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Who the hell is protecting our children?

  • The former sheriff of St. Tammany Parish has been sentenced to four life sentences after being convicted on four counts of aggravated rape, two counts of aggravated incest and one count of sexual battery and indecent behavior with a juvenile.
  • A Hammond police officers has been arrested for sex crimes against a juvenile.
  • At almost the same time, a St. Tammany deputy sheriff was arrested for possession of kiddie porn and sexual abuse involving animals.
  • A former Ascension Parish deputy spent time in jail after his arrest for attempted child pornography possession. Soon after he was paroled, he became a fugitive after becoming wanted on three counts of carnal knowledge of a juvenile, computer-aided solicitation of a minor, and unlawful use of social media in his solicitation of a teenage boy in another parish.

JACK STRAIN, former sheriff of St. Tammany Parish, will die in prison for his actions that spanned four decades.

BRAD CORE’S fate remains to be seen since he has yet to be arraigned. A former Hammond police officer, he was arrested Wednesday night on charges of sexual battery, oral sexual battery, carnal knowledge of a juvenile, and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

A deputy with the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office since 2006, CHRISTOPHER CASSIDY faces 28 counts of possession of pornography involving children under the age of 13 and 110 counts of sexual abuse involving animals. Word of Cassidy’s arrest actually popped up in my computer as I was writing this post.

Former Ascension deputy sheriff ERIC TRIPP was fired in 2013 for attempted kiddie porn and indecent behavior with a juvenile. Convicted, he was sent to prison and released on parole in 2019 only to become a fugitive in 2020. The Sorrento native was captured in South Carolina.

And then there is the sordid story of former Livingston Parish deputy sheriff DENNIS PERKINS and his schoolteacher wife Cynthia.

For those who don’t know that sick story, Perkins was head of the LPSO SWAT team who was indicted, along with his wife, on a combined 150 counts, including first-degree rape, attempted rape, sexually battery of a child under the age of thirteen, video voyeurism, mingling harmful substances, obscenity, possession of child pornography, producing child pornography and sexually abusing a dog.

It’s not that there were no red flags before his being hired by the sheriff’s office even though he had resigned from the Walker Police Department after admitting to theft of merchandise from a local store.

Cynthia eventually COPPED A PLEA a plea and received a 41-year sentence.

And if you think Louisiana is unique, think again. Following are a few headlines from around the U.S. You can click on the headline to read the entire stories if you have the stomach for such.

Former Newport school resource officer accused of lewd conduct, sexual abuse of a minor

Chicago Police Officer Charged With Sexual Abuse of a Minor

 

Togiak Police Officer Arrested for Sexual Abuse of a Minor

There are more, plenty more. You can google “cops sexually abusing minors” yourself if you wish.

These are people we appoint or elect to protect us and our families.

I know, I know, these are the exceptions. The typical law enforcement officer would never think of committing such heinous acts.

But do we know that for certain? How are these people screened and vetted for their positions? Are sufficient background checks run on every applicant? How did Dennis Perkins get hired by the sheriff’s department when he had resigned from a municipal police department in Livingston Parish almost in spitting distance from the sheriff’s office?

It’s bad enough when state troopers, sheriffs’ deputies and city cops beat the living hell out of some poor dude they’ve arrested for possession of a joint, but when you add sexual abuse of children to the equation, that compounds the problem.

Yes, these monsters are exceptions, but we cannot allow these exceptions to worm their way into our law enforcement agencies with such ease. Too much is at stake to let some political friend’s son or brother in just because of who he is.

We have seen the manner in which the sons of state police administrators and the sons of sheriffs are welcomed into the Louisiana State Police Academy and we’ve seen the results of that practice. We’ve seen pals hired as deputy sheriffs and we got Dennis Perkins as a result.

We cannot afford such slipshod methods of hiring cops. Our children are far too valuable to risk their safety and their innocence to such barbaric predators.

For all those wonderful, warm supporters of Agent Orange down in Mar-A-Lago who were so quick to brand me as a communist whenever I dared to criticize any treasonous actions by the former guy, I offer this in rebuttal: https://news.yahoo.com/trump-praises-putins-genius-incursion-into-ukraine-234001858.html

And this: https://www.npr.org/2022/02/22/1082478790/trump-praises-putin-as-savvy-amid-new-escalations-on-russia-ukraine-border

And this: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/analysis-donald-trump-sides-with-vladimir-putin-as-joe-biden-tries-to-stop-a-war/ar-AAUbFqd

And this: https://news.yahoo.com/while-donald-trump-praises-vladimir-140025863.html

More? https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-calls-putin-genius-and-savvy-for-ukraine-invasion/ar-AAUdce8

I’ve got plenty: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/feb/23/trump-putin-genius-russia-ukraine-crisis

You get the idea. Your hero has once again proven himself to be Putin’s lackey that we all knew he was. Well, “we” being a relative term. Some, about 40 percent of Americans, refused to believe such a thing.

Never mind that the Republican Party was supposed to be the conservative, anti-communist bulwark of American politics and those Hillary-loving Democrats were the ones who were giving the country away to the commies.

For the record, I have never been affiliated with nor sympathetic to communism but I do know the difference between capitalism, socialism, and communism. The fact that I support programs that benefit people doesn’t attach any label to me other than perhaps humanitarian and to that, I plead guilty.

But an inconvenient statistic for those who think the Repugnantcan Party is the answer to all our woes can be found in a recent WALLETHUB survey. The reddest states, those with the most avid supporters of the former guy, are the states most beholden to Washington.

New Mexico is the state that is most dependent upon the federal government and it is a blue state. The next nine are all red states. That’s correct: the reddest states, those with the most avid supporters of the former guy, are the states most beholden to Washington. Kinda hard to square that up with the drain the swamp philosophy when you are the swamp, isn’t it?

Here are the states, in order, most dependent on the Washington teat, in order:

Alaska, fourth-highest in both state government and state residents’ dependency;

Mississippi, third-highest in government and seventh-highest in residents’ dependency;

Kentucky, eighth-highest in government and fifth-highest in resident’s dependency (where y’at, Mitch and Rand Paul?)

West Virginia, 12th-highest in government and second-highest in residents’ dependency;

Montana, 14th-highest in government and second-highest in residents’ dependency;

Arizona, 10th-highest in government and seventh-highest in residents’ dependency;

Indiana, eighth-highest in government and 11th-highest in residents’ dependency;

South Carolina, 17th-highest in government and 6th-highest in residents’ dependency (hello, Lindsey Graham);

Louisiana, the highest in government and 24t- lowest in residents’ dependency (any comment, John Kennedy?)

Oh, and just in case you need more evidence that the red states seem to be the ones needing the most federal help, here’s a look at state economic RANKINGS which show Louisiana firmly entrenched near the bottom (49th).

But of course, I digress from my MAIN POINT and that is the crickets emanating from the corner over there where the former guy’s supporters usually congregate to throw stones at and otherwise troll this site.

But then, they’ve been relatively quiet for some time now.

As a follow-up to the ongoing – and expanding – Ronald Greene saga, it was recently disclosed that State Police cell phones were erased, or “sanitized” en masse in accordance with some obscure policy that had never been invoked prior to last July.

It’s more than a little interesting to note that this policy was suddenly put into place just as the investigation into the beating death of Greene on May 10, 2019

“Prior to July 2021,” Louisiana State Police (LSP) said in response to a public records request by former attorney Ashton O’Dwyer, “LSP did not have a policy specific to sanitizing phones when they were returned to the Department from employees (emphasis mine). At that time, pursuant to Section II, I, (2) of the DPS Property Control Procedure Manual, LSP followed the State Office of Technology Services policy, which requires the sanitization of all state employee assigned phones upon their return to each respective state department under the Office of Technology Services. Both policies are attached for your review and provide for the sanitization of data from electronic devices.”

Those words in boldface are critical. Phones are generally “returned” only upon separation from duty (retirement, resignation, termination) or when newer upgraded phones are purchased and even then, the data is required to be transferred to any new phone assigned the individual.

There’s just one little problem with that. Lt. Col. Doug Cain, the second in command and one in position to steer the direction of the investigation into Greene’s death, also had his phone “sanitized.”

And he has not resigned, retired or otherwise terminated his employment with LSP.

Just sayin’.

In Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men, Willie Stark’s gubernatorial campaign against state government corruption gets an unexpected – and unwanted – assist by the tragic collapse of an elementary school fire escape that resulted in several children’s deaths.

In the case of former New Orleans attorney Ashton O’Dwyer, his 16-year crusade against corruption in the ranks of Louisiana State Police got an unexpected – and unwanted – assist with the beating death of Ronald Greene in May 2019, and the two-year coverup that followed.

In each case, it took an unnecessary tragedy to bring about some semblance of justice.

To refresh, O’Dwyer was safely ensconced in his home in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina back in August 2005. In fact, he even hosted visiting news reporters in his upscale home on St. Charles Avenue, which was not threatened with the massive flooding that hit much of New Orleans.

But that didn’t matter to STATE POLICE  who yanked him up only minutes after midnight on Aug. 30 and threw him into a holding pen where he was brutalized by goons from State Police Troop F in Monroe. He might have had a good case against his captors, but he managed to make the wrong people uncomfortable and the end result was his firing by the prestigious law firm Lemie and Kelleher where he had worked for 35 years, specializing in admiralty and maritime law, and his ultimate disbarment.

All of which just shows what can happen when you cross the wrong people and a lot of people who stood to gain from the tragedy of Katrina found O’Dwyer both an uncomfortable liability and expendable with his Katrina victims’ class-action lawsuit.

But in May 2019, Ronald Greene was killed by overzealous thugs from Troop F and the coverup began in earnest – a coverup that would ultimately vindicate Ashton O’Dwyer who had been telling us about Troop F and State Police high command all along.

Let’s begin with the governor. Gov. John Bel Edwards’s Deputy Chief of Staff, Christina Stephens, released a statement that was reported by WDSU on Feb. 1, 2022, saying: “The Governor first learned of the serious allegations against the Louisiana State Police surrounding the arrest and death of Mr. Ronald Greene in September 2020.”

Yet, we now know that Edwards spoke with then-State Police Superintendent Kevin Reeves only nine hours following Greene’s death – on MAY 10. In that conversation, Reeves told Edwards that Greene died as the result of “a violent struggle” at the end of a police chase through two parishes and that they were “investigating” the event.

Reeves abruptly retired when allegations against State Police finally came to light some 16 months later. And body cam video which State Police insisted for more than a year did not exist suddenly surfaced that showed in graphic detail just how aggressive State Police can be with a black motorist. Yes, Greene fled police, taking them on a high-speed chase but once he surrendered, he was subjected to inhumane – and fatal – beatings and tasing.

Following Reeves’s departure, Col. Mike Noel was up for the directorship of the State Gaming Control Board. But realizing he would be subjected to some tough grilling on the Greene matter during his conformation hearing, he chose to follow Reeves into retirement.

Finally, we learn that all the cell phones of the fired and retiring troopers even peripherally connected to the Greene Case had been “sanitized,” or in more familiar vernacular, erased.

This was according to state policy, it was explained, but overlooked was the fact that these phones may have – quite likely, in fact – contained evidence relative to the case. Thus, their “sanitization” was tantamount to obstruction of justice – by State Police, no less.

O’Dwyer made a public records request to State Police for any policy governing the erasure of cell phones and received the following response from State Police:

Prior to July 2021, LSP did not have a policy specific to sanitizing phones when they were returned to the Department from employees. At that time, pursuant to Section II, I, (2) of the DPS Property Control Procedure Manual, LSP followed the State Office of Technology Services policy, which requires the sanitization of all state employee assigned phones upon their return to each respective state department under the Office of Technology Services. Both policies are attached for your review and provide for the sanitization of data from electronic devices. 

All DPS/LSP phones turned in prior to July 2021 were sanitized pursuant to this policy. To the extent that the OTS policy provided for the sanitization, these sanitizations were not at the direction of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections- Public Safety Services. However, that being said, LSP concedes that although sanitizations did take place during that time period pursuant to the OTS policy, LSP did not maintain the requisite logs required by the policy. As such, LSP maintains no documents related to sanitizations conducted on employee phones prior to July 2021. (Emphasis mine)

O’Dwyer, in an email, said, “Sometime between [May 10, 2019] and July 2021, when the “new” Superintendent of the LSP, Colonel Davis, established a specific LSP policy for dealing with phones used by LSP personnel, including the BRASS, the phones of the BRASS were “erased,” “sanitized,” or “wiped” CLEAN of evidence pertaining to the Greene investigation. I call THAT “obstruction of justice.”

Obstruction in much the same manner in which the powers that be conspired to make a skilled attorney look like a raving lunatic as a means of shutting him up and taking away his livelihood.

And while they were successful in taking away his livelihood, they have found the task of shutting him up a bit more formidable.

And he’s certainly no lunatic. Ashton O’Dwyer is probably smarter than most of his adversaries. He just doesn’t have friends in the right places and now he doesn’t have the financial resources to fight back.

All this just because he didn’t want to leave his home.

The news out of Baton Rouge last week was certainly uplifting insofar as local health care and medical research is concerned, but also fodder for critics of an LSU athletic program already considered bloated with money.

Our Lady of the Lake Medical Center (OLOL) and the Louisiana Children’s Medical Center (LCMC) combined to commit $245 MILLION over the next 10 years to LSU for medical research and treatment.

The biggest single commitment is $85 million to the LSU Athletic Department to be used “to deploy integrated clinical technology, facility improvements, and educational programming to advance student-athlete health and wellness – essential to sustain the vitality of LSU’s thriving athletic programs.”

Facility improvement and education programming? That $28 MILLION FACILITY, complete with sleeping pods, wasn’t enough? Especially when the LSU LIBRARY roof leaks like a sieve, forcing staff to cover books with plastic tarps. LSU already has more than $40 million in DEFERRED MAINTENANCE across its 15 million-square-foot campus.

LSU paid former head football coach Ed Orgeron and his fired staff nearly $27 MILLION to walk away – $17 million of that to Orgeron himself. And that doesn’t count the $100 million, 10-year contract for current head coach Brian Kelly and the $8.2 million for his ASSISTANT COACHES. One of those is quarterbacks coach Joe Sloan ($550,000), formerly the offensive coordinator for a Louisiana Tech team that went 3-9 last year.

The next-largest single allocation in the combined $245 million package is $40 million to “develop an end-to-end healthcare experience within the LSU Student Health Center and provide in-kind care to uninsured and underinsured LSU students.

Now, with some 35,000 students overall and just a couple hundred at most in the athletic program, how is it that $85 million goes to athletics and “only” $40 million to the rest of the student body? Just askin’.

And with all that money floating around for coaches’ salaries (the figures provided earlier included only the football program), it seems only reasonable that the Tiger Athletic Foundation (TAF) could pony up some of the money for deploying “integrated clinical technology, facility improvements, and educational programming to advance student-athlete health and wellness – essential to sustain the vitality of LSU’s thriving athletic programs,” especially those critical “facility improvements and education programming.”

I mean, what possible facility improvements could they be talking about – over and above what the jocks already have. And education programming? Aren’t there others among the 35,000-member student body who might benefit from some education programming?

And didn’t the OLOL Foundation experience a little PROBLEM with some fraud and money-laundering charges with its former PRESIDENT/CEO not too long ago that revealed some off-the-books support for LSU athletics?

Not that this allocation is in any way related to that fiasco, but I can’t help remembering that old adage from my wasted youth: once bitten, twice shy.

And we wonder why medical bills are so high.