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Don’t forget to order your copy of my newest book, Bordello on the Bayou. It’s the story of a legislative aide who uses her proximity to power to run a prostitution ring that at first caters only to Louisiana political officials and powerful lobbyist but which eventually expands into other southern states and employs more women.

With expansion comes access to sensitive information that could topple careers. Not surprisingly, when she is arrested for her extracurricular activities, she becomes a dangerous liability to her clientele, who range from the governor to municipal officials. When she engages the assistance of her attorney and a reporter she trusts, she sets in motion a chain of events that places the lives of all three in peril.

The book is $30, with $5 of each sale goes to the Baton Rouge Food Bank. You may pay by credit card by clicking on the yellow

Donate Button with Credit Cards

button in the column to the right of this post or by mailing your check to:

LouisianaVoice, P.O. Box 922, Denham Springs, LA 70727.

As always, thank you for supporting LouisianaVoice and the Baton Rouge Food Bank.

Doonesbury Comic Strip for December 20, 2020

Random

Sharon Black started out as an aide working for the Louisiana Legislature but she had the looks and the smarts needed to advance her career. All she needed was an opportunity.

It came when she found herself catering to the more basic “needs” of legislators and lobbyists who took notice of her striking beauty and captivating personality. Seeing a growing demand for her services, she recruited others, professional women like herself and college students, who shared her ambitions and tastes for the finer things in life. In time, she found herself being asked to use her discretion to handle matters that had nothing to do with legislation. Men of power took her into their confidence with sensitive documents. Pillow talk from Louisiana’s movers and shakers provided her with the leverage needed to expand her operation into other Southern states.

Then her world is shattered. Arrested for running a multi-state prostitution ring, she suddenly becomes a major liability. While the news media speculates about a “black book” containing the names of her clients, she harbors a much deeper and infinitely more damaging secret: a computer flash drive containing incriminating documents intended as insurance but in a cruel twist of fate, that now only serve as her death warrant. But first, she must get it into hands she can trust.

Desperate, she sends a message from her jail cell to reporter Dylan Bienvenu, the only person she knows won’t betray her. But she only succeeds in placing a target on Dylan’s back as he is hunted by unknown members of a shadowy cartel who want him dead in an adventure that takes him on chases through Baton Rouge, Denham Springs and Madisonville. Along the way, he forms a bond with Sharon’s attorney, J. Harley Pendergast, III, and the two join forces in their quest to find and destroy a major criminal enterprise. In so doing, they encounter bombings, beatings, kidnappings and grand juries as they race to stay one step ahead of their pursuers.

Bordello on the Bayou is my latest book and this is your first opportunity to purchase it. It’s my first fiction story to be published as a physical book (I have two e-books that have never been published in hard print). All my other books are non-fiction.

Bordello on the Bayou is a novel I’ve had kicking around in my head for several years and I finally got around to committing it to paper. A few close friends have read the manuscript and the feedback I’ve received from them has been positive thus far. (But then they are my friends and probably just don’t want to hurt my feelings.)

The price of the book is $30 and you may order your signed copy by clicking on the yellow

Donate Button with Credit Cards

button in the column to the upper right of this post or you may send a check for $30 to LouisianaVoice, P.O. Box 922, Denham Springs, LA. 70727.

Five dollars from each order will be used to purchase food for the Baton Rouge Food Bank.

Get your order in today so we can get contributions to the Food Bank before Christmas!

As always, thank you for your support of LouisianaVoice.

–Tom Aswell

About this time last year, when Joe Burrow became the second LSU player to win the Heisman Trophy, he gave an emotional acceptance speech during which he took the time to call attention to the needs of the more unfortunate among us, particularly those in his hometown of Athens, Ohio.

Americans responded to his appeal and contributions as nearly half-a-million dollars in donations poured into food banks in Athens and across the country.

And that was before anyone ever heard of a coronavirus pandemic. It was before people began losing their jobs because of the pandemic shutdown. It was before eviction notices started going out to those who couldn’t make rent or mortgage payments because of the massive layoffs, before parents started going hungry so their kids could eat.

Today, the need is far greater.

People are hurting. Congress, typically, is dragging its feet, unable to put together a stimulus package even though it for damn sure was able to get up off its collective backside long enough to push through a Supreme Court nominee.

But enough about the politics of a suffering nation. I want to talk about something far more important than some politician who couldn’t care less about the plight of average Americans unless they contribute to a reelection campaign.

I was in Rouses Market on Juban Road in Denham Springs earlier this week. Near the checkout I noticed stacks of filled paper bags. I walked over and saw that they were bags for the Food Bank. I picked one up and found it to be quite heavy. What the heck, I thought, I can afford a bag of food for someone. Judging by its weight, I figured it would be $10 or $15.

It was $5. Five bucks. I went back and got a second bag.

When I held my last fundraiser for LouisianaVoice, I made it a point to ask for contributions only from those who could afford it. Unlike certain televangelists, I would never ask anyone to take out a loan in order to support my plea for donations.

Now, I’m asking again – but not for me. I’m asking those of you who, like me, are fortunate enough to have not had your income stream interrupted, those who can afford it, to do it for your neighbor, for your relative, and yes, for a stranger you’ve never met and probably never will. And do it for yourself. Someone once said give ’til it hurts. I say give ’til it feels good.

And don’t do it just at Christmas. Every time you go to the store, pick up one of those bags and drop it in your cart. It’s five bucks, folks. Five bucks. You spend more than that on snacks or beer or a cute decoration. But people are hungry.

Put that snack back on the shelf. Forget that televangelist. Forget Donald Trump’s con game. Do something that actually helps the less fortunate among us. Purchase a food bag or make a donation directly to the Food Bank.

It’s five bucks.

To paraphrase Marcellus in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, something is rotten in the Parish of St. Landry.

So rotten, in fact, that even the otherwise moribund, impotent, lifeless Louisiana Board of Ethics found it necessary to actually recommend that the Ethics Adjudicatory Board (gasp) take disciplinary action against an individual found to be in violation of the state’s “gold standard of ethics” as set forth by Bobby Jindal more than a decade ago.

How rotten?

Try $336,407 worth of rotten.

Try a member of the LSU Board of Supervisors rotten.

Or could it be let’s try to embarrass Gov. John Bel Edwards rotten?

Here are the sordid details.

Patrick C. Morrow, Sr., a founding partner of the Opelousas law firm Morrow, Morrow, Ryan, and Bassett, was appointed on Jan. 5, 2012, as a member of the Opelousas General Health System Board of Trustees and served in that capacity until his resignation on July 15, 2020.

Morrow is the sole owner and operator of Patrick Morrow, a Professional Law Corporation (PMPLC). PMPLC, on the other hand, is a 25 percent partner of the law firm, Morrow, Morrow, Ryan and Bassett, A Louisiana Partnership (MMRB).

Morrow is the managing general partner of MMRB. All “significant” decisions are made by a vote of the four partners, the ethics board said in its ruling.

On Aug. 17, 2016, the Opelousas General Hospital Authority, a public trust doing business as Opelousas General Health Systems (OGHS), entered into an attorney representation agreement with MMRB whereby MMRB agreed to represent OGHS in a class action lawsuit against Blue Cross Blue Shield of Louisiana.

Morrow executed that agreement on behalf of MMRB on Aug. 26, 2016, and a petition, signed by Morrow, was filed by OGHS’s behalf by MMRB.

The agreement provided for compensation of MMRB in exchange for the law firm’s services as OGHS’s legal counsel in the class action litigation. As a 25 percent partner in MMRB, PMPLC would conceivably receive 25 percent of the compensation received by MMRB.

As sole owner of PMPLC, Morrow would thereby have an interest in the fees earned by PMPLC.

There are two active lawsuits in which OGHS is a plaintiff. The first is the Blue Cross litigation and the second is an Opioids product liability class action lawsuit. Morrow and MMRB filed a notice of withdrawal as counsel in the opioid litigation on June 2 of this year, about six weeks prior to Morrow’s resignation as a member of the OGHS Board of Trustees.

Morrow, PMPLC, and/or MMRB received $336,407 IN compensation as a result of the legal services that were provided to OGHS – $40,000 ON Sept. 26, 2016; $202,607 on Jan. 2, 2018, and $93,800 on April 2, 2018.

In its’ ruling, the ethics board said:

  • R.S. 1111(C)(2)(d) (sic) provides that no public servant and no legal entity in which the public servant exercises control or owns an interest of more than 25 percent shall receive anything of economic value for or in consideration of services rendered, or to be rendered, to or for any person during his public service unless such services are neither preformed (sic) nor compensated by any person from whom such public servant would be prohibited by (statute).
  • R.S. 42:1115(A)(1) prohibits a public servant from soliciting or accepting, directly or indirectly, any thing (sic) of economic value as a gift or gratuity from any person or from any officer, director, agent, or employee of such person, if such public servant knows or reasonably should know that such person has or is seeking to have a contractual, business, or financial relationship with the public servant’s agency.

“Based on the foregoing facts,” the ethics board said, “Mr. Morrow violated R.S. 42:1111(C)(2)(d) by virtue of his receipt of a thing of economic value for services rendered to PMPLC/MMRB at a time when he served as a member of OGHS, and at a time when MMRB had a contractual, business, or financial relationship with OGHS.”

  • The board requested that the Ethics Adjudicatory Board:
  • Conduct a hearing on the foregoing charge;
  • Determine that Patrick C. Morrow, Sr. violated (state statutes), and

Assess the appropriate penalties in accordance with the recommendation of the board to be submitted during a public hearing “or at another time deemed appropriate by the Ethics Adjudicatory Board.”

Granted, on the surface, things do look somewhat suspect from the standpoint of existing state ethics laws.

But why now? Why this particular individual?

But may have noticed that bold-faced “more than” earlier.

That might well be a technicality on which Morrow may hang his defense. He is, after all, only a 25 percent partner in MMRB, not “more than” 25 percent, as the law specifies as being the bar. It’s a fine point, but one worth attention going forward.

It wasn’t too many years ago that this same ethics board let three BOARD OF ELEMENTARY and SECONDARY EDUCATION (BESE) members and the sister of the BESE president off the hook for similar activity.

Jay Guillot, a board member from Ruston, was given the green light with the awarding of a $16 million state contract to HGA, a company in which he had/has a major (partnership) stake.

Then-BESE President Chas Roemer consistently voted on matters concerning charter schools despite his sister, CAROLINE ROEMER SHIRLEY’S simultaneously serving as executive director of the Louisiana Association of Public Charter Schools.

And then there’s BESE member KIRA ORANGE-JONES, who served as executive director for Teach for America (TFA), which simultaneously had contracts with the Louisiana Department of Education.

BESE member Holly Boffy likewise managed an outfit called EdTALENTS in Lafayette. EdTalents contracted with local school districts which were governed and regulated by BESE.

Orange-Jones and Boffy continue to serve on BESE.

Another glaring contradiction by the ethics board which left observers scratching their heads involved former State Police Superintendent Mike Edmonson and that infamous road trip to San Diego via the Grand Canyon and Las Vegas taken by four of Edmonson’s state troopers back in 2016.

In that case the ethics board first ABSOLVED the troopers of wrongdoing – in secret – in April 2018 when it said they were merely following orders from Edmonson. But in August 2019, that same ethics panel CLEARED EDMONSON. And guess who Edmonson’s attorney was in that ethics board hearing? Non other than Gray Sexton, who once headed the board but who now represents clients before his old board.

So, it’s pretty easy to see how the ethics board conveniently overlooked other apparent conflicts before it decided to knuckle down and do its job with Morrow. The question, though, is why, why now and why Morrow?

Could it be that Morrow was singled out because he was appointed to the LSU Board of Supervisors by Gov. Edwards, thus making him an expedient political target?

Or perhaps it’s because of the high-profile status of MMRB with former Federal District Court Judge Richard T. (Ted) Haik’s affiliation with the firm in 2016 as of counsel status?

Whatever the ethics board’s motives, you can bet there’s a back story to all this somewhere that has yet to be told.

Perhaps the Ethics Board should be hauled before a different ethics board, if such a board only existed, for a hearing on its numerous breaches of ethics.