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Archive for March, 2020

“I want to tell you Gorsuch, I want to tell you Kavanaugh. you have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price. You won’t know what hit you if you go forward with these awful decisions.”

—Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, criticizing Supreme Court justices at a rally last week.

 

“Justices know that criticisms come with the territory, but threatening statements of this sort are not only inappropriate, they are dangerous. All Members of the Court will continue to do their job, without fear or favor, from whatever quarter.”

—Chief Justice John Roberts, in response to Schumer’s inappropriate blurring of the lines of separation of powers.

 

“She’s trying to shame people with perhaps a different view into voting her way, and that’s so inappropriate.”

—Donald Trump, criticizing Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor for her dissenting opinion on the court’s decision to lift an injunction on the administration’s immigrant “public charge” rule.

 

“Everybody says it, but I have a judge who is a hater of Donald Trump, a hater. He’s a hater. His name is Gonzalo Curiel. The judge, who happens to be, we believe, Mexican…”

—Donald Trump, criticizing Indiana-born judge Gonzalo Curiel in a May 2016 campaign speech.

 

“There has rarely been a juror so tainted as the forewoman in the Roger Stone case. Look at her background. She never revealed her hatred of ‘Trump’ and Stone. She was totally biased, as is the judge,”

—Trump tweet criticizing the forewoman and the presiding judge in the trial of Trump ally Roger Stone, Feb. 25, 2020.

 

Crickets.

—Chief Justice Roberts and most, if not all Republican elected officials in Washington.

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That investigation into the death of Kimberly Gail Womack 11 years ago has gone from an accidental fall to an unsolved homicide that, because it has morphed into a “pending investigation,” any records pertaining to the investigation, the coroner’s report, the certificate of death, or the autopsy report are off-limits for public release.

So says Ali Zito Meronek, assistant district attorney for the 18th Judicial District.

LouisianaVoice, pursuant to it story of Feb. 19, made the following public records request of DA Ricky Ward, Jr.:

“The complete file on the investigation of the death of Kimberly Gail Womack (August 1, 2008), DOB: 08/0611959, including, but not limited to:

  • The Certificate of Death;
  • The Autopsy Report;
  • A copy of the Coroner’s Permission to Cremate;
  • A copy of the statute governing the cremation of bodies while a homicide investigation is ongoing;
  • The names of all detectives and/or officers actively involved in the investigation.

If any or all of the requested information is not subject to disclosure, please inform me in writing (as per Louisiana’s Public Records Statute) as to the reason for your denial. Also, please provide an update as to the status of this investigation as of Feb. 19, 2020.”

You can read that story by clicking HERE.

On Feb. 27, we received the following response from Meronek:

“As there was no arrest made in conjunction with this investigation, the District Attorney’s office does not have a file in its possession. Furthermore, if we did have an open file in conjunction with this investigation it is our opinion that none of the record is subject to the public records request, as this is an unsolved case that is still under investigation.

“Additionally, it is our position that there is no exception to this rule that records of pending investigations are exempt from public records requests found in LSA R.S. 44:3 which would apply to you or to the office/ entity requesting these records. Furthermore, as there has been no arrest in conjunction with this investigation of any person to date, there is no portion of the file which is public such as would be the case where there had been the arrest of a person (i.e. initial report, excluding narratives, booking information or bills of information or indictment). The case is classified as pending investigation.”

So, what First Assistant DA Tony Clayton blew off by telling Womack’s daughter Kathryn Simpson of Shreveport that she would “never know” the full story of her mother’s death is now a “pending investigation” of more than 11 years with no arrest or resolution in sight.

This case, folks, is beginning to look more and more like one of those cases authorities hope will just fade away so as to protect a married sheriff’s deputy who was having an affair with Womack. Suddenly, the person who might be considered a person of interest is the one being protected as a potential victim while a murdered woman is hopefully quietly forgotten?

Is this how justice is defined in Louisiana? Sadly, it may well be.

With Womack having suffered a side subdural hematoma from a blunt force trauma to the head as well as multiple fractured ribs and “multiple bruises and abrasions on the upper and lower extremities as well as the midfrontal region of the face,” according to the six-page autopsy report, it would seem that the deputy might have at least been questioned as to his whereabouts at the time of Womack’s death.

That’s not to say he would have been tagged as a suspect or even a person of interest. But that would have generated an investigative file, which the DA conveniently does not have.

It would be of some comfort to Simpson to at least know the Pointe Coupee Sheriff’s Office performed a cursory investigation of the scene. Simpson, for example, was initially told there no were fingernail clippings and scrapings taken from her mother’s body—only to learn later that there were. So, what became of those clippings? Were they tested for DNA? Were any neighbors questioned? Did investigators check for area surveillance cameras?

Instead, all we get from the 18th JDC DA’s office is a terse letter informing us that it has no investigative file—and, apparently, no communications from the Pointe Coupee Parish Sheriff’s Office.

Ms. Simpson would like answers and we believe she’s entitled to receive some.

Eleven years is a long time to wait for the phone to ring.

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“[Vladimir Putin] is not going into Ukraine, OK, just so you understand. He’s not gonna go into Ukraine, all right? You can mark it down. You can put it down.”

—Donald Trump, apparently unaware that Russia had already annexed Crimea in a 2014 intrusion into Ukraine that left thousands dead (July 31, 2016)

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“40 Wall Street actually was the second-tallest building in downtown Manhattan…And now it’s the tallest.”

—Donald Trump, pointing out that his building was now the tallest structure in Manhattan during an interview with a New York TV station following the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center.

 

 

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Donald Trump never passes up an opportunity to point out two facts: U.S. economy is booming and unemployment is at its lowest point in half-a-century.

And he’s correct.

Unless, of course you’re among some of his strongest supporters—those who are not necessarily sharing in the otherwise healthy economy because they can’t find jobs.

That booming economy is booming for the wealthiest of Americans and while more Americans are working, wages are simply not keeping up with the cost of living for the vast majority.

24/7 Wall Street, the survey company that provides statistics on just about everything from the most corrupt states to the best and worst deals on new car purchases to states with the poorest health and highest obesity and worst poverty has listed the worst 50 cities in which to live and the results might be a little surprising to the most ardent Trump supporters.

In all, 17 states are represented among the worst cities in America, which were chosen not for high crime statistics but for median home value, and their unemployment and poverty rates.

Of those 17 states, 12 were states Trump won in 2016 and those 12 states accounted for 41 of the 50 worst cities.

Louisiana had two of the dishonorable mentions: DeRidder, the 41st worst, and Donaldsonville, second only to Yazoo City, Mississippi, as the worst place to live.

As of January, the national five-year unemployment rate was 5.9 percent. In DeRidder, it was 9.6 percent and in Donaldsonville it was a soul-crushing 14.3 percent, more than double the national rate.

Likewise, the poverty rate for DeRidder was 23.6 percent. Donaldsonville’s poverty rate of 39.4 percent was nearly three times the national rate of 14.1 percent.

As a state, Louisiana, which went for Trump over Hillary Clinton by nearly 20 percentage points (58.1 to 38.4), had an unemployment rate of about 4.9 percent.

Florida, which had a whopping 11 cities among the 50 worst, ranking from 6th worst place to live (Poinciana) to 48th worst (West Pensacola). Those 11 had unemployment rates of from 6.9 percent to 19.9 percent and poverty rates of 14.5 percent to 42.4 percent—all above national figures..

Georgia had eight that made the list, ranging rom 3rd worst (Irondale) to 44th worst (Augusta-Richmond County) with unemployment from 6.3 percent to 14.4 percent.

Besides Yazoo City, with its unemployment rate of 20.7 percent and a poverty rate of 42.6 percent making it the worst city in America in which to live, Mississippi had three other cities on the list (Bay St. Louis, Moss Point, and Greenville, 43rd, 46th, and 47th worst, respectively.

Texas had three on the list, as did Arizona. Alabama, North and South Carolina, and Iowa and two each and Ohio and Pennsylvania had one each.

Each of those states went for Trump.

California (4 cities), New Mexico (2) and Nevada, Hawaii and Michigan, with one city each, were the five states voting for Clinton that had cities on the list.

In fact, if you take the 10 states with the highest unemployment rates as of December 2019, you will find that eight of those 10 (Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Louisiana, West Virginia, Mississippi and Alaska) went for Trump while only two (Washington and New Mexico) voted for Clinton.

A most unscientific survey, to be sure, but still, it’s worth pointing out that Trump’s core support appears to be concentrated in pockets of struggling poverty, high unemployment and desperation that seem to be having a difficult time reaping the benefits of the robust economy and 50-year-low unemployment the rest of the country seems to be enjoying.

And even with record low unemployment, seven southern states, each of whom supported Trump, fall in the lower half of the state unemployment rankings, an indication that those states, Louisiana included, have not been swept up at the same pace as the rest of the country.

And yet, they continue their unquestioning loyalty to MAGA and breathlessly hang onto every utterance as if his lies (15,000 and counting) were sent down from Mount Sinai with Moses and the Ten Commandments.

 

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