Eyes on two deadlines centered around Alexandria mayor Jacques Roy

By JIM BUTLER

Coincidental timing has two events of importance to Alexandria government watchers occurring as this week ends.

Under terms of the city charter, today, March 15, is deadline for the administration submitting its proposed budget for the next fiscal year to the City Council.

How it compares to the current-year budget will reflect the administration’s estimates of revenue and expense changes as well as outline Mayor Jacques Roy’s vision for the city.

To read the plan you’ll most likely have to go to City Hall. The city, like most local governments, doesn’t post current or proposed budgets on its web site and is not required to do so.

The other event this weekend is arrival Sunday of the deadline for Roy recall organizers to reach the 6,300 certified signatures to force a vote.

Project Enough organizers filed their petition with the Secretary of State’s office Sept. 17. By law, they have six months to garner the necessary support to force a referendum on recalling Roy and council members Jim Villard and Lee Rubin.

Given that the 17th is a Sunday it is likely the official deadline will not occur until Monday.

The organizers, who have not issued any recent updates on the campaign progress, cited utilities and law enforcement issues among the complaints.


RRAC champion LSUA tips tonight in NAIA tourney opener

LSUA’s Dimario Jackson made an impressive debut, leading the Generals to regular-season and conference championships and earning Red River Athletic Conference Coach of the Year honors. (Photo courtesy LSUA Athletics)

By DOUG IRELAND

OLATHE, Kan. – The LSUA men’s basketball team is on a roll entering the NAIA Men’s Basketball Championships, beginning tonight.

Their opponent, Bethel (Indiana), is not.

But the Pilots (19-10), losers of four of their last five games, have a credential the Generals (24-6) crave. Bethel was nationally ranked last month, and owns a win over then No. 6-ranked Georgetown (Ky.).  LSUA sits just outside the final NAIA Top 25 poll, receiving 58 points in voting to rank tops among the others receiving votes.

The Generals, champions of the Red River Athletic Conference regular-season and tournament, are seeded sixth in the Cramer Quadrant of the NAIA Tournament. They will face No. 11 Bethel at 6 p.m. tonight.

The winner will play either No. 3-seeded MidAmerica Nazarene (Kan.) or 14th-seeded Central (Ark.) Baptist in the regional final Saturday evening at 6. MidAmerica Nazarene is ranked 10th nationally with a 24-4 record.

No. 2 seed Oklahoma Wesleyan and No. 7 seed Hastings (Neb.) are the top seeds in the Wichita regional that feeds its winner against the Olathe survivor in the quandrant semifinal the following week.

Tonight’s game should be fast-paced. Both teams average 85 points per game. LSUA shoots a solid 48 percent but Bethel is even better at 51 percent as a team.

The Generals’ first-year coach, Dimaro Jackson, was the RRAC Coach of the Year after moving up from Port Allen High School last year. Junior guard Kashie Natt won RRAC Player of the Year honors by averaging 17.3 points, second in the conference, and leading the league with a 10.2 rebounding rate.

Senior guard JD Allen led the RRAC with an 18.1 scoring average, and grabbed 6.6 rebounds per game, earning first-team all-conference honors. Alexandria junior Jason Perry II scored 11.3 per game and was a second-team All-RRAC pick. Isaiah Howard was the co-Freshman of the Year in the conference.

The Pilots are led by former Incarnate Word three-year starter Drew Lutz, a 6-1 senior guard who is second nationally with a 24.6 scoring rate. He has made 165 free throws, sinking 86 percent.  He leads four teammates with double-figure scoring averages.

Bethel has only one win since mid-February. LSUA has won its last seven. The Pilots have a 12-5 record away from The Fort, their homecourt.


Farmerville woman faces 3rd offense OWI charge, $50,000 bail

Arrests are accusations, not convictions.

March 7

Steven Ray, 47, Alexandria — DWI 2nd, open container, no head light, 8 pm, $1,955 bail;

Piper Smith, 50, Alexandria — OWI 1st, 12:23 pm, $1,000 bail.

March 8

Jerry Duffey, 51, Alexandria — OWI 2nd, felony flight, speeding, littering, restricted driver’s license, improper lane use, no head light, open container, 10:11 pm, $2,500 bail.

March 9

Landon Fontenot, 25, Ville Platte — OWI 1st, improper lane use, safety belt violation, 1:17 am, $1,200 bail;

Kaden Jones, 19, Deville — OWI underage, 1:22 am, $1,000 bail.

March 10

Trenton Marler, 43, Sieper — OWI 1st, open container, 7:14 pm, $1,100 bail;

Kari Nalley, 39, Farmerville — OWI 3rd, open container, 1:17 am, $50,100 bail.

March 13

Nicholas Hammond, 44, Pineville — DWI 1st, careless operation, 9:49 am, $1,100 bail. 


Burglary, battery charges on three local suspects

Arrests are accusations, not convictions.

March 13

Gabriel Leer, 18, Pineville — purchase/possession of alcohol by minor, resisting, battery on officer, contributing to delinquency, $2,500 bail;

Winnie Lott, 48, Alexandria — aggravated battery, contempt 4 counts, $13,000 bail;

Ericka Thompson, 27, Alexandria — aggravated burglary, contempt 4 counts, $16,500 bail.


Notice of Death – March 14, 2024

Freda Wise Bryant
March 30, 1946 – March 11, 2024
Service: Friday, March 15, 2024, 10:30am at Framer Funeral Home of Fifth Ward
 
Jesse Homer Crouch
July 7, 1941 – December 11, 2023
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 3pm at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Pineville.
 
John “Mitch” “Swampy” Barnett
February 23, 1962 – March 9, 2024
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 11am at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Alexandria.
 
Harold Lynn “Bud” Weir
November 13, 1941 – March 9, 2024
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 3pm at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Alexandria.
 
Elta Mae Robinson
September 13, 1934 – March 5, 2024
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 1pm at St. John Missionary Baptist Church, Lecompte.
 
Jerry Wayne Riggs
November 11, 1943 – March 8, 2024
Service: Wednesday, March 20, 2024, 10am at Hixson Brothers Alexandria.
 
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)

Shocking homecoming to Pineville for Boeing whistleblower Barnett

John Barnett was raised in Cenla and came back to live here after his abrupt retirement from Boeing in 2017 while under pressure after warning about deficiencies in the airplane maker’s production lines. (Photo from Hixon Brothers Funeral Home)

By JIM BUTLER

John Barnett told some acquaintances he would be a millionaire on returning to Pineville from South Carolina.

Instead, he’s come home in a casket.

Services are scheduled for 11 a.m. Saturday at Hixson Bros., Alexandria. He will be buried at Greenwood Memorial Park in Pineville.

Ebullient is a word that comes to mind when listening to family and friends discuss him. 

Barnett, 62, a whistleblower on Boeing safety issues, allegedly committed suicide Saturday morning shortly before the third of three deposition sessions was to begin in Charleston, S.C.

His attorneys expressed disbelief that he would take his own life.

He retired in 2017 after 32 years with the aircraft company, telling friends he did so before Boeing fired him in the wake of his revelations about practices in the Charleston plant, to which he was transferred from Washington State that year.

Subsequently he sued, claiming he was punished for raising his concerns. Boeing moved to dismiss the action, but a judge ruled in 2022 it could go forward. Trial was scheduled for June of this year.

Also in 2022 Barnett, recipient of a national award for civic courage, was among those featured in a Netflix documentary – Downfall: The Case Against Boeing – about the company’s safety record.

After retiring Barnett, known as Mitch to some and Swampy to others, and his wife Diane, herself a 28-year Boeing employee, relocated to Pineville and pursued their interests in race cars and family.

Barnett, often referred to as Swamp Dawg by others in the racing circles, was a familiar sight around town in his distinctive orange pickup.

Diane became ill and John her caretaker until she passed at age 60 in November 2023.

Information in this story about the sequence of events in South Carolina was initially reported by The Washington Post. 


Radiothon: KRRV & KISS host the 28th Annual Country Cares for St. Jude

Cenla’s St. Jude Radiothon

Join us this Thursday (today) and Friday from 6a-6p for the two most exciting days on the radio, our St. Jude Radiothon!  The 28th Annual Country Cares for St. Jude Radiothon will be happening on KRRV 100.3 and KISS 98.7.  For two days KRRV and KISS will dedicate our airwaves to Country Cares for St. Jude.  Listen as we share patient stories and many of them from families right here in Cenla!

To find out how you can help, just LISTEN to KRRV or KISS.  

 

For Additional Information, please call:

Melissa Frost – KRRV Program Director

Jay Stevens – KISS Program Director

TO DONATE:

Call: 1-800-573-5425
TEXT: CENLA to 626262
ONLINE: KRRVonline.com

 


OPPORTUNITY: Executive Director for Natchitoches Parish Tourist Commission

State of Purpose:
The Executive Director serves as the chief administrator, providing leadership to staff and directing the CVB operation in order to develop maximum potential of convention and visitor business, thereby bringing the greatest possible economic benefit to the Natchitoches area.

Reports to:  Natchitoches Parish Tourist Commission board members.

Degree of Supervision:  Monthly review by NPTC Board

Supervision Exercised: Supervises all NPTC employees

Location of Job: Natchitoches Visitors Center, 780 Front Street, Ste 100.

Qualifications:
Graduate of an accredited four year college in the field of Business, Marketing and Public Relations, Hospitality Management or any combination of education and experience to equal five years related experience.

Special Knowledge:
Extensive knowledge of the principles and practices in convention and tourism planning  services. Considerable knowledge in the fields to advertising, marketing, public relations, business administration, which includes but not limited to, personnel management, principles of accounting, and excellent communication skills. Must possess the ability to exercise initiative, judgment, tact, and, diplomacy in a wide variety of public situations. Position requires frequent travel.

Submit to:  Arlene Gould director@natchitoches.com

780 Front Street, Suite 100
Natchitoches, LA 71457
Telephone: 1-800-259-1714
Fax: 1-318-352-2415

DUTIES OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR:

  • Provide administrative and professional assistance to the Chairman and Commissioners along with the staff of the Tourist Commission and ensure that the board complies with all local, parish, state and/or federal laws and regulations
  • Responsible for hiring, termination and training all staff and volunteers.
  • Preparation of the annual budget and management of Commission business within the budget.
  • Preparation of annual marketing/advertising plan with all advertising potentials outlined in plan.
  • Track and prepare all financial data for annual audit or Compilation of Finances by Accounting Firm.
  • Represent Natchitoches Parish to national and international audiences by attending consumer and trade shows along with Groups & Tourism Sales Manager.
  • Oversee press releases and press packets for local, regional and national media regarding activities along with Marketing & Communications Manager.
  • Advise tourism partners with launching festivals, new events and ongoing events with consulting, publicity and advertising.
  • Host local, national and international travel writers along with familiarization tours for group tour leaders along with Marketing & Communications Manager.
  • Create publicity materials and brochures for distribution to guests, group tour leaders, retirees and newcomer inquiries.
  • Work closely with advertising agency to create ads for regional publications in a timely manner.
  • Assist Marketing & Communications Manager with creating story ideas and articles for both regional and national publications.
  • Attend meetings of city/parish stakeholders such as City, Chamber of Commerce, Parish Council, HDBA, NHDDC, CRNHA, Christmas Festival and several others including statewide, LTA and LACVB, and regional tourism associations, El Camino Real, No Man’s Land, Holiday Trail of Lights, councils and committees and others.
  • Maintain a working relationship with the NSU hospitality program and university students for internships and other assistance to the Commission.
  • Assist Groups & Tourism Sales Manager to consult and advise conference meeting holders and large groups visiting Natchitoches.
  • Responsible for overseeing meeting notices, recording of minutes, transcribing and typing monthly board minutes, filing, letter writing and other necessary items for a small business office and Executive Director.
  • Oversee that all inquiries from potential visitors and tour groups are acknowledged immediately.
  • Assist Marketing & Communications Manager with updating websites, social media information with current events and festivals.
  • Assist with daily operations as necessary supervising the Travel Counselors and Visitor Center.
  • Follow the directions and seek counsel of the Chairman of the Board of Natchitoches Parish Tourism Commission, as the immediate supervisor, between Board Meetings.
  • Ensure no employees, nor the Executive Director; conduct any personal business on Tourist Commission property, during working hours or with Tourist Commission assets.

OPPORTUNITY: Airport Manager

Position: Airport Manager

Description: Directs, Coordinates and Supervises all day to day operations and activities related to the Natchitoches Regional Airport.

Qualifications: Broad knowledge of such fields as Accounting, Marketing, Business Administration,  Finance, etc. Equivalent to a four-year College degree, Plus 5 years related Airport Management experience and/or training.

Contact: City of Natchitoches, Human Resources Department, 750 Second St. or P.O. Box 37, Natchitoches LA 71458-0037.

Applications may be picked up at the Event Center or you can download an application at www.natchitochesla.gov and turn into Human Resources at the Event Center when complete.

Deadline to Apply: March 15th, 2024

THE CITY OF NATCHITOCHES IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER


ASH, Tioga claim OakWing team tourney titles

By BRET H. MCCORMICK, Journal Sports

Alexandria Senior High’s boys and Tioga’s girls made it two for two in tournament victories in the Central Louisiana High School Golf League by taking the team titles during a 9-hole tournament at Alexandria’s OakWing Golf Club on Monday. 

ASH placed the top two and three of the top four individual finishers to defeat St. Mary’s by nine shots and claim the team title. Jake Hansen earned the individual title with a 1-over 37 to finish one shot ahead of his teammate, Aiden Crowell. 

The duo tied for second at last month’s Links on the Bayou tournament. Jackson Townsend followed his fourth-place finish at Links on the Bayou with another fourth-place finish at OakWing by shooting 4-over 40. 

Menard’s Jake Vaughn finished third at 3-over 39, while the St. Mary’s duo of Peter Kautz and Mixon Bankston were among four players to tie for fifth place with a 41. Avoyelles Charter’s Pierce Regard, who won the Links on the Bayou tournament, and Bunkie’s Jamie Lachney also shot 41. 

Menard’s Hunter Vaughn finished in ninth place with a 6-0ver 42, while Bode Blackmon and Ethan Busby of St. Mary’s shot 43 to tie for 10th place along with Bunkie’s JD Smith. 

Tioga’s Morgan Goudeau (42) and Maci Smith (46) earned the top two spots in the girls division as they paced the Lady Indians to a 24-shot victory over Avoyelles Charter. Goudeau and Smith also went 1-2 at the Links on the Bayou tournament. 

The rest of the girls’ top-five finishers were St. Mary’s Lilly Boyd (53), Avoyelles Charter’s Kara Chenevert (55) and Avoyelles Charter’s Marlee Mayeux (57). 

Two of the five scheduled tournaments for the Central Louisiana High School Golf League are in the books leading up to the final 18-hole tournament at Links on the Bayou on March 26. 

Boys district tournaments will be held from April 15-18 followed by regionals for boys and girls April 22-25 and the state tournament April 29-30. 

BOYS TEAM STANDINGS

  1. ASH, 159
  2. St. Mary’s, 168
  3. Bunkie, 176
  4. Menard, 180
  5. Avoyelles Charter, 204
  6. Pineville, 204
  7. Tioga, 213

BOYS INDIVIDUAL RESULTS

  1. Jake Hansen, ASH, 37
  2. Aiden Crowell, ASH, 38
  3. Jake Vaughn, Menard, 39
  4. Jackson Townsend, ASH, 40
  5. Peter Kautz, St. Mary’s, 41
  6. Mixon Bankston, St. Mary’s, 41
  7. Pierce Regard, Avoyelles Charter, 41
  8. Jamie Lachney, Bunkie, 41
  9. Hunter Vaughn, Menard, 42
  10. Bode Blackmon, St. Mary’s, 43
  11. Ethan Busby, St. Mary’s, 43
  12. JD Smith, Bunkie, 43 

  GIRLS TEAM STANDINGS

  1. Tioga, 88
  2. Avoyelles Charter, 112
  3. St. Mary’s, 116
  4. Pineville, 123
  5. Bunkie, 130

 GIRLS INDIVIDUAL RESULTS

  1. Morgan Goudeau, Tioga. 42
  1. Maci Sanders, Tioga, 46
  1. Lilly Boyd, St. Mary’s, 53
  1. Kara Chenevert, Avoyelles Charter, 55
  1. Marlee Mayeaux, Avoyelles Charter, 57

 UPCOMING SCHEDULE

Here are the remaining tournaments for the 2024 Central Louisiana High School Golf schedule: 

March 19

Location: Tamahka Trails, Marksville
Time: 3 p.m. 
Length: 9 Holes

March 25

Location: Northwestern Hills, Natchitoches
Time: 3 p.m. 
Length: 9 Holes

March 26

Location: Links on the Bayou, Alexandria
Time: Noon
Length: 18 Holes


Upcoming turkey season triggers treasured memory

Hunting wild turkeys in spring has always been my favorite thing to do in the realm of hunting. It started for me in 1992 when on my very first time to hunt turkeys, I was able to take a fine gobbler on a guided hunt in Alabama and I was immediately hooked.

With the age factor along with joints that no longer function as they should, I have had to give up the sport I love and rely on memories of special hunts. With that in mind, here’s memories of my most special turkey hunt, as shared some time ago, when I was still actively chasing gobblers. 

This is the time of year when guys and gals of my ilk crawl out of warm beds early mornings to head for the woods. Granted, no hunting season is open now and we’re not out there to circumvent the law; we’re going out to “listen,” as you’ll overhear us talking about what we did on early pre-spring mornings. We’re going out to “listen” for a gobbler.

Season was still a few weeks away, but there’s something about getting to hear a gobbler sound off from his roost tree that gets the juices flowing and serves to fire us up for what we hope to hear opening morning. 

Not only is it possible to locate where gobblers are roosting, you can also find tracks, droppings, strut marks and such to find where birds are hanging out. Such was the case for me on March 19, 2008 when I stumbled upon the mother lode of turkeys.

After an early morning of listening for a gobbler when the woods were silent, I drove up to a well site back in the woods on my hunting club. I didn’t need to hear a gobbler that morning; when I rounded the curve leading to the well site, I saw turkeys – a whole bunch of turkeys including several strutting gobblers. When they saw me, they took off but no problem; I knew where I’d be set up on opening morning.

The next afternoon, I set up my ground blind in a thicket next to the well site, and cleared brush so I could see the area where the turkeys had gathered the day before.

Granted, it was hard to sleep that night as my mind kept running back to what I had seen two days prior.

March 21 was opening day and I arrived at my blind well before daylight. I decided to sweeten the pot by placing “Pretty Boy,” my strutting tom decoy, on the well site with a submissive hen crouching in front of the tom. Then I waited for daylight with high expectations of what I hoped would happen.

Once the eastern sky began to illuminate the woods and the cardinals and barred owls began their morning chorus, I heard a gobble from the woods directly in front of where I sat.

Waiting a couple of minutes, I stroked a few sweet yelps on my slate call and was greeted with an immediate gobble. Then I just sat back and waited to see what would happen next.

In less than 10 minutes, I saw a white head pop up on the far edge of the well site 100 yards away. Then another head and then a third head as three gobblers began looking for the “hen” they thought they’d heard.

What happened next was what turkey hunters dream about; all three gobblers spied Pretty Boy and the little hen and it became a foot race to see who could get there first to chase away what they envisioned to be a gobbler that had invaded their territory. 

One gobbler won the race and immediately attacked the fake gobbler, sending him careening off the stake where I had placed him. All three proceeded to give the fake a thrashing like I’d never seen with a chorus of clinks and rattles as their beaks and spurs pummeled the hard plastic.

One of the gobblers separated from the other two, I got a bead on him and dropped him. I expected the other two to hightail it when I shot but no; they jumped on the flopping bird I had shot and began pecking and spurring their fallen cohort unmercifully.

I could have easily taken both the other gobblers but I had my limit for the day and all I could do was sit back and enjoy the show until a vehicle approached and they scattered.

Spring turkey hunting can be disappointing but it can provide thrills and excitement, the likes of which I never experienced before or since that special morning in the turkey woods.

Contact Glynn at glynnharris37@aol.com


Protective order violation carries heavy price

Arrests are accusations, not convictions. 

March 12

Derrick Blunt, 44, Alexandria — felony flight, no driver’s license, speeding, improper turn, extradition proceedings, $1,300 bail;

Kathy Hill, 58, Jonesboro, LA — criminal trespass, paraphernalia, theft, $1,500 bail;

Kenny Piper, 36, Alexandria — aggravated strangle domestic abuse battery strangulation, aggravated battery, contempt, $5,000 bail;

Matthew Pomes II, 25, Pineville — violation protective order 1st offense 2 counts, $50,000 bail. 


No Bake Chocolate Chip Cookie Dessert

No Bake Chocolate Chip Cookie Dessert – With the Easter holiday quickly approaching this recipe pops to mind for both sake of ease and of course YUM.  Often I am asked what desserts can be made ahead for someone to take to another home.  This recipe fits the bill perfectly!  This is also a recipe that kids will love to help with too.  Every time I make this for a crowd I hope for leftovers to take home and there are rarely any!

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups prebaked chocolate chip cookies (I use storebought)
  • 4 tablespoons butter, melted
  • 16 ounces cream cheese, softened
  • Large box instant chocolate pudding (plus milk called for on box less ½ cup)
  • 2 cups powdered sugar
  • ¼  cup whole milk
  • 8 ounces extra creamy Cool Whip

Directions

Roughly crumble the cookies in the bottom of a serving bowl.  Pour melted butter over the top.

In a mixing bowl add cream cheese, powdered sugar and milk.  Mix until smooth.  Pour on top of cookies. 

Make chocolate pudding according to package directions but reduce the milk by ½ cup.  Spread over cream cheese mixture.

Top with Cool Whip. Enjoy!

(Ashley Madden Rowton is a wife, mom and published cookbook author who lives in Minden, La.)


Notice of Death – March 13, 2024

Freda Wise Bryant
March 30, 1946 – March 11, 2024
Service: Friday, March 15, 2024, 10:30am at Framer Funeral Home of Fifth Ward
 
Jesse Homer Crouch
July 7, 1941 – December 11, 2023
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 3pm at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Pineville.
 
John “Mitch” “Swampy” Barnett
February 23, 1962 – March 9, 2024
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 11am at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Alexandria.
 
Harold Lynn “Bud” Weir
November 13, 1941 – March 9, 2024
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 3pm at Hixson Brothers Funeral Home, Alexandria.
 
Elta Mae Robinson
September 13, 1934 – March 5, 2024
Service: Saturday, March 16, 2024, 1pm at St. John Missionary Baptist Church, Lecompte.
 
Jerry Wayne Riggs
November 11, 1943 – March 8, 2024
Service: Wednesday, March 20, 2024, 10am at Hixson Brothers Alexandria.
 
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)

Collection of contempt charges, other accusations follow two Alexandria women

Journal File Photo

By JIM BUTLER

Nakeita Williams made another short visit Monday to the parish lockup.  Meanwhile, Terineesha Nelson’s stay continues.

Williams, 35, of Alexandria was booked on five counts of contempt of court. She posted $17,500 bond less than a half hour later.

In October Williams was in custody 20 days before making $16,250 bail.

Those charges included six counts of contempt as well as aggravated assault with a firearm, home invasion and violation of a protective order.

Her $9,000 bond was posted the same day of an April 2022 arrest on three counts of contempt in addition to accusations of illegal use of dangerous weapons, contributing to delinquency and disturbing the peace.

Nelson, 31, also of Alexandria was booked March 7 on narcotics charges and 15 counts of contempt. Her bail is that $48,500.

In December, she made $25,000 bail on 14 contempt charges.

That was her sixth arrest of 2023.


If you’re waiting for a Mulkey apology, you’ll be on hold forever

 If you’re waiting for a Mulkey apology, you’ll be on hold forever

BATON ROUGE — The more I read and hear the last couple of days from national journalists that LSU head women’s basketball coach Kim Mulkey is a soulless terrible human being and a Salem witch on the bayou. . .

“As a leader of young people, she leaves a lot to be desired,” writes Paul Newberry of the Associated Press.

The more I realize. . .

“She wears so many feathers and sequins, it’s a wonder there’s any left for the Mardi Gras krewes,” writes Nancy Armour of USA Today.

And the more I understand. . .

“We’ve got to start doing a better job of holding Kim Mulkey accountable and responsible for some of her comments,” said ESPN self-proclaimed sports watchdog Shannon Sharpe, who last season got in a courtside verbal confrontation with two Memphis Grizzlies players during a Lakers’ game.

I’d like to be back in college again and coached by someone as passionate as Mulkey, somebody so demanding of giving it your best and so fiercely loyal about protecting her players.

Elite players like current Tigers’ starters Angel Reese, Aneesah Morrow and Hailey Van Lith transferred to LSU because they wanted to be coached hard Mulkey, who makes them better players and stronger women for life.

They know when Mulkey opens her mouth, she says what she means, and she means what she says.

It isn’t usually candy-coated. It often isn’t politically correct. And you may disagree with her viewpoint and straightforward delivery most of the time.

But she’s authentic in a business full of phonies and snowflakes selling mountains of malarkey to anyone who’ll listen.

Because of that, Mulkey’s always on call to be burned to the stake by the hordes of her haters, angry and aghast that she doesn’t fit in their imaginary little box of what a demure coach of “little ladies” and “gals” should be.

Like her spot-on assessment of the officiating crew of Pulani Spurlock-Welsh, Angelica Suffren, Kevin Pethtel that allowed Sunday’s SEC championship game won 79-72 by No. 1 South Carolina over No. 8 LSU to turn into a 40-minute street fight full of trash talk, demeaning gestures, hair pulling, forearm shivers to the neck and thrown elbows galore.

It finally culminated with 128 seconds left when LSU guard Flau’jae Johnson’s perfectly legal intentional foul turned into a near-brawl. She shoved aside the second of two Gamecocks mouthing in her face as she walked to the bench, only to be leveled by 6-7 South Carolina center Kamilla Cardoso who took a running start to deliver the cheap shot.

Afterward, South Carolina coach “Saint” Dawn Staley apologized for the fracas, a gesture immediately deemed by internet keyboard warriors as “classy.”

Maybe it occurred to Saint Dawn she should be the one apologizing because she stood frozen in her tracks when Cardoso bull-rushed Johnson.

Mulkey didn’t apologize in her post-game press conference.

Instead, she correctly addressed how the game got to the point of no return.

“Do you realize there was only one foul called on each team with two minutes to play in the fourth quarter?” Mulkey said. “Are you kidding me? That might have created some of that. Not the way we play. We gonna foul your ass. Not the way they play. They’re going to foul your ass. But you only blew that whistle one time? Think about that now.”

My heavens, Delores. Did that hussy coach just say “ass?”

Staley and Mulkey coach like they played the game once upon as college stars for Virginia and Louisiana Tech respectively. They turn it loose. They push officiating to the limit until told otherwise. All is fair in love, war and basketball, and that includes shoving, fighting, clawing and jawing for every rebound and every loose ball.

The problem Sunday was the officiating crew didn’t nip it in the bud immediately. They had to see Reese and Cardoso hammering each other in the low post. They had to notice mouthy South Carolina freshman guard Milaysia Fulwiley give the “too small” sign twice when she drove both times past Van Lith. They couldn’t ignore the incessant digs between the teams almost every time someone made a play.

If the officials intended to “let the teams play” and not whistle foul after foul, they certainly accomplished that. But the behavior was never curbed.

Most officiating crews handle such a situation after a couple of excessive fouls or staredowns or whatever is said to aggravate or intimidate. They call both head coaches to midcourt in front of the scoring table and advise they’ll start handing out technical fouls like lunch money if the coaches don’t get their players to cut out the extracurriculars.

What’s even worse is Sunday’s crew, supposedly veterans who have called NCAA tourney and even Final Four games, were clueless beforehand of the emotional temperature that already existed between the Tigers and the Gamecocks.

And especially this time around in their second hotly contested game this season, both won by South Carolina.

With Reese gutting it out on a badly sprained ankle, Johnson playing extended minutes and cramping constantly, Van Lith simply bruised and beat to hell by constant collisions fighting through screens and point guard Last Tear-Poa not playing because of a concussion suffered in Saturday’s semifinals win over Ole Miss, short-handed LSU doubled down on its fight and determination against South Carolina’ 10-player deep roster.

Mulkey recognized how hard her team had played, which is why near the end of her press conference she said the following about the late-game scuffle.

“It’s ugly. It’s not good. No one wants to be a part of that. No one wants to see that ugliness. But I can tell you this: I wish she would have pushed Angel Reese. Don’t push a kid – you’re 6-8. Don’t push somebody that little. That was uncalled for, in my opinion. Let those two girls that were jawing, let them go at it.”

That’s the part of Mulkey’s quote that fueled her critics, questioning if she’s condoning her players’ use of violence and demanding she apologize.

Here’s some advice for the Mulkey haters. You better pack a year’s worth of supplies if you’re camping out waiting for an “I’m sorry” from her.

She’s not apologizing and has no reason to do so.

“I am what I am,” Mulkey said on her weekly Tuesday appearance on the Baton Rouge radio sports talk show Off The Bench. “I have no ill intentions. I have no agenda. I speak from my heart. I speak from my life experiences. And people like it or don’t like it. I have nothing, nothing whatsoever in my heart to harm anybody.”

That’s who she was as a 12-year-old, the only girl playing in an all-boys summer baseball league in Hammond because there were no girl leagues.

That’s who she was a pint-sized point guard who won four state championships for Hammond High, two national championships for Louisiana Tech and an Olympic gold medal.

That’s who she’s been for 39 years as a college coach – 24 seasons and four national titles as a head coach, 15 seasons and one national championship as Leon Barmore’s chief assistant at Tech.

That’s who she’s been throughout a career that got her inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2021 as part of the Class of 2020.

“I fight like hell,” Mulkey said. “That’s who I am.”

Round 3, anyone?

Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com


Battery charges for Mack pair

Arrests are accusations, not convictions. 

March 11

Hardy Mack, 56, Alexandria — aggravated battery 2nd degree, $1,000 bail;

Shavonda Mack, 54, Alexandria — aggravated battery 2nd degree, $1,000 bail.