Audit of Police Jury shows big General Fund balance, reveals cases of incomplete compliance

By JIM BUTLER 

The Police Jury began this calendar year with $7.7 million in unassigned General Fund balance.

And, auditors said, it was still working on a fail-safe purchasing system and meeting state law requirements on ethics and sexual harassment training.

The audit report recently issued covers fiscal and calendar year 2023.

According to the audit, the General Fund had $11.2 million in revenue and $7.8 million in expenses. After transfers and adjustments the fund balance was $8.4 million, of which $7.7 million was unrestricted.

Across its governmental funds the parish had $94.5 million restricted for statutory or bonded debt, $5.7 committed for specific use and the $7.7 million unrestricted.

Auditors again noted instances of purchases outside the established system. The parish, responding to the same issue in its previous audit, cited plans to convert to an electronic purchasing system Responding this year, the parish noted continuing efforts to create the electronic system.

Regarding ethics and harassment, the parish repeated intentions and assurances that all employees and elected jurors would complete the required one-hour training.

Jury President Joe Bishop’s compensation value was reported as $69,371. That includes salary, insurance, vehicle and other.

Jurors are paid $1,600 salary monthly; the president $400 more.

The parish collected sales taxes and/or licensing fees for various municipalities, excluding Alexandria.

Total collections were $181.1 million. After collection expenses $178.7 million was distributed to the entities.


Two arrests on rape accusations carry six-figure bails

Arrests are accusations not convictions.

August 11

Tyhonda Coutee, 39, Alexandria — fugitive, flight, no child restraint system, contempt 3 counts, $150,000 bail;

Clarence Frazier Jr., 46, Lecompte — 1st degree rape, cruelty to infirm, sexual battery, $500,000 bail. 

This date: 19 arrests, 3 including one or more contempt counts.

August 12

David Briggs, 44, Alexandria — home invasion, aggravated assault, paraphernalia, contempt, $3,600 bail;

Mack Davis Jr., 61, Alexandria — flight, domestic abuse battery, unauthorized entry inhabited dwelling, $9,000 bail;

Justin Jameson, 29, Pineville — unauthorized use of motor vehicle, $25,000 bail;

Amber Johnson, 49, no address listed — 1st degree rape, criminal conspiracy, cruelty to infirm, $275,000 bail. 

This date: 20 arrests, 10 including one or more contempt counts.


Three parish residents arrested for possession

Arrests are accusations not convictions. 

August 11

Amy Andries, 43, Alexandria — possession 2 counts, paraphernalia, contempt 5 counts, $5,000 bail;

Kaylee Brister, 26, Deville — possession, paraphernalia, $3,000 bail;

Robert Newman Jr., 44, Alexandria — possession, paraphernalia, $3,000 bail.  

August 12

Kevin Harris Jr., 31, Lafayette — possession, paraphernalia, $3,000 bail. 


Ponderings: One of Those Days

By Doug De Graffenried

I mapped out two simple tasks for Saturday.

Task number one was to trim the hedges in the front yard. They all look like planted versions of a Chia-pet. The task would not take long. I have purchased power tools that make this task a breeze. I was breezing along through the task, about to turn the corner from the east side to the north side of the house, when a complication arrived. The battery powered hedge trimmer suddenly died. I looked for obstructions, there were none.  I changed the battery. That didn’t work either. I sought out advice from the experts at You Tube. I found a video with a guy describing how to fix the same problem. He had my very model suffering from the same symptoms. After five minutes of watching that video, I decided I was not taking the thing apart. I developed a new strategy. On Sunday after church, I went to Lowes and bought a new one. As soon as I send this article to the nice people who publish it, I’m back at hedge trimming.

Task number two was to cook the steaks. That is always fun. No one bothers me when I’m cooking steaks. It is alone time that produces sumptuous results. I cheat! I have one of those wood pellet grills. The grill is so smart it is attached to my phone. I can be in the car miles away and instruct the grill to light and heat up to a certain temperature. If I use a meat probe, the probe reports the temperature to my phone. It is all technological.

Saturday, I went to light the grill.

The grill informed me that it needed to do a software update. How much software could a grill need? Has Microsoft discovered my grill and wants to install one of those infernal updates? The grill would not let me bypass the update.

While the grill was updating, I piddled with the plants in the yard. I looked at my phone to see how the grill was working. The update also applied to my phone. Suddenly, the grill app wanted the log in stuff. Do you remember the password you set two years ago for your grill app? Me neither.

I took care of the grill. While I cooked the steaks, I managed the password for the phone app. The relaxing Saturday had fallen apart by now. 

I cleaned the grill and seasoned the griddle I had also used for the steaks. I went into the peace of my study to finish working on the sermon. There it was, the end of a perfect day, Microsoft wanted to update the software on my computer.

I started wondering if Jesus ever had “one of those days.” After reading the gospels, I can answer, “Yes, He did.” The Bible tells us what he did. He went off by himself and prayed.

You might give that a try the next time you have “one of those days.”

Doug de Graffenried is Pastor of Trinity Methodist Church in Ruston.  You can contact Doug at dougsponderings@gmail.com


Shawn Christian brings Outlaw Country to Cenla

By JEANNI RITCHIE
 
I stopped by El Paso last Friday night after seeing that Shawn Christian would be playing live. Christian had been popping up on my social medias for a few weeks and I knew if I couldn’t get back to Nashville anytime soon, seeing him live would be a close second. 
 
When I arrived, he was taking requests and fielding offers for private parties. Christian plays restaurants, bars, campfires, tailgates, and private parties. He’s also competed in local competitions but he prefers gigs. They give him a chance to connect with his audience. 
 
Outlaw country is his preferred genre, though he comes well-prepared for a variety of tunes including some originals. I requested some Johnny Cash and after a toe-tapping rendition of Folsom Prison Blues, we had a conversation about Cash’s Hendersonville home and the joys of visiting Nashville. 
 
Christian is an authentic country boy down to his guitar roots and 5-year old mini-me son. His values line up with up with every hard-working Southerner out there. 
 
“What’s the dream?” I’d asked him. 
 
He answered immediately. “To keep doing what I love and provide a future for my son.”
 
With that voice, I have no doubt his son will have an amazing life. 
 
 
Jeanni Ritchie is a contributing journalist from Central Louisiana. She can be reached at jeanniritchie54@gmail.com. 

Notice of Death – August 13, 2024

William “Billy” Brooks, Jr.
August 3, 1946 – August 8, 2024
Service: Wednesday, August 14, 2024, 11am at Paul Cemetery, Forest Hill
 
Georgia A Humphrey
June 7, 1952 – August 5, 2024
Service: Saturday, August 17, 2024, 10am at Zion Hill Church Family, Pineville.
 
Charlotte Williams Rue
January 18, 1939 – August 8, 2024
Service: Saturday, August 17, 2024, 2pm at New Hope Missionary Baptist Church, Alexandria.
 
Jack Kahn
September 8, 1929 – August 9, 2024
Service: To Be Announced
 
The Rapides Parish Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or RPJNewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to RPJNewsla@gmail.com)

Pineville Council set to delve into property issues at this evening’s session

By JIM BUTLER

The Pineville City Council will hear several matters at its meeting this evening that deal with property use.

Four Zoning Committee reports on requests to change allowable use of property will be considered.

The committee meets prior to the council session.

Also to be addressed are seven proposed condemnation notices and seven condemnation hearings.

The council is expected to give final approval to the administration to proceed with securing up to $10 million for waterworks and sewer system improvements.

Financing will be with bonds issued through the Local Government Environmental Facilities and Community Development Authority of the State Bond Commission.

The funds will be used for constructing and acquiring improvements, extensions and replacements to the systems.

The agenda also proposes an executive session “to discuss potential legal action involving a former employee.”

Exceptions to public meetings in state law include legal strategy talks and threats of litigation State law allows closed session to discuss possible litigation when a formal, written demand has been made.

It also requires a statement identifying the parties and the demand be included with the meeting notice posting.


Peabody’s ’79 champs still shining decades later

Peabody Magnet High School has won 10 state boys basketball championships, but the one that set the bar for all the rest was the first, in 1979. It wasn’t the first great basketball team at Peabody, but it was the first, after four straight near misses, to win the school’s Class 3A state title.

That ’79 team’s legacy has resurfaced of late with accolades going to three members of the team.

Paul Thompson, the star of the team who went on to basketball acclaim at Tulane and the NBA, as well as 16 professional seasons overseas, was inducted a few weeks ago into the Greater New Orleans Sports Hall of Fame.

Bruising Napoleon “Nap” Johnson, at 6-foot-9, the original War Horse among the ’79 Warhorses, was inducted last month into the Grambling Legends Sports Hall of Fame, joining a lineup of hoops legends at Grambling like Willis Reed, Aaron James and Larry Wright. He was recognized in the Rapides Parish Journal at the time for that honor.

Marcus Brown, a reserve on the ’79 team who had a good jumper, could play defense and was the president of the student body, is the chairman of the host committee for the 2025 Super Bowl to be played in the Superdome. Getting that honor, it helped that he is the executive vice president and general counsel of Entergy Corporation, a founding partner of the Super Bowl LIX host committee.

He is at the right, and Thompson on the left, in the photo above, taken at an Allstate Sugar Bowl function in New Orleans.

It seems the ’79 Warhorses are celebrating again as they did when they beat two-time defending champion Redemptorist for the title before a sellout crowd of nearly 9,000 at the Rapides Coliseum. Redemptorist, coached by Rick Huckabay, entered the game with a 70-game winning streak and boasted a lineup that included future LSU stars Howard Carter and Derrick Taylor. Peabody, coached by quiet Ernest Bowman and assisted by current coach Charles Smith (bound for Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame enshrinement this fall), had in the previous four seasons been halted in either the semifinals or finals.  

Peabody won that 1979 state title game, 55-53, and Coach Smith said that was the “prototype” team that he tried to model his teams after once he took over as head coach in 1985. A key reason for that is the team combined good academics with good athletics.

Thompson, who has been with the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Office for 25 years, has been shot at a few times in 18 years with the unit’s SWAT team. He knows the value of teamwork, and he said the ’79 team, unlike some of the previous stellar teams at Peabody, was as tight-knit as a coach could want.

Johnson, an entrepreneur whose latest business venture is running a life insurance business, credited the Warhorses’ success to the many hours of work and sweat and “testosterone” at countless practices at the old second-floor gymnasium. That was under the command of two math teachers, Bowman and Smith, who demanded structure and order and discipline at practice. The rigors involved made game time seem like a walk in the park.

“The uniqueness to that team,” said Brown, “is we were part of the first magnet school class. We had a very disciplined group of players who had to have a high academic background to get into school. So we not only had really talented players but also really good students. These guys did a lot of different things after school in the community, with work and with their lives.

“Do you have the discipline to do things even when you don’t feel like it?” he asked. “These are the kind of lessons we got then that have helped so many of us since. We were a high-profile team and there was a way we were required to interact with others, the way we presented ourselves and the respect we were to show for people, and the parents were very involved in this, too.”

Brown said his career success, which started — after Southern University Law School — as the first Black attorney in a New Orleans law firm, was molded by things he learned as part of that championship team at Peabody.

“You learn you can be valuable and not be a star,” he said. “Understanding your role is really important, and it really resonates later in life.”

Brown’s teamwork extends to being part of a power couple since he married Nannette Jolivette of Lafayette, now the chief federal judge for the Eastern District of Louisiana. She previously served as New Orleans’ city attorney.

As the Super Bowl’s host committee chair, Brown leads a group responsible for planning, executing and hosting the NFL Championship game following this season. That’ll give New Orleans 11 notches as a Super Bowl host, which ties the record with Miami. He’s hoping some of the lessons from ’79 help guide him as he tries to make the Super Bowl “a world-class event and a memorable experience for the city … so that we can have another opportunity to host another Super Bowl.”

Maybe, like Peabody’s ’79 state championship team, it can be the “prototype” for future Super Bowl championship committees.


Baker’s schemes free Tiger defenders, vex opposing offenses

 LOOSE AND LIGHTING ‘EM UP:  Linebacker Harold Perkins Jr. (4), shown making a flying stop in LSU’s spring game, is ‘on fire’ in preseason practice, playing relaxed in the schemes drawn by new defensive coordinator Blake Baker. (Photo by GUS STARK, LSU Athletics)

By RON HIGGINS, Journal Sports

BATON ROUGE – LSU starting quarterback Garrett Nussmeier vouches that the defensive schemes of the new Tigers’ defensive coordinator, Blake Baker, aren’t easy to decipher.

“He’s definitely one of the more complex coaches I’ve faced,” Nussmeier said after the Tigers’ ninth preseason practice. “Every day, there’s a (new defensive) look. I have to make sure I’m in the right protection or reading the right guy. He challenges me and our offense in different ways.”

The essence of what made Baker’s defenses the last two seasons at Missouri so effective is no secret. He made his schemes simple and relatable so his defenders could react rather than become mentally paralyzed with too much rolling around in their heads.

It’s the opposite of how LSU defenders played the last two seasons under former Matt House.

Too much complexity resulted in miscommunication, misalignments and too many mistakes that made the 10-3 Tigers of 2023 rank 103rd or worse nationally in six defensive stat categories.

LSU head coach Brian Kelly took a look at Missouri’s defensive numbers under Baker last season – No. 4 nationally in fumbles forced (17), 11th in sacks (18), 16th in fumbles recovered (10) and 18th in tackles for loss – and made Baker college football’s highest-paid assistant at $2.5 million annually.

“Our scheme is very user-friendly and very player-friendly,” said Baker, who was LSU linebackers coach in 2021 on Tigers’ head coach Ed Orgeron’s final staff before he was fired. “It takes time (to learn). We really work hard as a staff compartmentalizing things, putting things in buckets, and trying to give them (the players) some word association. It’s clicking with them pretty quick.”

More than one LSU defender describes Baker’s defense as allowing them to play “free.”

“Free, like you don’t have to worry about a lot on your mind,” Tigers’ cornerback Ashton Stamps said. “You have one call, one check, and not like 14 different checks. Just being free allows you to do freakish things.”

LSU All-SEC inside linebacker Harold Perkins Jr. is all in on anything Baker can design.

“Coach Baker has a spectacular mind,” Perkins said. “He can come in here right now and draw up something (a scheme) that I like. He’s always bringing fresh stuff to the table. We may come out in a look we’ve already used, but we’ll run something totally different from it.”

One of Baker’s charges is making maximum use of Perkins’ spectacular athletic ability, which seemed vastly reduced last season when he moved to middle linebacker.

Perkins is playing in the box again this season as an inside linebacker but with more confidence and knowledge instilled in him by Baker.

“Harold Perkins right now is playing on fire,” Baker said. “We’ve put a lot on his plate. We have packages (for Perkins), and we move him all around. He’s not just playing on the inside.

“I’m very pleased with Harold and his development. If you talk about where he started this thing at the beginning of spring and where he is now, it’s night and day.  I really think he’s not even scratching the surface of where he’s going to be.”

Monday began a run of 12 LSU practices in the next 13 days – six straight days this week, a recovery day on Sunday and then another six consecutive days putting the Tigers on the doorstep of season-opening game week preparation.

Baker is trying to solidify a starting lineup and playing rotation.

“We’ve been mixing a lot of people with a lot of different groups,” Baker said. “We haven’t settled into any type of depth chart. We’ve improved a lot physically since spring. The guys did a really good job in the summer on their own. We have about 90 percent of our playbook in and we’re calling it all so there’s a lot on their plate mentally.

“I’m pleased where we’re at, but we still have a long way to go. I’m still looking for more consistency. When we all do our job, we’re pretty good.”

Baker said this two-week stretch of six consecutive practices each week is huge for the defense leading into the Sept. 1 season opener vs. USC in Las Vegas.

“We’re looking for marked improvement,” Baker said. “I think the cream will start rising to the top.”

Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com


The Olympic medal gymnastics fiasco

By JEANNI RITCHIE 
 
If you’ve tuned in to the Olympics the last two weeks, you’ve seen some career-defining record moments by United States athletes. 
 
The U.S. Mixed 4×100 meter medley relay team comprised of Ryan Murphy, Nic Fink, Gretchen Walsh, and Torri Husk set a new world record in Swimming. Gretchen Walsh also broke the Olympic record in the Women’s 100 meter butterfly. 
 
In all, Team USA won 40 gold medals, tying with China for the most first place finishes. Overall, however, the U.S. topped the international competition in podium stands with 126 medals in all. Or is it 127?
 
This is where it gets tricky. 
 
During the final event of the Women’s Gymnastics Individual Event Floor Competition, all eyes were on USA’s record-shattering Simone Biles and Brazil’s Rebecca Andrade as they battled for gold. The gymnasts, who’ve long supported and advocated for each other, battled it out with Andrade edging out Biles for the top spot 14.166 to 14.133. 
 
In an admirable and little-talked about display of sportsmanship, Biles immediately walked over and hugged her rival as soon as her slightly-lower score was announced. 
 
However there were more contestants to go. Announcers thought Romania’s Sabrina Voinea’s flawless routine might have surpassed both girls but her score surprisingly placed her in her fourth, behind teammate Ana Barbosu. The .1 deduction for stepping out of bounds was not contested by the Romanian coaches, thought video replay showed her heel was actually in-bounds and would’ve ultimately put her on the podium. 
 
Last up was USA’s Jordan Chiles whose popular floor routine had the crowds cheering. Her initial score landed her in 5th as her coaches submitted an inquiry involving a move she hadn’t gotten credit for. As Romania’s Barbosu prepared to receive her bronze medal with her country’s flag draped around her, the scoreboard flashed and showed a score change. 
 
Chiles had been given credit for the added element and her new score eclipsed Barbosu’s. As the Romanian headed off the floor in tears, it was the US flag that would flank each side of the podium. 
 
Giving Andrade “her flowers” (slang for paying respect) by bowing to gold medalist Andrade on the podium, Simone Biles and Jordan Chiles exemplified sportsmanship in an international competition. 
 
Meanwhile the Romanian Gymnastics Federation asked the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to review the procedure of Team USA Coach Landi’s appeal while its Prime Minister planned to boycott the Closing Ceremony. They also asked for a reinstatement of the deduction Voinea had erroneously received. 
 
CAS wrote Saturday that the initial finishing order should be restored, with Romania’s Barbosu and Voinea, third and fourth respectively, and Chiles fifth. The organization added the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) should determine the final ranking “in accordance with the above decision,” but left it up to the federation to decide who would get the medal. 
 
Both the USA and Romania Gymnastics Committees proposed that all three girls share the bronze. The girls had weathered an avalanche of emotions and social media firestorms through the questionable judging. It was a fair and amenable solution. 
 
FIG refused. They ordered Chiles to return the bronze medal so it could be shipped to Romania by claiming her coach’s inquiry came four seconds too late and reinstating her original score. 
 
Now the USA has appealed with video evidence showing Coach Landi’s first inquest came at 47 seconds, 13 full seconds before the deadline, with a second inquiry submitted at 55 seconds. As of press time, no ruling has been made on the latest appeal. 
 
At this point, I’m hoping someone like Haley Graham shows up in L,A, in 2028, determined to revolutionize a flawed gymnastics judging system a la Stick It. 
 
Jeanni Ritchie is a collegiate and elite gymnastics fan. She can be reached at jeanniritchie54@gmail.com. 

Rape, attempted murder suspects draw combined $1 million bail

Arrests are accusations not convictions. 

August 9 

Weapons 

Alex Bell, 22, Alexandria — aggravated assault with firearm, allowing dogs to run loose, contempt 2 counts, $4,000 bail;

Allen Bell Jr., 23, Pineville — aggravated assault with firearm, allowing dogs to run loose, contempt 2 counts, $8,000 bail. 

Other

Joshua Burnett, 36, Glenmora — 1st degree rape, sexual battery, indecent behavior, $450,000 bail;

Travis Newman, 29, Alexandria — aggravated domestic abuse battery, aggravated assault, $5,000 bail;

Malcolm Smith, 37, Pineville — domestic abuse battery, aggravated assault child endangerment, resisting, probation violation, $3,000 bail.  

This date: 20 arrests, 10 including one or more contempt counts.  

August 10 

Weapons

Zachary Bonier, 37, Alexandria — attempted murder 2nd degree, felon possessing firearm, contempt, $550,000 bail.

Other

Caleb Calvo, 33, Alexandria — aggravated battery, $2,000 bail;

Joshua Miller, 40, Pineville — aggravated battery, contempt 2 counts, $6,500 bail. 

This date: 14 arrests, 8 including one or more contempt counts. 


Conspiracy, drugs in jail accusations add up on Alexandria man

Arrests are accusations not convictions.

August 9

Quinton Dick, 21, Alexandria — possession with intent, criminal conspiracy, contraband penal facility, $150,000 bail;

Gregory Hattaway, 63, Pineville — possession, improper turn, $2,600 bail;

Sheterroca Henderson, 47, Alexandria — possession, paraphernalia, illegal possession stolen things, probation violation, contempt 2 counts, $20,500 bail;

Adriel Hester, 52, Elmer — possession with intent, suspension/revocation, $2,600 bail;

James Jones, 61, Alexandria — possession 2 counts, lamps/reflectors, $2,600 bail;

Antonio Love, 34, Alexandria — possession with intent, possession, paraphernalia, $100,500 bail;

Rebecca Mcmahon, 34, Pineville — possession, contempt, $3,500 bail;

Travis Trantham Jr., 40, Pineville — possession, paraphernalia, burglary, contempt 2 counts, $13,000 bail;

Tyrone Wilson, 44, Alexandria — possession 2 counts, trespassing/remaining forbidden, $5,500 bail. 

August 10

Carl George Jr., 63, Pineville — possession, paraphernalia, resisting, lamps/reflectors, contempt 3 counts, $29,100 bail;

Dwight Poole, 68, Boyce — possession, paraphernalia, $2,000 bail;

Sedrick Wells, 30, Alexandria — possession, paraphernalia, speeding, no driver’s license, $1,200 bail.


Are Beavers Worth a Dam?

By Brad Dison

Following World War II, a large number of Idaho farmers began complaining that beavers were ruining their land.  They argued that overeager beavers were building dams in their much-needed irrigation canals.  Once beavers built dams in their irrigation canals, water could not get to their crops.  Farmers wanted to exterminate the beavers.  This led to a years-long dispute because fur trappers liked the beavers for their monetary value.  They made a considerable amount of money by selling beaver pelts.  Also, conservationists wanted to protect the beavers because, as The Idaho Statesman reported, “Idaho is one of the few places where [beavers] still can be found outside a zoo.”  For years, farmers, fur trappers, and conservationists argued as to whether beavers “are worth a dam—their own dams, specifically.”   

To quell the dispute, Idaho’s fish and game department decided to transport the beavers into the Chamberlain Basin in the Sawtooth Mountain Range in central Idaho where they could build dams and not hurt productive fields.  The beavers would also help with erosion in the mountainous region.  The task was daunting for the agents of the fish and game department as well as the beavers themselves.  Agents, farmers, and fur trappers set out live traps to capture beavers without harming them.  They put each beaver in its own cage, loaded the cages onto trucks, and carried them in this manner until they ran out of roads.  Then, agents used horses to deliver the beavers deep into the woods.  The trip took several days and was taxing on the agents and the beavers.  Many beavers died before they could be released.  Several of the beavers which survived the trip overheated and were in such poor condition that they refused to eat and died soon after being released.  Conservationists needed a better way.

Ivol Sies, district conservation supervisor at Boise, Vernon Rich, federal aid coordinator for Idaho, and Elmo Meyer, conservation officer at McCall, came up with a two-part plan.  They devised a new cage for delivering the beavers.  Their cage was a simple spring-loaded box which was hinged at the bottom.  Each box held a single beaver.  The weight of the beaver kept the box closed.  To be sure the cages remained closed until it was time to release the beavers, two inner tubes were pulled around the box and tied together at the top with a string.  As soon as the box carrying the beaver touched the ground, the tension on the string released, the spring-loaded box opened, and the beaver crawled out.  That was just the first part of their plan.  They needed a way to reduce the transportation time.

Conservationists wanted to capture and release beavers back into the primitive areas of central Idaho in a timelier manner.  Trucks and horses just took too long.  Building roads into the Chamberlain Basin was too expensive.  They had considered transporting the beavers by airplane and having agents release the beavers once they arrived, but there was no suitable place to land amongst the dense foliage.  The answer came with World War II military surplus items.             

On August 14, 1948, the second part of their plan to transport the beavers into the primitive areas of Idaho began.  Conservationists loaded their vehicle with eight of the new hinged cases each of which contained a single beaver.  Whereas all previous trips had taken several conservation agents, the new plan only required two people, one agent and a pilot.  The vehicle they used was a twin-engine Beechcraft airplane.  Remember, there was no place to land in the dense foliage.  The pilot flew the airplane at an altitude of between 500 and 800 feet above Chamberlain Basin and the conservation agent simply pushed the cages out.  Of the first 76 beavers they released into Chamberlain Basin during that operation, only one beaver died when he fought his way out of the new cage and fell to his death.  The other beavers landed safely because their fall was slowed… by parachutes left over from World War II.  Hundreds of beavers were safely relocated in what has become known as the beaver drop.          

Sources:

1.     The Idaho Statesman, August 24, 1948, p.11.
2.     San Angelo Standard-Times, August 25, 1948, p.6.
3.     The Spokesman-Review, September 13, 1948, p.5.


August is National Crayon Collection Month

By Jeanni Ritchie
 
National Crayon Collection Month in August makes a point of ensuring every child has this essential school supply. National Crayon Collection Month draws awareness to the environmental and social impact of throwing crayons away while students across the country go without crucial classroom supplies.
 
#NATIONALCRAYONDAY
 
Collecting gently used, but discarded restaurant crayons was the brainchild of Crayon Collection, a 501c3 non-profit organization dedicated to redirecting mountains of much-needed (and non-decomposing) crayons from landfills to schools. 
 
Throughout the month of August, families and teachers are encouraged to ask managers of kid-friendly restaurants to save their discarded crayons.  At the end of the campaign, they can return to the restaurant, collect the restaurant’s saved crayons and donate them to their local schools. Bringing all those simple but brightly colored art tools to classrooms will free up teacher resources and place them into the hands of children who might have gone without.
 
This makes a great family project, school service club drive, or young philanthropy lesson. Anyone can participate and all efforts benefit local schools and students in need. 
 
Share photos of your collections and art by using #GotCrayons on social media to encourage others to participate and to show how simply you can gain access to thousands of crayons. Make a difference in the lives of children and the environment simultaneously! 
 
Jeanni Ritchie is a former educator and contributing journalist. She can be reached at jeanniritchie54@gmail.com. 

Notice of Death – August 12, 2024

William “Billy” Brooks, Jr.
August 3, 1946 – August 8, 2024
Service: Wednesday, August 14, 2024, 11am at Paul Cemetery, Forest Hill
 
Georgia A Humphrey
June 7, 1952 – August 5, 2024
Service: Saturday, August 17, 2024, 10am at Zion Hill Church Family, Pineville.
 
Charlotte Williams Rue
January 18, 1939 – August 8, 2024
Service: Saturday, August 17, 2024, 2pm at New Hope Missionary Baptist Church, Alexandria.
 
Jack Kahn
September 8, 1929 – August 9, 2024
Service: To Be Announced
 
The Rapides Parish Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or RPJNewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to RPJNewsla@gmail.com)

State auditors: Billions spent, at least $3.3 billion ‘questionable’ in purpose or accounting

By JIM BUTLER

Using Everett Dirkson’s measure, the Louisiana Legislative Auditor’s Office is talking real money.

The Illinois senator, observed about federal spending decades ago, “A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking real money.”

The state’s auditors in their required report this month to the Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget cite $3.3 billion in at least questionable state agency spending or accounting of it.

The current General Fund budget is $12 billion. The overall budget is $44.2 billion.

State law requires the audit team to sift annually through the extended maze of Louisiana public spending and report on fiscal deficiencies, inefficiencies, fraud or other significant issues in governmental audits.

The report is delivered to the Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget.

What happens next is up to the committee chaired by Sen. Glen Womack, whose district includes part of Rapides.

Other Rapides legislators on the panel include Sen. Heather Cloud and Reps. Rhonda Butler, Jason Dewitt and Mike Johnson.

Agencies and sums involved in the report:

Department of Children & Family Services- $27 million; Department of Education – $2.3 billion, $966,000, $180,000; Department of Hospitals – $720 million;

Department of Military Affairs – $13 million;

Executive:

Office of Community Development – $9.5 million; Homeland Security & Emergency Preparedness Public Assistance Program – $228 million; Road Home – $10.8 million.

Auditors note some issues have been encountered in previous audits. These reports are from those done in the last quarter of the fiscal year that ended June 30.


RPSB: Revised transportation guidelines

Rapides Parish School Board’s Transportation Department 2024-2025

The Rapides Parish School Board’s Transportation Department has issued revised guidelines for 2024-2025.

We apologize for any confusion around the guidance referring to the requirement of parental supervision at the designated bus stops for students.

After clarifying with the LDOE Transportation, parental supervision is not a requirement at bus stops, and we ask that all families please read the revised guidelines below:


Multi-agency collaboration leads to 57 arrests with drugs, firearms, and cash seized

The Central Louisiana Violent Crimes Abatement Team (CENLA/VCAT) conducted a two-day joint crime suppression detail last week in Alexandria.

CENLA/VCAT comprises many law enforcement agencies that join together as one team to conduct proactive enforcement efforts. During this two-day detail, the agencies that participated were Louisiana State Police, Rapides Parish Sheriff’s Office, Alexandria Police Department, Louisiana Probation and Parole, Federal Bureau of Investigations, and the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms.

As a result of the collaboration and dedicated enforcement efforts, officers made 57 arrests and seized multiple firearms, as well as various controlled dangerous substances, including cocaine, marijuana, and methamphetamine. Additionally, officers seized over $8,000 in U.S. currency.

The investigation remains active and ongoing. To report suspicious or criminal activity in your community, the Louisiana State Police online reporting system is available to the public through a convenient, anonymous, and secure reporting form that is submitted to the appropriate investigators. 

Report Suspicious or Criminal Activity.  Call 318-741-7411


Arrest made in felony theft investigation

Shelby Martin Decote

On July 21, 2024, Patrol Deputies responded to the 7000 Block of Hickory Grove Road in Deville in reference to a theft. Deputies processed the scene by taking photos of missing items and generated a report for further investigation. Detectives from the Tioga Substation responded to conduct their investigation and were able to identify a suspect, identified as Shelby Martin Ducote, 29 of Deville, LA.

Detectives met with the victim and determined that the theft was in excess of $25,000.00 which is a felony. Detectives were able to established sufficient probable cause for an arrest warrant for Ducote and on July 30, Ducote was located, taken into custody without incident at his residence and booked into the Rapides Parish Detention Center. Ducote was released the following day after posting a $10,000.00 bond.

Sheriff’s Detectives say this is still an active investigation and more arrests could be made. If anyone has any information involving this crime, they are asked to contact Detective Matt Dauzat, Criminal Investigation Division- Tioga Substation at 318-641-6005.

Arrestee: Shelby Martin Ducote, 29, 7137 Hickory Grove Road, Deville, LA

Charges: Theft greater than $25,000.00


Reynolds-Lively box office showdown

By JEANNI RITCHIE

I knew when I left the theater after seeing It Ends With Us that there would be a good-natured rivalry over who topped the boxed office in the Reynolds-Lively home this weekend.

Ryan Reynolds’ Deadpool and Wolverine had been at the number 1 spot for two weeks and was still going strong when wife Blake Lively’s It Ends With Us adaptation of the popular 2016 Colleen Hoover novel hit the screens. It was the ultimate destination for a good old fashioned GNO.

Judging from the packed parking lot at my local theater it was going to be a photo finish. While I wasn’t sure who would come out on top, I was certain both would emerge victorious.

After all, acting is a family affair as the spouses are highly involved in each other’s work. Lively starred as Lady Deadpool in Deadpool and Wolverine while their 7-year old daughter Inez starred as Kidpool and 1-year old son Olin had a voice cameo as Babypool. The script, cowritten by Reynolds, had lots of cheeky references to his wife and her previous acting roles.

Reynolds also had a hand in writing his wife’s new film, creating the rooftop scene that set the tone for the drama. Both spouses have said in interviews that they are highly engaged in the creative process of their films, a quality that makes them as vital to the film onscreen as well behind the scenes.

Lively’s movies are often psychologically complex but Reynolds helps his wife maintain that girl next door vibe with a healthy dose of pranking and trolling each other on social media. They don’t take their fame seriously but they do take their family seriously.

They also take their careers seriously. From his sitcom Two Guys and a Girl to the blockbuster Deadpool series, Reynolds has had massive hits including The Proposal and Definitely, Maybe. Lively became a household name while starring on Gossip Girl, but is also very adept at bringing popular book characters to life from Bridget in Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants to Emily in A Simple Favor and its upcoming sequel. With her recent turn as Lily Bloom in It Ends With Us, I couldn’t wait to find out who won the box office showdown. I just knew there was some kind of quirky bet behind closed doors in the Reynolds-Lively household.

The envelope, please…

It is Deadpool and Wolverine for the box office win but not by much!  In its third weekend, the Shawn Levy-directed Marvel flick slightly edged out the romantic drama at the weekend box office 56.4 million to 50 million.

But if I’m casting a vote…the award definitely goes to Lively for pulling off crop tops and sexy lingerie three months after delivering her fourth child. I, too, have four kids. But my youngest is 29 and my abs are still in hiding!

Jeanni Ritchie is a film buff and pop culture fanatic. She can be reached at jeanniritchie54@gmail.com.