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The following is an excerpt from my book, Louisiana’s Rogue Sheriffs: A Culture of Corruption, which chronicles the unparalleled power of sheriffs and how they can use that power for personal enrichment and to shield themselves from violations of human rights, theft, drug distribution and even murder. For this book, I have chosen to limit stories to Louisiana and there were plenty of examples from which to choose. This partial chapter examines Mike Tregre, sheriff of St. John the Baptist Parish.

 

On December 20, 1993, Leonardo Alexander and Arizona Batiste became embroiled in an argument over property Batiste said Alexander had stolen from his home. The confrontation ended when Batiste shot and killed Alexander when he said Alexander first pulled a chrome-plated handgun on him. Batiste panicked, flagged down a passing friend, Jerry Lewis, threw both guns in his truck with instructions to “get rid of them,” according to Lewis, who said he threw the pistol in a canal.

When deputies arrived at the scene of the shooting, one of the officers, Paul Schnyder, was a first cousin to the victim Alexander. Schnyder, because of the conflict of interest, turned the investigation over to his partner, Allan Wayne Schaeffer, but remained on the scene as interviews were conducted with four witnesses, each of whom said Alexander had a handgun. That would seem to collaborate Batiste’s claim of self-defense but deputies instead accused the witnesses of lying, saying they had fabricated the story of the second gun.

Lewis said sheriff’s deputies went to the canal in search of Alexander’s weapon and he seemed to remember there were divers at the canal who were not mentioned in the subsequent report filed by Schaeffer. “They had divers out there,” Lewis said.

Carl Butler, an attorney for the sheriff’s office, would deny that the sheriff’s office had an “official” diving team but Edward Nowell, commander of the Marine Division of the sheriff’s office at the time, confirmed that the sheriff’s department had access to divers.

Upon their return from the canal, Lewis said deputies pressured him to lie and say there was only one gun, repeatedly asking him, “You gonna continue to lie for Arizona?” Though Lewis said he never changed his story, the investigative report filed by deputies following their last interview with Lewis said he told them there was only one gun, quoting Lewis as saying he “only received one gun from Batiste, that being the 12-gauge shotgun that killed Alexander. The actual transcript of the interview, however, differs radically from the detectives’ report, with no mention of any questions about the gun. Instead, Lewis refused to answer questions and demanded an attorney.

Charges against Lewis were eventually dropped after Batiste’s trial because he had produced Batiste’s shotgun for deputies. The detective who interviewed him, Mike Tregre, asked, “Have any threats or promises been made to you or has pressure of any kind been applied to induce you to answer questions or give up any of your rights?”

“No,” said Lewis, who would later say, “They (the sheriff’s deputies) were putting a lot of pressure on me,” adding that he was in fear of retaliation against him by Tregre.

In December 1995, two years after the shooting, Schaeffer faxed a file to St. John Assistant District Attorney GeorgeAnn Graugnard which said a silver handgun recovered in the Batiste investigation was being held by the sheriff’s office for “safekeeping.”

When Batiste’s new attorney, Gwyn Brown, discovered the fax, she confirmed with the sheriff’s office that it was still in possession of the gun that deputies had denied ever existed. When Batiste appealed for a new trial, cooperation was less forthcoming, saying records of the investigation had been destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

The only problem with that was while New Orleans was inundated by floodwaters, St. John the Baptist Parish was not. Instead, it served as a staging area for recovery efforts into New Orleans and the sheriff’s department’s own annual report boasted there was “no flooding and no looting. Power outages inconvenienced us all but thankfully, damage was mostly limited to roofs.” No mention was made of any damage to sheriff’s facilities. Nor did the sheriff’s office ever file any insurance claims for damaged facilities from the hurricane. Faced with the prospect of explaining how files could have been damaged when nothing else was, the department changed its story to say, “The case files you see were relocated to a mobile trailer following Hurricane Katrina damage to the CID (Criminal Investigations Department) building where they were stored. However, those files cannot be currently located.”

Mike Tregre captured 64 percent of the vote in the first primary, easily defeating two other candidates.

He was sworn into office in July 2012 and six months later, on January 18, 2013, his son, Jared Tregre, was sworn in as a reserve deputy while still a student in high school. He wore a badge and “represented himself as a deputy” during a ceremony for fallen officers in Washington, D.C. Among those honored at the event were St. John deputies Brandon Nielsen and Jeremy Triche, who were killed in 2012. Moreover, by virtue of his still being four months from graduating from high school, Jared Tregre could not legally be commissioned as a reserve deputy since the law requires deputies to have a high school diploma or to possess a GED, said Rafael Goyeneche, president of the New Orleans Metropolitan Crime Commission (MCC), a nonprofit citizen watchdog organization.

Goyeneche’s letter described Jered Tregre’s action of walking around Washington “with a badge around his neck with people thanking him” for his service as a “disgraceful breech of conduct”

 

To read the first page of that letter, click HERE.

To read the full story, as well as 43 other chapters of murder, malfeasance, abuse of power, theft, and other transgressions, you may order my book, Louisiana’s Rogue Sheriffs: A Culture of Corruption. The price for the book is $30 and you may click on this icon: Donate Button with Credit Cardsin the column to the right or you may send a check for $30 to Tom Aswell, P.O. Box 922, Denham Springs, Louisiana 70727.

Kira Orange Jones prevailed in the challenge to her candidacy for re-election to the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education from the state’s 2nd District in a special court hearing in New Orleans on Tuesday, lending further validation to the theory that in Louisiana politics, anything goes.

That anything includes:

Jones listing at least three separate residents on various reporting forms submitted to the state;

Her failure to file Louisiana state income tax returns for the years 2015 and 2017 (a prerequisite to seeking political office in Louisiana, but…);

Her serving as executive director for Teach for America (TFA), which contracts with the Louisiana Department of Education (LDOE), a clear conflict of interests and a not-so-trivial ethics question;

Her chronic absence from BESE meetings—she missed more than one-third of all meetings last year;

Here several years’ delinquency in filing required annual financial disclosure forms with the state—another requirement of candidates and even in-the-trenches civil service employees;

Her serving as a board member for a non-profit called Instruction Partners (IP) which is listed by LDOE as a vendor for professional development for 2018-19—another potential ethics problem and conflict of interest.

But what I found most humorous was the suggestion by educator and blogger Mercedes Schneider: “Given that Orange-Jones’ uninterrupted residence in BESE District 2 is in serious question (Her husband was at one time during her tenure New Mexico’s top education official), it seems in (opposition candidates) (Shawon) Bernard’s and (Ashonta) Wyatt’s best interest to file a claim against Orange-Jones with the Louisiana Ethics Board.”

So, why would I find that so amusing? Simple. Not to make light of Schneider’s well-intentioned suggestion, but the Ethics Board is Louisiana’s single biggest political JOKE going and has been since Bobby Jindal’s ethics “reform” of 2008.

Eight years ago, special interests hijacked BESE from Louisiana’s citizens by buying the offices of the likes of Orange-Jones, Jay Guillot, Holly Boffy, and others so that people like John White could ram through education “reform” designed to benefit corporate ownership of virtual on-line schools and charter schools.

Boffy, who is seeking re-election to her District 7 seat, is manager of an outfit called EdTalents in Lafayette, which, according to its web page, works to support schools or districts “in creating an educator talent system to attract, hire, place, develop, leverage, and retain teachers for student success.” Go HERE for the Louisiana Secretary of State’s corporate report on EdTalents.

She also is an Educator in Residence for the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) for the central and southeastern states. CCSSO was instrumental in writing COMMON CORE standards for the state.

In other words, like Guillot when he served on the board, Boffy contracts for services with school districts that are governed and regulated by the board on which she sits.

No conflict or ethics problem there.

But let’s look at some of the results under the tenure of Orange-Jones, Boffy and White:

  • Today, every single charter school in New Orleans is FAILING;
  • Louisiana, after a decade of White’s leadership, remains the fourth-worst EDUCATED state in the nation;
  • While the state’s teachers were going without pay raises, 20 unclassified employees at LDOE raked in average PAY RAISES of nearly $27,000 each over a five-year period—that’s more than $5,000 per year, compared to the meager $1,000 raise teachers got this year—finally.
  • LDOE attempted to gloss over a major ERROR in the Minimum Foundation Program for fiscal year 2018-19 which created an actual $17 million surplus for LDOE, but instead of distributing the money to the schools as it should have done, LDOE made no mention of the error for fear of an audit. Instead, the money was expected to be used for one-time expenses for the department.

And did a single legislator raise the first question about the mistake?

Nah. It’s all good. Move along. Nothing to see here.

A lawsuit was filed last Thursday in Civil District Court in New Orleans that seeks to disqualify Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) member Kira Orange Jones as a candidate for re-election to the 2nd District seat she has held since 2012.

While the petition of plaintiffs Linnell Steib and Michael McFarland cites only two causes for the disqualification of Jones, there appears to be an entire laundry list of reasons she should be disqualified as a candidate, some of which LouisianaVoice has addressed in previous posts.

Little is known about the plaintiffs other than a Google search turned up the name of one Linnell Steib as being manager of judicial courts of the State of Louisiana. There was another Linnell Steib, but his work address was given as Wichita, Kansas.

But as long as the plaintiffs are electors in Jones’s district, they have legal standing to bring the lawsuit to block her candidacy.

The two disqualifying points they list in their petition are:

  • Jones’s failure to file Louisiana state income tax returns for the years 2015 and 2017 as required for candidates;
  • Her failure to pay outstanding ethics fines and fees to the attorney general’s office totaling $8,800.

But there are other reasons, according to educator Mercedes Schneider, who has a web blog called DEUTSCH29 in which she points out Jones’s chronic absence from BESE, missing more than a third of its meetings altogether and either arriving late or listing alternatively no fewer than three separate residence addresses on various reporting forms—not counting the New Mexico address of her husband Christopher Ruszkowski, the former secretary-designee for the New Mexico Department of Education.

Schneider also questioned whether or not the New Mexico Department of Education had a contract with Teach for America (TFA), for whom Jones serves as an executive director (it does). Here is another of her posts about JONES.

LouisianaVoice had previously questioned possible conflicts of interest with Jones as an executive director for Teach for America (TFA), which had a lucrative contract with the Louisiana Department of Education (LDOE) even as she sat on BESE.

Schneider also noted that Jones sits on the board of directors for a non-profit called Instruction Partners (IP) which is listed by LDOE as a vendor for professional development for 2018-19, a relationship that also could be considered a conflict of interests or an ethics violation.

Finally, Schneider, on her blog, notes that Jones was “extremely delinquent” in filing her required annual financial disclosure forms with the state. In fact, Schneider said, as of August 11 of this year (last Monday), she still had not filed her annual disclosures for 2017 and 2018, only doing so on August 12 (last Tuesday), six days after she official qualified for reelection.

Apparently, there are those who worked for Jones at TFA who were less than enamored with her leadership. This from the website GLASSDOOR.COM.

Jones is opposed in this year’s election by Shawon Bernard and Ashonta Wyatt.

The Louisiana Democratic Party has Wyatt in the District 2 race.

“We’ve seen the effects of Democratic leadership versus Republican leadership on our educational systems,” Stephen Handwerk, Executive Director of the Louisiana Democratic Party said. “Under a Republican administration, we’ve seen underfunded education, underpaid teachers, and a lack of concern about investing in our children. Compare that to a Democratic administration who is putting teachers, students, and our educational institutions first and it’s clear why we need to support Louisiana Democrats for the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education. The endorsements we made today will promote education reform and push our state forward and I’m confident we’ll see them making a difference this January.”

The following are candidates the Louisiana Democratic Party endorsed for BESE:

BESE District 2: 

Ashonta Wyatt

 

BESE District 6: 

Ciara Hart

 

BESE District 8:

Vereta Tanner Lee

Preston Castille

 

Many years ago, 1974, to be exact, I was a reporter for the old Baton Rouge State-Times, mostly responsible for labor-related news coverage. But Edwin Edwards was gearing up to run for a second term with principal opposition expected from Lake Charles State Sen. Bob Jones. But another, lesser-known name was set to make a formal announcement. City Editor Jack Lord assigned me to cover the event at the old Oak Manor Hotel on Airline Highway in Baton Rouge.

I still believe the whole affair was a practical joke and I was set up, but that’s another story for another time.

I dutifully showed for the press conference in a red shirt and white tie that was about four inches wide and tied with a double Windsor knot at my neck the size of a baseball (yes, I was a fashion plate—women wanted to be with me and men wanted to be me) only to fine a large meeting room with about 200 chairs set up (there weren’t that many print and electronic media reporters in Baton Rouge, New Orleans and Lafayette combined).

I was the only reporter to show up for the announcement of “Cousin” Ken Lewis’s candidacy for governor.

Lewis eventually entered the room and went directly to the dais and read his somewhat lengthy, formal announcement as if the room were packed. When he finished, he announced that he would take questions.

I looked around the empty room and finally raised my hand.

Spotting me among the packed house cleverly disguised as empty seats, he pointed and said, “Yes, the gentleman in the red shirt.”

Again, I looked around the room to be sure he was calling on me before somewhat hesitantly asking, “Is this for real?”

Back at the paper, Jack Lord and the rest of the newsroom were thoroughly enjoying the whole affair and I had to admit the whole thing was rather amusing.

It conjured up memories of another character who relished the opportunity to take on the stuffed-shirt politicians by running outrageous political campaigns. That, of course, was long before the most outrageous of them all, one Donald J. Trump. But again, I digress.

Puggy Moity was something of a legend in Louisiana politics. He would run for anything—sometimes for more than one office in a single election. He ran in the 1971 gubernatorial race against Edwards. That was the race in which Edwards beat State Sen. J. Bennett Johnston for his first term as the state’s chief executive.

Moity, in that campaign, established himself as the candidate willing to do or say anything without fearing the consequences, legal or otherwise. Edwards, as most anyone knows, had a well-earned reputation as a womanizer but that didn’t stop Moity from calling him a homosexual. Edwards responded at a campaign event at the old Capitol House Hotel by walking up to Moity and planting a wet kiss on his cheek.

But now, the combined ghosts of Moity and Lewis have appeared in a single personage in Livingston Parish where a candidate for sheriff has launched his campaign in a most unusual fashion and with a platform that remains elusive and perplexing, to say the least.

Walter Ray “Beau” Wesley, of the Upper Sweet Gum Nation, has set up his campaign headquarters on the side of LA. 1019 across from Hunstock Road in Watson, north of Denham Springs.

It’s pretty well established that incumbent Sheriff Jason Ard was quaking in his boots until it was learned that Wesley had been disqualified because he was delinquent on his taxes. Word is he showed up in court looking the way he does in the photos below and was sent home to change into something more appropriate before being allowed in the court room for the hearing on his abortive candidacy.

Caution: Photos contain words and terminology that may be offensive to some:

PHOTOS

 

 

A second development in what I thought was an issue laid to rest with the resignation of Mike Edmonson cropped up today just hours after the Louisiana Board of “Ethics” (that word should always be in quotes when talking about Louisiana political “ethics”) whitewashed its investigation of Edmonson and the infamous San Diego road trip and his overall management of Louisiana State Police (see post of earlier today).

Right on the heels of that story was the unconfirmed report from a usually solid source that State Sen. Neil Riser is being considered to succeed David Young as executive director of the LOUISIANA STATE TROOPERS ASSOCIATION.

Young, who retired, effective last month, is the one who laundered campaign contributions from the LSTA through his personal checking account in order that the LTSA might circumvent state civil service laws prohibiting classified employees from active involvement in political campaigns, including, of course, campaign contributions.

Young would ultimately enter into a CONSENT AGREEMENT with the Louisiana Board of “Ethics” in which he admitted to making $17,500 in contributions to various political candidates for which the LTSA later reimbursed him.

Riser, a Republican senator from Columbia who failed in a bid for the U.S. House of Representatives in a 2013 special election, is the one who tacked on an amendment onto Senate Bill 294, an otherwise innocuous bill dealing with procedures for formal, written complaints made against police officers. That amendment, slipped in on the closing hours of the 2014 legislative session, would have given Edmonson a generous increase in his pension that otherwise he would not have been entitled to. Riser at first denied but later ADMITTED that he was behind the amendment and days after he did so, posed for a photograph with Edmonson.

Edmonson and Riser

Riser, who owns two funeral homes in Columbia, again failed in his bid to succeed former U.S. Sen. John Kennedy in another special election in 2017 to fill Kennedy’s vacated State Treasurer’s position. He is term-limited in his current state senate position and is a man potentially without a job in politics, so it stands to reason that he would be looking to maintain an influential presence in Baton Rouge.

Such is the intoxicating nature of politics that some egos simply cannot walk away from it.

LouisianaVoice was first to break that STORY about the amendment boosting Edmonson’s pension on July 11, 2014, after receiving an anonymous tip and that story generated immediate and near-unanimous opposition. State Sen. Dan Claitor (R-Baton Rouge) was successful in filing a lawsuit in Baton Rouge district court to block the pension increase.

Young, contacted Thursday by LouisianaVoice, said he had had no contact with the association since his retirement and that he knew nothing of Riser’s pending appointment to head the LSTA.

Attempts were made to reach Association President Jay O’quinn for confirmation but he didn’t answer his cell phone.