond.
--Huey Hopkins, 39, Yellow Bayou Road, Franklin, was arrested at 11:18 p.m. Tuesday on the charges of operating a vehicle while intoxicated (second offense) and operating a vehicle under suspension for certain prior offenses. Hopkins was additionally arrested on a warrant for 3rd Ward City Court alleging failure to appear on the charge of speeding. Hopkins was booked, processed and held on a $5,205.50 bond.

Assumption

Sheriff Leland Falcon this arrest:

-- Jacob Timothy Dugas, 36, Bayou Drive, Pierre Part, was arrested Monday on a fugitive warrant alleging contractor fraud.

Deputies were advised of an outstanding felony warrant from Ascension Parish on Dugas for contractor fraud.

Dugas was arrested on Monday evening in Pierre Part. Dugas was booked into the Assumption Parish Detention and transferred to the Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Office for booking in that jurisdiction.

Around Town for Nov. 25

Happy birthday Sunday to Annabelle Ruiz, love, all your family and friends … Happy birthday Catherine Lynch, happy birthday Saturday to Kerwin Webb Jr., and belated happy birthday Teraneka White from family, friends and Ira.

John K. Flores: Some hunters found success when duck season opened

When it comes to numbers, 802,000 may seem like a lot. Unless it’s the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries’ waterfowl population estimate.

Point of fact, the 802,000 ducks estimated during the November 2022 survey for coastal Louisiana and Catahoula Lake was the lowest since the survey began in 1968.

According to the aerial estimate that was reported on the eve of the 2022/2023 waterfowl season opener last weekend, the number was 38 percent lower than last year’s November (2021) estimate, 28 percent lower than the recent 5-year average, and 48 percent lower than the 10-year average.

Once again, the lion’s share of ducks counted were found in southwest Louisiana, totaling 644,000, followed by 105,000 in the southeast, and 38,000 on Catahoula Lake.

No matter what the duck numbers are, few diehard waterfowl hunters will ever miss the season opener.

One hunter who hunted the southeast region of the state was Bill Lake, owner/operator of Bayou Guide Service. Lake’s duck lease is close to transect line number 20 of 27 south of Gibson that the LDWF flies over. He and three of his friends hunted opening day and were surprised how well they did.

Lake said, “Man, I hate getting rained on before getting in the blind. Good thing the front Saturday morning came in after daybreak as it would have been a cold and miserable pre-dawn ride. We had a better opening day than expected. We didn’t see any birds while brushing our blinds a couple of days before the season. We didn’t get full limits, but we shot enough ducks for supper. We had teal, greys, widgeon, ringnecks, spoonies, and a summer mallard. So, it was a good start.”
Across the state, Brian Windsor hunted south of Highway 82, east of Cameron in southwest Louisiana. Windsor said they saw plenty of ducks along the coast and lots of high flight birds. He and his partner were able to limit (12 birds) by 8 a.m. on opening day.

On Sunday, he and two other friends limited out again killing 18 ducks prior to 8 a.m.

Windsor said, “The majority of birds were teal, mostly blue wings. Other species we killed were grey ducks, spoonbills, and a few widgeons.”

Ben Givens hunted the Atchafalaya Delta Wildlife Management Area on opening day. Givens brought his 8-year-old son Harper who would be making his first ever duck hunt. Givens was hoping his son would have fun hunting ducks and make the connection that comes with being down to the camp with a bunch of guys.

Father and son hunted with four other duck hunters that put out some 50 decoys with hopes of attracting a few birds.

Givens says up until around 7:15 a.m. things were unusually quiet for the group of hunters. In fact, across the WMA there were few shots fired. Then a few birds started flying only they weren’t committing to the decoys.

They witnessed lines of diving ducks flying high, saw decent flocks of teal buzzing over distant tree lines, and lonely pintails every now and then looking for anything but them Givens said.

After a while, things changed, and the group of hunters started getting a few passes. All total they killed 19 ducks that was a mixed bag of blue and green winged teal and scaup.

Givens said, “We had a few opportunities, but you had to act quick and take long hard shots. Fortunately, we shot well. That really was the saving grace of our hunt.”

Thomas Landers and his friends hunted in Gueydan. Landers reported he saw more ducks on Saturday ahead of the cold front that passed through than he’d seen in 10 years.

Landers said, “We had good hunts both days with easy limits. We had a banded mottled duck on Saturday in the mixed bag of 18 and over the two days of opening weekend we harvested 9 different species of ducks. We shot blue winged teal, green winged teal, mottled ducks, gadwall, wood ducks, scaup, ring necks, widgeon, and the ever-present spoonbill made his appearance. I’m looking forward to more of the same with any luck this season.”

Jack Cousin, who guides for Sportsman Charters in Gueydan, mainly hunt white-fronted geese (speckle bellies). Opening weekend wasn’t very good for goose hunters says Cousin.

“It was pretty slow to nonexistent for us, but we’re starting to see some birds now. So, hopefully things will start to pick up for us,” Cousin said.

With the waterfowl season only a week old, there’s still a lot of season left for duck numbers to hopefully increase as the migration continues southward. It usually only takes a few cold fronts in the heartland with a mix of snow and ice to push ducks south. Here’s hoping that occurs over the next few weeks.

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

Flood control project may yet help Lower St. Martin

ST. MARTINVILLE – The canceled plan to organize an ambitious flood control project in lower St. Martin Parish could get another chance to succeed.

As discussed by Public Works Project Manager Callen Huval at the Nov. 15 Parish Council committee meeting, the Bayou Estates Flood Wall project in Lower St. Martin Parish was shelved in early 2022 when the original $6+ million FEMA funding plan proved to be inadequate.

Engineering and design work is complete for the project, which involves the construction of two flood gates, a sheet pile wall to isolate the area in times of rising water, and the addition of a high-volume pump station along with improved cross-drainage conduits.

With additional funding from a recently-secured $1.8 million Community Development Block Grant, parish government decided it was worth another try.

Bayou Estates is the most problematic development in the parish with regard to flooding. Currently, parish workers must rush to block storm drains when back-flow water begins to rise. The streets are frequently flooded and much depends on the ability of pumps to protect the homes.

Another prospective project in Lower SMP includes improvements to Four Mile Bayou Road. One and one-half miles of the often-inundated aggregate road would be raised and topped with asphalt.

Parish President Chester Cedars commented that, given the price increases since contract proposals were received last year, it may still be a reach, even with the added funding. “I’d say I’m very, very, very cautiously optimistic, but it’s well worth taking another shot,” he said.

Waste Collection Cost

The contractual allowance with Pelican Waste for periodic increases in fees according to changes in costs, particularly of diesel fuel, will result in an increase in customers’ trash collection bills.

Fees for customers in unincorporated areas of the parish will rise by approximately 8% to $25.01 per month in the upper portion of the parish and $26.06 in Lower SMP beginning in January.

Oilfield jobs picking up in Louisiana, Texas

Louisiana and Texas are expected to gain thousands of oil and gas jobs in the coming months, though employment numbers likely won't return to pre-pandemic levels any time soon, according to a new report.
The 2023 Gulf Coast Energy Outlook released by Louisiana State University this week shows Louisiana lost roughly 8,700 upstream oil and gas jobs during the pandemic, while Texas lost about 83,000, accounting for 26% and 35%, respectively.

By August 2022, Louisiana had gained back about 2,500 oil and gas jobs, while Texas regained about 44,700. David Dismukes and Gregory Upton, Jr., with the LSU Center for Energy Studies, predict that trend to continue into 2023, before slowly declining for the next couple of years.

"Over the next year, the GCEO anticipates both states will continue to gain back some of these COVID-induced job losses. By the second quarter of 2023, Louisiana is expected to gain about 3,500 jobs. Texas is forecasted to gain about 12,200 upstream jobs between August 2022 and the second quarter of 2023," the authors wrote.

"It's important to note that although employment is expected to increase over the forecast horizon, these model results are not anticipating employment in either state to reach pre-COVID levels over the forecast horizon," the report read.

The GCEO expects upstream oil and gas job numbers to peak in the second quarter next year, then decline steadily in both states through 2025.

"This is driven by a combination of projected increases in oil and gas production alongside futures market prices that are currently in backwardation (expected to decline over the forecast horizon)," according to the report. "Although, we note that given the margin of forecasting error, upstream employment post the peak forecasted in 2023 should be considered a random walk, for all intents and purposes."

It's a similar situation with refining and chemical manufacturing employment, which also declined during the pandemic, though as drastically as upstream oil and gas jobs.

"For Louisiana, the GCEO anticipates employment to first recover from the recession and then modestly increase over the rest of the forecast horizon," the report reads. "Specifically, the GCEO envisions employment to increase by about 1,450 jobs by the end of 2023, or about a 3.9% increase. Employment growth is expected to slow thereafter, gaining approximately 600 jobs in 2024 and 700 jobs in 2025."

The GCEO predicts refining and chemical manufacturing jobs in Texas will follow the same pattern, adding 4,500 by the end of 2023, then slow to gain 800 jobs in 2024 and 600 jobs the year after.

Oil and gas prices, meanwhile, are expected to fall next year after significant increases tied to the war in Ukraine.

"Oil prices that are currently trading at over $90 per barrel (spot market) are anticipated to decline by the end of 2023, when oil price futures fall to about $80 per barrel," the report reads. "In the long run, oil futures converge to prewar levels and even fall below prewar futures prices by 2030."

Natural gas prices are expected to fall from $5.50 per million British thermal units in 2023 to $4.70 per million British thermal units in 2024, then remain about $1.40 higher than anticipated before the war.

Production of oil and gas is expected to increase by about 30% over the next decade, though the LSU models are based on continued offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico that's currently at the center of legal disputes.

The report notes, however, that the Inflation Reduction Act requires the Department of Interior to follow through with at least two lease sales in the Gulf next year.

"Although some have communicated skepticism of this process, suggesting that the Biden Administration will continue to make attempts at discontinuing offshore activity, the current law of the land is that offshore leasing will continue," according to the report. "As with past GCEO's, our modeling assumptions are based on current policies, not predictions about future policy actions that could occur."

Wax Lake campground work complete

The Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries announced the reopening of the Wax Lake Outlet Campground in the Atchafalaya Delta Wildlife Management Area in St. Mary Parish following the completion of renovations.

The campground re-opened Nov. 9, three days ahead of waterfowl season. The $4.2 million project addressed shoreline erosion that threatened the recreational use area, which includes a camping area, docks, piers, and restrooms.

“Areas like Wax Lake in the Atchafalaya Delta are essential to Louisiana’s identity as the Sportsman’s Paradise,” said CPRA Chairman Chip Kline. “Protecting and restoring the Wax Lake campground shoreline enhances recreational opportunities for hunters, anglers, bird watchers, and campers and conserves more of Louisiana’s unique natural resources and ecosystems.”

Officials with LDWF celebrated the completion of the project in time for duck hunting season and what it means for the future of the Wax Lake area and the Atchafalaya Delta.

“The camping area is one of our most popular coastal WMA campgrounds, and for good reason,” said LDWF Secretary Jack Montoucet. “It offers sportsmen a great base camping location from which they can access some of the most productive portions of our coast for hunting, fishing, and other outdoor pursuits. Our partners at CPRA were crucial to the project being completed in time for the upcoming hunting seasons, despite high river levels and other challenges faced during the construction phase.”

The project, which began construction in January 2022, included installation of a 1,200-foot-long bulkhead and a timber jetty to prevent shoreline erosion.

The new bulkhead was placed approximately 30 feet from the existing shoreline and backfilled with sediment to restore some of the campground’s lost acreage.

Two new 50-foot structures, to be used as fishing piers and boat docks, were also constructed as part of the project.

CPRA partnered with LDWF to complete the project using Natural Resource Damage Assessment funds.

“This project is an incredible example of what we can achieve through interagency collaboration,” said CPRA Executive Director Bren Haase. “Wildlife and Fisheries worked with us through every step of this effort, from planning and design to execution. The importance of projects like this to preserving the fishing and hunting culture in south central Louisiana cannot be overstated.”

The ADWMA has two campgrounds with primitive restrooms. There are also a number of pilings available for houseboat mooring. Users must have a permit for houseboat mooring during hunting season. Users may obtain hunting season overnight mooring privileges via a 5-year bid lease or annual lottery. Year-round mooring is prohibited.

To provide campers level, well drained, durable surfaces for their tents, the project included careful grading and hydro-seeding throughout the renovated campground; however, recently planted turf grasses are still establishing themselves. In the interim, certain areas may become muddy after heavy rain. Campers should be extra cautious when using the campground during these periods.

Waterfowl hunters are reminded about limited access areas, horsepower restrictions for mudboats/air-cooled powered vessels and 2 p.m. waterfowl closures on opening weekends.

Jeremy Alford: Five-bill limit will add pressure to '23 session

The ongoing election cycle and speculation about control of Congress kept most politicos in Louisiana busy and distracted this fall. But now attention spans are beginning to branch off, especially as the 2023 regular session comes into focus and state lawmakers launch their re-election bids ahead of next year.

Lobbyists, associations, local government officials and special interests are all beating paths to the doors of state legislators, who will be confined to only five general subject matter bills next year.

Competition for those bills will be fierce.

Tax issues, meanwhile, will be plentiful, since the next session will be fiscal in nature.

Lawmakers will be allowed file as many of those kinds of proposals as they want, within certain limits.

Changes to our incomes taxes and the state sales tax rate will be debated.

Lawmakers will likewise push — once again — concepts to centralize sales tax collections in Louisiana, which voters rejected when it was last sent to them in the form of a constitutional amendment.

When not attempting to write tax policy, lawmakers will also use the next regular session to guide the state’s hands on everything from investment portfolios to election practices.

The session will likely host other debates about insurance coverage, electricity regulations and much more.

Next year’s session won’t be just another session. Lawmakers are up for re-election on the 2023 fall ballot, so the spring session will be among the last opportunities for the House and Senate memberships to impress voters.

According to Stephen Waguespack, president of the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry, the last session of a term is always heavily influenced by the upcoming elections.

Moreover, all fiscal sessions are heavily influenced by the national and state economy. “Combined,” he added, “this means the next session should be a spicy one.”

As long as revenue collections stay strong, Waguespack said we could see the Legislature continue investments in one-time expenses like infrastructure.

There could be some “bold reforms” floated, like an education savings account, he said, and inflation will undoubtedly be discussed.

“Crime is out of control and must be addressed,” Waguespack added.

“I don’t see any way this session can end without some movement on this issue. We all know that any session before a big election has the potential to be more about sound-bites and posturing rather than substance and policymaking.
Hopefully this one can be the exception to the rule.”

There’s a growing appetite to get rid of the personal income tax, and Rep. Richard Nelson of Mandeville has been leading a review to figure out how to best accomplish that goal.

The big challenge involves paying for the change.

Lawmakers are investigating similar avenues to tackle the temporary 0.45% portion of the state sales tax structure that expires in 2025.

There’s even chatter about lawmakers removing the temporary portion of the state sales tax early so they can take credit during their re-election bids for (technically) cutting taxes.

While that’s all easier said than done, representatives and senators aren’t willing to shy away from their lofty ambitions quite yet.

Rep. Beau Beaullieu of Iberia Parish, the vice chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said, “From the discussions that I am having with colleagues, you might see efforts to swing for the fences on the budget and revenue side of things.”

Compromises are always possible, Beaullieu said, even on high-profile items like eliminating the income tax.

“Are you able to cut expenses to that large of an extent in the general fund? Do you get rid of exemptions and credits to make it happen?” Beaullieu asked.

“Good luck trying to get rid of the homestead exemption or move to a state property tax. Although it would be great to see it done in a single swoop, it’s more likely that we see a steady reduction of the income tax over a period of years.

Legislation that eats the alligator one bite at a time has the best shot of passing.”

Lawmakers will get a shot to eat the alligator during their regular session that convenes in roughly four and a half months, on April 10, 2023.

The legislative primary election cycle, meanwhile, is less than a year away and is slated for Oct. 14, 2023.

For more Louisiana political news, visit www. LaPolitics.com or follow Alford on Twitter @ LaPoliticsNow

50 years ago, two shootings shocked Southern University

First in a series

(Editor's note: This is the first in a four-part series exploring the deaths of two Southern University students during a protect in November 1972.)

Josephine and Denver Smith took different approaches to protests at Southern University in the fall of 1972. Josephine skipped class for meetings, while her older brother stayed away and warned her to be careful.
The pair had grown up with 10 other siblings in a tiny sharecropper’s house near New Roads, Louisiana, where they picked cotton in the hot sun and harvested pecans to help make ends meet. When they were not working, they fished, swam by the river levee and, not having paper, scratched their multiplication tables in the dirt with sticks, the oldest checking the work of the youngest.
Despite their modest finances, one thing was always certain: They would go to college.
One by one, the siblings enrolled at Southern University in Baton Rouge. Denver was the third to go, followed by Josephine the next year. And while Josephine lived in a dorm amid the growing campus ferment, Denver – 5 feet, 9 inches and slim – walked each morning to a white-framed Catholic church, where he hopped on a school bus for the hour-long journey southeast to Baton Rouge.
The protests at Southern in October and November 1972 echoed what was happening around the United States in an era of civil rights and anti-war activism. Southern, the main campus in a university system that had the largest number of Black students in the country, had its own history of activism that began with lunch counter sit-ins. By 1972, many of its 9,000 students in Baton Rouge were tired of what they saw as poor funding and teaching, dilapidated buildings and a lack of responsiveness to their concerns.
From those frustrations came weeks of protests, class boycotts and demands for a change in the school’s leadership. Rather than sticking with negotiations, university officials repeatedly summoned sheriff’s deputies and state troopers onto campus — and a standoff between roughly 150 students and 85 heavily armed officers that Nov. 16 ended in tragedy.
Amid the chaos and tear gas, a single blast of buckshot fired by a deputy from the East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff’s Office killed two 20-year-old men in a stream of fleeing students.
One was Denver Smith, who may have just wandered into the crowd to make sure Josephine was safe. The other was Leonard Douglas Brown, a junior who had finished breakfast with his girlfriend and went out to see why the crowd had gathered.
Neither man had been involved in the protests, and it was never determined which deputy fired the shot.
Now, at the 50th anniversary of the shooting, a 10-month examination by the LSU Cold Case Project provides a much clearer picture of one of the most troubling episodes in race relations in Baton Rouge — and one that still resonates nationally amid the tense relations between police officers and young Black men.
This series is based on dozens of interviews with family members of the victims; student leaders and witnesses; and former sheriff’s deputies, FBI agents and prosecutors who had never discussed the case publicly.
Researchers from LSU’s Manship School and the Southern University Law Center also studied nearly 2,700 pages of FBI documents that reveal how agents quickly narrowed their search to a handful of deputies but could not prove who fired the fatal shot.
A gubernatorial commission created shortly after the shooting determined there was “no justification” for it and that the confrontation “should never have happened.” The commission, headed by William J. Guste, who was then Louisiana’s attorney general, found no evidence that any of the students was armed.
It also concluded that Southern officials were not prepared to cope with student unrest, criticized protesters for disrupting classes in the weeks leading up to Nov. 16 and chastised law enforcement officials for responding with more force than was needed.
“No one should have pointed a gun at those students,” Mike Barnett, who was at Southern that day as a young sheriff’s deputy and is now a liaison to the Louisiana Sheriff's Association, said in a recent interview.
“There was no threat from them or anyone else at the time the shot went off,” he said.
Challenging
the 'Old Guard'

In the spring of 1972, a group of Southern students drove to a national Black political convention in Gary, Indiana. Among them were Fred Prejean and his girlfriend, Ola Sims.
Prejean was a tall, talkative 25-year-old political science major who had returned to his education after years in community activism. At 17, he had been inspired hearing the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. speak at the March on Washington. He also was struck by how casually people of different races intermingled in the march’s crowds.
Sims was a 19-year-old psychology major who grew up in north Louisiana near Grambling State University, another historically Black institution. She had accepted a scholarship to Southern for a program in the psychology department, wanting to experience something new.
The conference in Gary, aimed at electing more Black people to office, sparked a new connection to politics in Sims—one that took hold of her that fall when a young professor, Charles Waddell, resigned as chairman of Southern’s psychology department.
Waddell was beloved by his students—and was everything they did not see in Southern President George Leon Netterville Jr., a quiet 66-year-old with white hair and dark-framed glasses.
Waddell was frustrated by a lack of equipment for his research. He took his concerns to Netterville, who had started as Southern’s business manager in 1932 before being promoted to its vice president for finance and becoming Southern’s third president in 1968.
Netterville promised things would improve. But in meeting after meeting, they did not, and on Tuesday, Oct. 17, Waddell informed his students he was leaving.
Around midnight, a group of students braved the dark to protest outside Netterville’s home, and he came out briefly to try to calm them.
But to the students, Sims said, a consensus was forming that Netterville was basically an “old guard” administrator who followed “old-guard rules” – and they were going to have to keep pushing if they were going to see any change.
Tensions rising
on both sides

Sims brought Prejean to a meeting organized by the psychology students, who soon realized that students in other departments shared their concerns.
Students noted that LSU’s main campus in Baton Rouge spent $2,325 per student, while Southern spent only $1,327 per student, and that their school was losing faculty to better pay elsewhere.
“The conditions on the campus overall were not comparable or even close to the conditions that existed at LSU,” Sukari Hardnett, one of the protest leaders, said recently. “And it wasn't fair.”
As student talk bubbled, a loose organization formed.
The group, called Students United, argued that Southern was failing to serve the Black community. Members put together a long list of grievances, ranging from substandard housing and pest problems to no emphasis on the Black experience anywhere in the curriculum.
They thought that part of the solution might be a council system that would allow faculty and students voting power over university decisions, and they wanted Netterville to resign.
The students delivered the grievances to Netterville on Oct. 23, and at an assembly the next day in the Men’s Gymnasium, he agreed to some student involvement in university oversight. But the meeting fell apart when it became clear that he did not intend to step down, and the tactics escalated on both sides.
Worried about how the students might react, Netterville had arranged for 100 sheriff’s deputies to be on standby at the Baton Rouge airport. Black sheriff’s deputies in plain clothes walked around campus watching for any signs of trouble.
Shortly after the meeting ended, an estimated 1,000 students descended on the state Board of Education and the Capitol, with some marching the seven miles from campus and others driving.
Gov. Edwin Edwards, a Democrat who had taken office eight months earlier with Black support, stepped outside to meet them. Edwards refused to consider Netterville’s resignation. But he told the students he would negotiate on other issues if they returned to school.
The next day, Oct. 24, protest leaders met in the Southern gym. They decided to call for a boycott of classes, giving speeches outside the dorms to rouse support.
'You got
to be careful'

The surge in activism caught the attention of Josephine Smith, a 19-year-old education sophomore, who was concerned by Southern’s lack of a Black studies program.
“I had never been in a group or organization that was so big – bigger than me – as far as a cause,” Josephine recalled recently. “And I felt led to join that cause for a good reason.”
Denver did not share his sister’s feelings, mirroring concerns from some students that the protests would interrupt their education.
A junior studying computer science more than a decade before the internet, Denver preferred to keep his head in his studies and encouraged Josephine to do the same. He often stopped by her dorm to check on her and her suitemates.
“You got to be careful,” Denver told her.
Denver had almost left Southern after receiving a job offer from a technology company in Houston. But he had declined it that summer after his mother suggested he finish his education.
Leonard Brown, a 5-foot-10-inch vocational agriculture education major known as Doug, also was focused on his studies, and he returned home to Gilbert in northeast Louisiana for two weeks to avoid the protests.
Brown had loved living on a farm as a child. He attended Southern with the help of an educational opportunity grant and joined the National Society of Pershing Rifles, a military honor society that focused on developing leadership skills.
Brown also had an infant daughter, who lived with his mother, and he went home every weekend to visit them. His sister Evelyn Turner said he hoped to get married and start a farm after graduating.
Negotiate
or confront
with force?

As the protests churned forward through late October, the students stuck to their demands that Netterville leave and for a say in running the school—and Gov. Edwards and Netterville would not give in on those points.
The men’s gym became the center of student organizing as well as student-led classes and tutoring.
It was exhausting, said Sims, who married Prejean in 1974. In an interview in her Lafayette home, she recalled that amid the boycotts and late nights, her normally high GPA dropped. She left class quickly one day, embarrassed, after realizing she had been so busy she had forgotten to wash her clothes.
When students gathered in the gym on Tuesday, Oct. 31, a school official told them that the meeting was unauthorized. They headed over to the administration building, where Netterville refused to meet them. Instead, he called in the sheriff’s deputies and canceled classes until Monday, Nov. 6.
It is not clear how much say Netterville, who died in 2000, had at this point, with Edwards and an all-white state education board heavily involved. But judging from how two other historically Black universities had handled similar situations, there seemed to be a choice between further negotiation and the risks involved in relying on law enforcement to quell the protests.
At Howard University in Washington, D.C., in 1968, administrators negotiated as 1,000 students occupied the administration building for four days. The school refused to fire its president, but the protests ended peacefully after it agreed to incorporate Black history and culture into its curriculum and give students input in its disciplinary process.
But in Jackson, Mississippi, in 1970, police killed two protesters at Jackson State. The students were fed up with whites driving through campus shouting racial slurs and throwing bottles, and the students were throwing rocks at the cars.
Any hopes for a compromise at Southern evaporated on Nov. 1, 1972, when 150 students at Southern’s campus in New Orleans occupied its administration building and demanded the resignation of their president, who left eight days later.
Students at Grambling also made demands on Nov. 1, and the next day, roughly 150 of them barricaded the street outside its administration building with chairs and tables from the dining hall and threw rocks through dorm windows.
These incidents – as well as a shootout on North Boulevard earlier that year that had left two Baton Rouge police officers and two Black Muslims dead – also had unnerved many whites and placed law-enforcement officers on edge.
Several Southern protest leaders said in interviews that they cautioned students not to take control of buildings.
“Whenever we had a demonstration and law enforcement came on campus, we urged the students to go back to their dorms, leave the campus, do not engage the police, do not allow them to engage you,” said Herget Harris, an electronics technology major and Students United leader.
When school reopened on Nov. 6, Brown’s mother asked if it was safe to return. His sister said he replied that it must be, since classes were resuming.
About 500 students met in the men’s gym around 10 a.m. that day, and the leaders urged them to keep boycotting classes. State Police and sheriff’s deputies sealed off campus but had no confrontations with students. They left after half the crowd returned to class.
Students United slammed the university at a press conference for bringing police onto campus, and members of the physics department condemned the “senseless” choice.
'Expect trouble
tomorrow'

Over the next several days, a mysterious fire broke out at Southern’s Horticulture Barn, and some students protested on the field during a football game. Harris said Students United did not condone these activities, but Netterville asked for arrest warrants to be drawn for Harris and seven other student leaders, including Prejean and Hardnett, for disrupting university operations. After some of the students were arrested, Netterville said the remaining warrants would not be executed if the disruptions stopped.
But the boycotts continued, and on Nov. 15, university and law enforcement officials met at the East Baton Rouge Parish Prison to decide whether to execute arrest warrants for the rest of the leaders. According to an FBI interview with Sheriff J. Al Amiss, they discussed “whether this arrest of students would stir up trouble and add to the unrest already existing on the campus.”
Still, they decided to execute the warrants. And that evening, Netterville left a message for Gov. Edwards saying that he expected trouble the next morning.
Drew Hawkins, Maria Pham, Allison Allsop, Alex Tirado, Adrian Dubose, Oliva Varden, Cayli Pham, and Brea Rougeau contributed reporting. This series is supported by the Data-Driven Reporting Project.

Early voting opens Saturday; parish, state amendments on the ballot

Early voting begins Saturday for the Dec. 10 election. Unlike the Nov. 8 primary ballot, the Dec. 10 ballot for St. Mary voters will be a short one.

Early voting will be 8:30 p.m.-6 p.m. each day through Dec. 3, except for Sunday, when there will be no voting.

Registered St. Mary voters, regardless of address, may vote at either Registrar of Voters Office. They're located in the courthouse in Franklin and at 301 Third St., Morgan City. Bring a photo ID to your polling place.

One proposed parish charter amendment and three proposed amendments to the state constitution await voters. Baldwin voters will decide two races.

The parish charter amendment would open the St. Mary Parish Council chairmanship and vice chairmanship to any council member.

The council is composed of eight members elected by voters within eight geographic districts. Three larger districts, which together cover the entire parish, are represented by council members who are each elected by voters parishwide. The three big districts are known as at-large districts.

Currently, the charter limits the two leadership positions to members elected from the three at-large districts.

If the amendment passes, any of the 11 council members would be eligible for the chairmanship and vice chairmanship.

The state constitutional amendments on the Dec. 10 ballot:

--Amendment 1 would ban people who aren't U.S. citizens from registering to vote or voting in state elections. The constitution currently requires Louisiana citizenship.

--Amendment 2 would require Senate confirmation of the governor's appointments to the State Civil Service Commission.

--Amendment 3 would require Senate confirmation of the governor's appointments to the State Police Commission.

Currently, the governor appoints members to those commissions without the need for confirmation.

Baldwin's town government has two runoffs on the Dec. 10 ballot.

Ronnie Fuselier and Anthony "Gip" Gibson are running for police chief.

Carolyn Bowser and Marion J. Newton are running for a seat on the Baldwin Board of Aldermen.

Maxie J. McGuire Sr.

Maxie J. McGuire Sr., beloved husband, father, grandfather, great grandfather and dear friend, passed away on Saturday, November 19, 2022.
He was born the baby of 9 children to Lonnie C. McGuire Sr. and Grace Lee Knous on May 2, 1943, in Arp, Texas. He married his wife, Patricia Ann Aucoin of Morgan City, Louisiana on April 3, 1964, and they were married for 58 years.
He enlisted in the US Army on May 13, 1963, and was honorably discharged on May 12, 1966, at the rank of Sergeant (E5) as a parachute rigger, having earned the Senior Parachutist Badge (completing 43 jumps and was amongst the first to parachute from a jet airplane (C-141), expert marksman, and completing courses in Basic Airborne, Parachute Packing, Maintenance and Aerial Delivery, and Jumpmaster.
In 1968, he continued his career with Schlumberger Offshore, working in Morgan City, Larose, Houma, and Berwick, Louisiana, serving the Gulf of Mexico, North Atlantic Ocean, and North Slope of Alaska, and retiring in 1998 with over 30 years of service.
He was the leader of the pack and words can’t describe what he meant to each of us as Boo, Dad, Papa and Baby Bro. He was tough but kind, hardheaded yet cooperative, had the biggest heart, the quickest wit and the best sense of humor of anyone we know. You are missed by many!
He was preceded in death by his father, Lonnie C. McGuire Sr., his mother Grace L. McGuire, brothers Herschel McGuire and Tommy McGuire, and sisters Jerry Hardy and Lois Durham.
He is survived by his dear wife Patricia, sons Maxie McGuire Jr. (Kristal McGuire) of Alexandria, La., Erik McGuire (Rochelle Gonsoulin) of Lafayette, La., two brothers, Lonnie McGuire Jr. of Athens, Texas, and Clyde McGuire, his big bro (Nancy McGuire) of Houston, Texas and a sister, Sue Roberts of Arp, Texas.
He is the beloved grandfather of six grandchildren, Samantha McGuire, Jessica McGuire, Raleigh McGuire (Keeley McGuire), Jake McGuire, Reid McGuire, and Molli McGuire, and two great granddaughters, Finnley McGuire and Oakleigh McGuire.
Services will be limited to immediate family.
In lieu flowers, please consider a donation to St. Jude's or Tunnels to Towers Foundation.
To extend online condolences to the Wiley family please visit us at www.hixsonbrothers.com.

Pages

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