It’s the story that won’t die, no matter how the Runaway Governor (apologies to Julia Roberts) would like it to.
While Gov. Bobby Jindal may go running off to Iowa or New Hampshire or Washington, D.C., or wherever his latest odyssey takes him in his futile attempt at resuscitation of his moribund presidential aspirations while ducking his responsibilities at home, folks like political curmudgeon C.B. Forgotston and State Treasurer John Kennedy just won’t go away.
Instead, Kennedy is staying home and demanding answers to the nagging problem of the Edmonson Amendment that Jindal so obligingly signed into law as Act 859, giving State Police Superintendent Mike Edmonson that $55,000 bump in retirement income.
Act 859, which began as a bland, nondescript bill by Sen. Jean-Paul Morrell (D-New Orleans) that addressed procedures in cases where law enforcement officers are under investigation, quietly turned into a retirement bonanza for Edmonson.
That happened when State Sen. Neil Riser (R-Columbia) inserted language into a Conference Committee amendment to the bill that allows Edmonson and one other state trooper in Houma to revoke their decisions of several years ago to enter into the Deferred Retirement Option Plan (DROP) which gave them higher take home pay but froze their retirements at their pay level at the time of their decision.
In Edmonson’s case, his payment was frozen at 100 percent of his $79,000 a year captain’s pay but Act 859 allows him a do-over and to act as though all that never happened so that he can retire at 100 percent of his $134,000 per year colonel’s pay instead.
Other state troopers, teachers and civil service employees who made similar decisions, meanwhile, are stuck with their decisions because….well, sorry, but this is special for Col. Mike Edmonson Esq. Swank. Riff raff need not apply.
The Louisiana State Police Retirement System (LSPRS) board is scheduled to receive a special report by Florida attorney Robert Klausner, an acknowledged authority on public retirement plans, and local attorney Denise Akers at its Sept. 4 meeting but Kennedy isn’t waiting that long.
As State Treasurer, Kennedy holds a seat on the LSPRS board and he has repeatedly voiced his concern over the amendment which he says could put enormous strain on LSPRS if other retired state police officers file suit to obtain similar consideration as Edmonson.
He has claimed the board has a fiduciary responsibility to file suit to overturn the new law that Jindal so hastily signed.
A group of retired state troopers also has signaled its willingness to enter into litigation to get the law overturned.
Both Kennedy and the retired troopers contend the law is unconstitutional because it was not properly advertised in advance of its passage.
“Talking points” originating in State Police headquarters by Capt. Jason Starnes and sent to Edmonson, his Chief of Staff Charles Dupuy, and—for whatever reason—Louisiana Gaming Control Board Chairman Ronnie Jones, said the bill was properly advertised but because the bill in its original form in no way addressed retirement issues, that claim appears rather weak, especially given the fact that state police should be more skilled in producing hard evidence to back their cases.
The additional fact that the amendment never made its appearance until the last day of the session even though it had been discussed weeks before adds to the cloud of suspicion and wholesale chicanery enveloping Jindal, Riser, Edmonson, and Dupuy.
And Kennedy, who already has fired off two previous letters to LSPRS Executive Director Irwin Felps demanding a full investigation of the rogue amendment, now has written a third.
That letter, dated today (Aug. 13), while much shorter than the others, loses no time in getting right to the point: Kennedy is demanding under the state’s public records statutes (La. R.S. 44:31, et seq.) that Felps provide him a copy of the report generated by Klausner and/or Akers.
“Please immediately email the document(s) requested to me,” he wrote. “If you cannot or will not email them, please immediately inform me, and I will send a representative to your office to pick them up right away.”
Here is the link to his letter: Treasurer Kennedy Public Records Request to Irwin Felps August 13 2014
His letter sets the stage for a probable showdown between Kennedy and the rest of the board given the fact that Felps has previously denied Kennedy’s informal request for the report.
Felps said following Kennedy’s initial request, he was advised by legal counsel (most probably Akers) to release the report to the board members but not to the general public. He added that he expected Kennedy will have the report Thursday morning.
“I don’t know why the big cloak and dagger that they won’t share with the board,” Kennedy told the New Orleans Times-Picayune. http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2014/08/john_kennedy_demands_state_pol.html#incart_river
“I’m a board member and I’m entitled to it. They can’t tell me I can’t see it,” Kennedy said. “This is a very important issue and it’s not just limited to state police. We have thousands of employees in the retirement system (who) didn’t get this treatment.
“I just want to see a report that I asked for and the board asked for. It is a public document.”
Kennedy should know better. LouisianaVoice has already received its comeuppance from the House and Senate, both of which have refused to comply with our request for copies of emails and text messages between the six Conference Committee members who approved the amendment and Jindal, Edmonson or any of their staff members.
Even though such discussions would have fallen under the narrowest of definitions of public business, we were told the public has no business peeking over legislators’ shoulders to see what they’re doing and to please just butt out.
LSPRS board Chairman Frank Besson, president of the Louisiana State Troopers Association, told the Times-Picayune in a statement (prepared as talking points by Starnes, perhaps?) that he felt it would be “inappropriate and premature” for the board to take a position on Act 859 until it heard the attorneys’ report.
Uh, Trooper Besson, would that be more or less “inappropriate” than passing a secretive bill in the final hours of the session to benefit one person (well, two, since one other trooper fell within the strictly limited parameters of the bill’s language) while no one was looking?
Just as a reminder, it’s going to be difficult to get the board off dead center on this issue considering the board’s 11-person membership is comprised of four active troopers, Commissioner of Administration Kristy Nichols and one of Jindal’s legislative puppets, State Sen. Elbert Guillory (R/D/R-Opelousas), chairman of the Senate Retirement Committee (you can almost see Jindal’s lips move when he talks).
Just in case you lost count, that’s six members that Jindal and Edmonson control—and that’s a majority.
Folks, it’s looking more and more like that group of retired state troopers is going to have to make good on that threat to file a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the act.



Awesome!
FBI. Public Corruption Unit. All the shenanigans; the Edmonson Affair is just one more item in a continuum of corruption.
When Louisianavoice brought this to the attention of all I said this would be fixed where it will never happen again so I believe they will “fix it” to avoid it ever being repeated. I still believe this will be the “fix” for this error by the legislature and the governor leaving no recourse to state employees including troopers and retirees, but to be put out to hang, dry or just blowing in the wind
In other word don’t call us we’ll call you. Right!
File that suit — yes, if you have to. But no matter what, like earthmother says above, refer this to the FBI Public Corruption Unit.
Will the local FBI office do anything if the local U.S. Attorney won’t do anything?
No. If the U.S. attorney won’t prosecute, the FBI can do nothing.
And THAT is a great concern!! After all, somehow, someway, the U. S. Attorney didn’t mind making utter and TOTAL fools of themselves (and flushing somewhere in the neighborhood of $800,000 – $1 million in taxpayer money, not to mention another $300,000 in defense costs) serving as Bobby Jindal’s attack dogs for Murphy Painter. The jury correctly saw it for what it was: a witch hunt orchestrated by Jindal (I mean, seriously? prosecuting a man for looking up two addresses to send two brothers sympathy cards upon the passing of their mother??? — PLEASE!!). Walt Green, U. S. Attorney (interim at the time of the trial) tried to put the best spin he could in television interviews after the 12-0 acquittal vote (which only took six hours – I’m surprised they needed more than one hour), but that trial had to rank as one of the most embarrassing episodes I’ve EVER witnessed, but the key is it was “all done in the name of Bobby Jindal!”
Our rulers like being our rulers, and hate having to ‘splain what they do and why.
Keep doggin’ this, Tom.
Great column in today’s Advocate by James Gill, who gives Tom and C.B. much credit for keeping legs on this story: http://theadvocate.com/home/9984066-55/james-gill-edmonsons-gift-for .
Corruption at it’s finest! What a bunch of sleaze bags…
Off topic (other than state employees getting screwed over again) but has anyone visited the LFO site today? The proposed changes to our group benefits are explained. Ouch! Can someone boost my pension so I can afford the increases?
@Tom Aswell
The FBI has a major section devoted to investigating pubic corruption. When appropriate, after their investigations are complete, they turn their findings over to a US Attorney. Then the US Attorney decides whether to prosecute. So it has to start with the FBI.
Maybe one day the legislatures will realize that they can’t go by made up presentations.
Too many people spend money they haven’t earned, to buy things they don’t want, to impress people that they don’t like.
Will Rogers
[…] John Kennedy and the state’s news media (including dogged bloggers C.B. Forgotston and Tom Aswell) challenged the propriety of the deal, no one seemed to know where the amendment originated. After […]