Rampant drug deals, police officers taking McDonald’s lunches to the police chief’s son at school, a fundraiser that reportedly raised $50,000 for a wounded officer which he never received, and termination of a department officer who only tried to do his job.
Just another day at the Jennings Police Department.
But every now and then, the good guys win one.
Christopher Lehman, a retired Navy veteran and a resident of Jennings, has reached a confidential SETTLEMENT believed to be in the six-figure settlement range with the City of Jennings and its former Police Chief for wrongful termination.
Lehman, who also is a retired federal government civilian employee, joined the Jennings Police Department in June 2013 as a community services coordinator after having reported suspicious activity on his street beginning back in 2011.
His duties with the Jennings PD included overseeing the city’s Neighborhood Watch program.
And his troubles began when he started watching his own neighborhood as a representative of JPD.
And someone didn’t like it so, in December 2015, he was suspended.
Generally, law enforcement officials are quick to tell you, “If you see something, say something.”
But it appears others don’t want people rocking the boat or airing the city’s dirty laundry, i.e. the proliferation of illegal—and unrestrained—drug activity. In short, upstaging the local police chief. And saying something can sometimes get you fired.
Remember: Jennings is in Jefferson Davis Parish and Jefferson Davis Parish is where the murders of eight prostitutes between 2005 and 2009 remains unsolved to this day. The victims were said to have been heavily involved in the area’s drug culture, the issue that was—and remains—at the center of Lehman’s termination.
Lehman, you see, took his duties seriously and when he began reporting suspected drug trafficking on Isabelle Street, his days as a member of the Jennings Police Department were numbered.
It just so happens that Lehman resides on Isabelle Street, so he had an up-close look at the activity on the dead-end street. Some days, as many as 100 vehicles made their way to the end of the street where a couple resided in a dilapidated mobile home that, it would turn out, was in violation of a number of local building codes.
None of the cars turning into the driveway of the trailer stayed more than a few minutes and when a suspicious Lehman installed a high-tech surveillance camera to record the comings and goings, his career at Jennings PD went south in a hurry.
Add to that atmosphere the fact that then-Police Chief Todd D’Albor, who referred to Lehman as his department’s “token nigger,” according to the sworn CLAUDE GUILLORY AFFIDAVIT, a 27-year veteran of the Jennings PD, and you have a department with internal problems.
Former officer Debbie Breaux testified in her SWORN DEPOSITION, that D’Albor would make her shuttle his son to and from school and to take his lunch to him at school each day. She also would take the city mower to the chief’s home so he could cut his grass (at least he didn’t have her perform that chore).
“I knew it was all wrong and I shouldn’t have been doing it,” she said in her deposition of Oct. 29, 2018, “but what was I supposed to do? He was the chief, he told me to do it. I have no protection. I’m not civil service. He could have fired me on the spot.”
And then there is the case of officer RICKY BENOIT, shot in the neck while responding to a domestic disturbance call in 2014..
Chief D’Albor spearheaded a skeet shoot and silent auction on Benoit’s behalf and reportedly raised about $50,000.
Problem is, Benoit says he never received a penny of the benefit money.
But it was the deposition of Jennings officer CHRIS WALLACE that proved to be really eye-opening. His testimony, along with that of Debbie Breaux and the affidavits of Guillory and Priscilla Goodwin, most probably convinced the city to settle Lehman’s case before it got to an open courtroom. It was Goodwin who revealed that D’Albor’s attitude toward Lehman changed after complaints that he was photographing vehicles on his street he suspected of being involved in drug dealings in the trailer at the end of the street.
Negotiated settlements in the conference room of a law office, after all, can keep a lot of embarrassing testimony from the public’s eyes and ears.
And a confidential settlement, as this was, helps keep the lid on the actual amount of the settlement and keeps any admission of fault out of the official record, as well.
Which is precisely why we’re seeing more and more confidential settlements of lawsuits that should be very public. It is, after all, public money that is being negotiated in these settlements and the public has a right to have every cent accounted for.
Instead, realizing it was about to get burned severely, both financially and in a public relations sense, the city decided to capitulate—as it should—with a confidential settlement—as it should not.
And the settlement amount does not even include the thousands and thousands of dollars spent on Douget Court Reporters for no fewer than 10 sworn depositions, attorney fees for Baton Rouge attorney Erlingson Banks, representing the city, as well as the cost of numerous court filings—all because D’Albor, who displayed a sign on his desk that read, “I am the alpha male—I am the Lion,” told Guillory when Lehman persisted in trying to expose suspected drug deals on his street, “I’m getting rid of our token nigger.”
D’Albor is no longer heading up the Jennings Police Department. He is now Police Chief of New Iberia, a city with its own law-enforcement problems, thanks in no small part to Iberia Parish Sheriff Louis Ackal.
Meanwhile, the drug deals continue, the murders of the Jeff Davis 8 remains unsolved, and the benefit money raised for officer Benoit remains unaccounted for.
And the circle just keeps going ‘round.
Shouldn’t the settlement cost to the city of Jennings be contained in its public Budget? Or did an insurance company pay the settlement? I hope you, Mr. Aswell, the “Alpha Male” of FOI filings, will once again work your magic and let the citizens of Jennings (and now New Iberia) know what a liability D’Albor is when in your employ.
I’m shocked I tell you that such shenanigans are going on in our lovely State in the year 2019.
Tha is some seriously crazy Sh it.
Sadly, the police corruption in Jennings did not start with D’Albor. The reign of sexual harassment, discrimination, moral bankruptcy and some pretty freaky stuff was rampant years before.
Corruption runs rampid in JDP. Read this…
http://www.lulu.com/shop/blake-mitchell/unfiltered-view-jefferson-davis-parish/ebook/product-22191062.html
Thank you Tom! Once again, you have noted the one “lesson” that must be learned. Public officials spending public moneys must not reach confidential agreements. Ever. Where is the Legislature that will pass such a law, and a Governor to sign it? Sadly, not LA.
And now in New Iberia of all places. Read James Lee Burke’s newest novel, The New Iberia Blues.
Unbelievable! But then I remember: it’s LOUISIANA! Corruption rampant all over the state. Do you still allow the sheriff of each parish to appoint positions right down to the dog catcher? That one practice created a culture of corruption when I lived in Louisiana. This kind of thing seldom happens in Arizona and when it does the culprit is not likely to be an elected official. It’s more likely to be a hired financial director in a school district who directs money into his own account. And because of regular audits these guys always eventually get caught.
Hate this place! They ruined my life all because (I feel) they wanted to pin something on my uncle. There was no need for them to put me in all that crap the way they did. And now In order to be able to have a decent job and raise my children without the knowledge of what I was arrested for I’ve moved far away from Jennings. Still to this day I’m scared to even get pulled over in that town. Sad when your terrified of the people that are supposed to serve and protect you.
I am a little late, but talks about you are everywhere. I heard you name in a podcast. Then saw it on reddit and web sleuths, seems as though news has travelled.
What’s amazing is this man is chief in new Iberia! Did they not check his background? Guess not being he couldn’t keep a job at one place that long! And now I hear about people getting fired from the police force for one reason and he only promotes those that worked with him at Jennings police
Based on Tom’s previous posts, he apparently landed in exactly the right parish.
I recommend watching Showtime’s documentary on the Jeff Davis 8, called “Murder Bayou.” Apparently once you’re part of law enforcement or the power structure in Louisiana, nothing you do will exclude you from those circles. Whew! Scary.
After watching “Dateline”’s expose of Jennings PD stopping out of state travelers for any excuse (including Dateline’s camera-fitted vehicle) to seize anything they could get their hands on in the Asset Forfeiture law, & after seeing the INCREDIBLY suspect behavior of JPD during the Jeff Davis 8 investigation on Showtimes documentary “Murder Bayou”—nothing on earth would convince me to visit Louisiana. It appears corrupt all the way to the top & no amount of suspicious behavior seems to dislodge these people from power. I’d rather have to deal with the Mafia. They seem more careful not to hurt civilians than the JPD.