The Louisiana State Troopers Association (LSTA) has apparently declared war against LouisianaVoice and two of its own retirees who dared voice their objections to campaign contributions by the association that amounts to little more than money laundering.
On Saturday (Feb. 27) we received a copy of a LETTER TO LSTA MEMBERS which, among other things accuses me of “an abysmal lack of journalistic ethics. (I have redacted the names of the two retirees in order to prevent undue pressure on one in his current employment.) While it was not my intention to get into a verbal exchange with LSTA, I feel I must address certain issues raised in the letter.
First of all, and this is important: I did not choose to re-open the subject of training for Trooper Steven Vincent. Nor was it I who initially raised the issue, but a retired state trooper in a letter to Louisiana State Police (LSP) headquarters. I unwisely wrote about the letter but took down the post at the family’s request. Now it appears that LSTA wants to keep the issue alive which raises the question of just who is the insensitive party here. If LSTA wishes to continue the debate over that story, it will have to do so alone. Out of respect for the family’s wishes, I refuse to be drawn into any further discussion of the subject.
As for any “agenda” the LSTA claims I may have, I can only deduce the association is attempting to deflect attention away from its own actions via the time-worn ploy of going after the messenger. For the record, in 40 years of news reporting for several major daily newspapers, I have enjoyed a healthy and professional working relationship with Louisiana State Police—until July 2014. That seems to be when things started going south.
For those who may not remember, that was when Department of Public Safety (DPS) Deputy Secretary and State Police Superintendent Mike Edmonson, through his friend State Sen. Neil Riser (R-Columbia), attempted to sneak through an amendment to an otherwise benign bill on the last day of the legislative session that would have given Edmonson a retirement income boost of about $55,000, something no other state employee has been allowed to do (except for a lone state trooper in Houma who coincidentally fell under the same qualifications as Edmonson). The bill passed and Edmonson seemed well on his way to enhanced retirement riches despite his having made an “irrevocable” decision years earlier to enter into the Deferred Retirement Option Plan (DROP) which froze his retirement at his then-rank of captain.
But a sharp-eyed observer tipped off LouisianaVoice to the deception and we broke the story which was quickly picked up by state and national news publications. http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/jul/16/law-change-boosts-pension-for-state-police-leader/
The letter, most likely written at the direction of State Police Superintendent Mike Edmonson, goes after two retired state troopers who had the audacity to request board minutes, checks, receipts, budgets and tax documents. Edmonson is not on the LSTA board but he nevertheless is closely involved in its activities through board members who work for him.
It is interesting to note that no one person signed off on the letter. It closes with “Respectfully, the LSTA Board of Directors.” So, presumably, every member of the board is a party to the letter which said the board respects the right of members “to question LSTA policies and practices.” At the same time, the letter admitted that the board “voted unanimously not to provide any further information” to the two.
It also said it has not seen a groundswell of support from LSTA membership for the two.
That should seem obvious to anyone who has not been in a coma for the past six months. There has been ample evidence on this blog that LSP administration, rather than addressing serious problems within its organization, has chosen to go after whistleblowers, even to the extent of conducting an audit of state-issued cell phones to determine who has been talking to LouisianaVoice. No active trooper in his right mind would lend vocal support to anyone who questioned activities of LSP or LSTA for fear of reprisals.
The biggest concern to the retirees who have challenged LSTA for its endorsement of John Bel Edwards for governor (the first such endorsement in LSTA’s history), Edmonson’s unsuccessful efforts to get LSTA to write a letter to Edwards after his election pushing for the Edmonson’s reappointment (Edwards did reappoint Edmonson to another term as superintendent, most likely at the urging of the Louisiana Sheriffs’ Association which endorsed him), and the funneling of more than $45,000 in political campaign contributions to several political candidates through LSTA Executive Director David T. Young, who wrote the checks for the contributions on his personal checking account and was later reimbursed by LSTA. https://louisianavoice.com/2015/12/09/more-than-45000-in-campaign-cash-is-funneled-through-executive-director-by-louisiana-state-troopers-association/
Of the more than $45,000 doled out to candidates, $10,500 went to Edwards in 2013, 2014 and 2015. Another $10,250 went to Bobby Jindal in 2003, 2007 and 2011. Edwards has since returned his contributions after his campaign deemed them inappropriate. Jindal has not returned his contributions.
And while the LSTA letter attempts to paint me as lacking in journalistic ethics and while I, as publisher of LouisianaVoice, did report on irregularities within LSP and LSTA, it is important to remember these points:
- I am not the one who tried to manipulate an illegal increase in my retirement income by having an obscure amendment tacked onto a bill in the final hours of the 2014 legislative session.
- I am not the one who secretly laundered campaign contributions through the LSTA executive director’s personal checking account only to “reimburse” him for expenses at a later date.
- I am not the one who denied an accounting of those activities to LSTA members.
- I am not the one who promoted a lieutenant to captain and commander of Troop F after that lieutenant sneaked an underage woman into a casino in Vicksburg and then tried to use his position as a state trooper to bargain his way out of trouble (it didn’t work; he was fined $600 by the Mississippi Gaming Commission).
- I am not the one who chose to mete out only token punishment to a state trooper who was found to have twice had sex with a woman while on duty—once in the rear seat of his patrol car.
- I am not the one who again handed out only a slap on the wrist and then promoted an LSP lieutenant to captain and named him commander of Troop D—after the lieutenant was found to be abusing prescription drugs while on duty and who admitted to flushing extra pills when he learned there was an active investigation into his addiction.
- I am not the one who lied about the Troop D commander’s refusal to take a complaint about one of his troopers from a citizen; I merely posted a recording of his denial after LSP Internal Affairs exonerated the commander following an intensive “investigation.”
- I am not the one who asked LSTA to write a letter of recommendation to Gov.-elect Edwards recommending that Edmonson be reappointed.
- I am not the future State Police superintendent who was disciplined for padding his overtime expenses during a visit to New Orleans by the Pope.
- I am not the one who refused to provide radio logs of a state trooper in LSP Troop D that revealed he was being paid for working when he was, in fact, asleep at home (I received the radio logs from an independent source but again, the records speak for themselves).
- I am not the one who took an early retirement buyout of about $59,000 only to return to work for LSP the very next day—with a promotion.
- Nor am I the one who ignored a directive from then-Commissioner of Administration Angéle Davis to repay the money, only to have the problem mysteriously go away when the daughter of Paul Rainwater, Davis’s successor, was given a job at LSP.
- I am not the one who is responsible for that same retire/rehire having her son-in-law on LSP payroll as an employee of the State Police Oil Spill Commission—at the very time he was working offshore for a private firm.
- I am not the one who hired Senate President John Alario’s wife who somehow manages to supervise LSP personnel in Baton Rouge—from her home in Westwego—at $56,300 per year.
- Nor am I the one who hired Alario’s son, John W. Alario, as director of the DPS Liquefied Petroleum Gas Commission at $95,000 per year.
No, I am not the one responsible for any of these things; I merely reported them. But the LSTA board must possess sufficient intelligence to understand that each of these things is a matter of public record and that I could never have carried out any vendetta, perceived or otherwise, against LSP unless what I wrote was accurate.
LSTA, in its letter to its membership, accuses me of taking “uncorroborated information at face value, never question the motivation of the source, and offer it for public consumption without ever seeking to determine its truthfulness.” They know better.
I invite the LSTA board to cite a single instance of my reporting anything that was “uncorroborated” either by public records or by interviews with multiple sources.
I also invite the actual author if the LSTA letter to come forward and identify himself and not hide behind the anonymous sobriquet of “LSTA Board of Directors.”



You’d think they would quit poking the hornet’s nest because everytime they do, Tom stings them. Here is how I read the letter.
Dear Everyone:
We did all this just for you and it frankly hurts our feelings that we aren’t being praised about it. And it’s not our fault, it’s the fault of the Members for not complaining when we did it.
Now, we will Circle the wagons because mean people didn’t keep this hidden. The Board is the real victim here and we want the Members to hate those malcontents as we do so we can put this all behind us.
Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain as he is only reviewing electronic records so we can identify any whistle blowers.
Love and kisses,
Your hard working, dedicated, selfless, unappreciated, honorable Board. (Rbj)
Wow. It’s unbelievable that they act like you are the bad guy. God forbid they hold their own people accountable for their BS. Blame the messenger.
It amazes me how corrupted Louisiana law enforcement and officials are
John Bel,
I realize that you are currently consumed, as you should be, by trying to recover from the jindal budget disaster. On the other hand, one of your staff can take care of this if you will just authorize them to do it.
I think you only have two choices to maintain the credibility of your pledge to comply with the West Point Honor Code:
1. Tell Edmonson in words that he can’t misunderstand that he must immediately stop the actions Tom has documented and fix the things he can. Or option two will be required.
2. Fire him because his continuation of these actions on your watch, and his refusal to fix what he could of his prior inappropriate actions, has embarrassed you and breached any agreement you had with the Sheriff’s Association.
Either option would be pointless. Edwards knows he has 46 months remaining as governor and, with re-election off the table, he’s just going to open the drunk tank wide open to handsomely reward those who put him in power. Why do you think he is complaining about the 18-month rollback of the one cent sales tax increase? He needs that money to keep flowing in so he can honor commitments he made to reward his supporters with lucrative consulting contracts and similar paybacks. If you think he is going to touch Edmonson or buck the LSA in any way, you’re sadly mistaken! Everybody involved, especially Edmonson, is just content to make hay while the sun is shining and bilk the taxpayers for the very type of cronyism Tom itemizes above.
You seem quick to suggest that Edwards has already given up. We haven’t even completed the Special Session yet.
Certainly he has realized that the mess that Jindal and his successful implementation of Conservative policies has left us is bigger than anyone knew. I just hope that the $2B slap in the face that the legislature has received will jolt enough of them back toward fiscal reality and responsibility.
Edwards is caught between a rock and a hard place, and he knows it. Buck Edmonson, the LSA, and others, and his infrastructure for getting where he is turns on him, thus making the task of raising funds for re-election near impossible. Stick with Edmonson, the LSA, and others and get the same type rap Jindal got for cronyism and, combined with Edwards’ insatiable desire for tax hikes, he’s guaranteed to be toast in 2019. He has little choice but to put up with Edmonson and crew and their antics because he is their puppet. Bottom line: Edwards is out on the streets in 2020, and he knows it.
Only time will tell if your analysis of Edward’s future is accurate.
On the other hand I have a question about one critical sounding phrase: “…Edwards’ insatiable desire for tax hikes”. The budget experts tell us that jindal left us $900M short this year and $2B next year and each following year. Stephen Winham in an earlier LouisianaVoice post documented in some detail that there are no where near $2B in state General Fund cuts that can be made. And many possible cuts would be multiplied in their impact by the loss of Federal matching funds.
On the other hand, business taxes have been cut more than 70% in the last 8 years. According to Bob Mann, the wealthy pay a lower percentage of their income in taxes than the middle class and poor. And all these tax cut for the supposed job makers have resulted in very few new jobs in our state. It seems to me that we should begin our recovery from jindal’s failed Conservative economic principles by RESTORING tax rates for business and the wealthy to pre-jindal levels and immediately stopping ALL Corporate Welfare.
Do you have some other way to get out of the Jindal fiscal swamp?
All I ever see state troopers do is man speed traps and hang out at construction ateas. They are useless.
I’m afraid I don’t agree with your comment about state police. While I have my problems with LSP administration, the rank and file for the most part, do a good job. I cannot agree with your comment that state police are “useless” in light of the fatal shooting of Trooper Steven Vincent last year as he was attempting to help a motorist who had run off the road. He was killed by the very person he was trying to help.
State police have the unenviable duty of notifying parents when a teenager is killed in a traffic accident—a job I certainly would not want. They try to keep drunk drivers off the roads and they work hard to stop human trafficking. They are invaluable in keeping order during emergencies like hurricanes and other disasters.
And they “hang out” at construction areas because so many irresponsible and/or drunk drivers would otherwise barrel through the construction zones with little regard for the lives of workers or of their own safety. Some drivers, it seems, need someone to babysit them and it falls to state troopers to perform that task, boring though it most often is.
So to use a blanket statement like “useless” on the entire agency is, I believe, not only inaccurate, but unfair and a disservice to those who take their oath seriously. The problem with LSP, simply put, is at the top, not with the rank and file troopers whom I respect and admire.
Simply put, you cannot paint any group, including state police, with the same broad brush. Without law enforcement, there would be anarchy. You would do well to reconsider your rash characterization of them as “useless.”
You know you’re on the right track when you ruffle the feathers of a rooster so much he has to crow so loudly against you. Silence the messenger? Not a chance. We know you’ll keep the flow of information coming, Tom.
The saddest part of this saga as that those who are so aggrieved at the reporting of such grievous misdeeds are the very people charged with upholding and enforcing the law. Unless of course, they are the ones breaking them (or at least skirting rules and requirements that may not carry the weight of law, just ethics and decency).
When caught with their hands in the cookie jar, the bad guys always blame the media for their problems. Which entity do we trust? The reporter or the transgressors?
Another chapter in the ongoing corruption and control of Louisiana subtitled “Louisiana, The State We are”.
Keep it up Tom, we depend on you for information regarding our government, that would otherwise be under reported, or not reported, the rank and file LST are doing a good job, and I have the utmost respect for them but unfortunately, there is an entitlement attitude at the top, and it will be very hard to change…..the only thing that will change it is “we the people” when we get sick and tired of the status quo, we might be heard….I said might!
I believe that the LSTA letter writer is obtuse. Cut through the fluff rants and think about this admission of guilt in the letter; “Indeed, any member has had more than a decade to object to the use of Association funds for political contributions.”
LSTA is supposed to have a board made up of ethical members who are also knowledgeable of Louisiana laws. So they admit to committing illegal acts surreptitiously to accomplish an annual task which they knew was against the law for at least 10-years.
I hope everyone takes sides with the officers of the LSP. They help many people every day. Tickets are annoying, but simply part of life.
Tom, keep on kicking the jerks and congratulations on being called only a blogger and not a journalist.
Bob Mhoon
Arlington, TX