Connect with us

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Family of escaped inmate Derrick Groves hope he will turn himself

Published

on

www.youtube.com – WDSU News – 2025-05-27 13:24:54

SUMMARY: The search continues for Derrick Groves, one of five inmates still at large after a breakout from Orleans Parish Jail ten days ago. Groves, a convicted killer, remains missing, and his family, including his aunt Jasmine Groves, is pleading for him to turn himself in, hoping he will be brought into custody alive. The family has endured ongoing police presence around their homes and law enforcement questioning of Groves’s mother. Groves’s grandmother was killed by an NOPD officer in 1994, adding to decades of trauma. Authorities urge anyone with information to contact Crime Stoppers.

YouTube video

As we get into yet another week, we are hearing from one of the families of the escapees for the first time on camera. Jasmine Groves, the aunt of Derrick Groves, said she wants her nephew to turn himself in, but she hopes he will be taken into custody alive. She is hoping that deadly force is not used by law enforcement.

Subscribe to WDSU on YouTube now for more: http://bit.ly/1n00vnY

Get more New Orleans news: http://www.wdsu.com
Like us: http://www.facebook.com/wdsutv
Follow us: http://twitter.com/wdsu
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wdsu6/

Source

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Louisiana lawmakers put some limits back in place on gifts to public officials

Published

on

lailluminator.com – Julie O’Donoghue – 2025-05-29 05:47:00


Louisiana Rep. Beau Beaullieu revised House Bill 674 to maintain limits on gifts to public officials, removing a previous proposal that allowed \$200 in gifts annually. The updated bill permits \$200 worth of sympathy flowers or charitable donations and allows seasonal food gifts up to \$79 per person for holidays, relaxing prior restrictions that required food gifts to be consumed only at events. The bill also tightens ethics board investigations by raising the vote threshold to pursue probes, shortening decision times, and barring investigations based on advisory opinion requests. The Public Affairs Research Council opposes the bill, warning it weakens ethics enforcement. Governor Jeff Landry supports the legislation amid his ongoing ethics disputes. The bill passed the Senate committee and awaits full legislative approval before the June 12 deadline.

by Julie O’Donoghue, Louisiana Illuminator
May 29, 2025

Louisiana lawmakers are no longer looking to broadly lift restrictions on gifts to elected officials and public employees while doing their jobs, but they still appear intent on discouraging ethics investigations.

Rep. Beau Beaullieu, R-Iberia, removed language from House Bill 674 that would have allowed public servants to receive $200 worth of gifts annually. This would have applied to all local and state government employees, from a local police officer to the governor.

Instead, Beaullieu has rewritten the legislation to keep a portion of a current limitation on government worker gifts in place. Now, gifts that aren’t food would be mostly restricted to $200 worth of flowers or a charitable donation to express sympathy for a family death.

New allowances for “seasonal” food and beverages remain in the bill, however. Under current law, most public officials are not supposed to receive food and drink as gifts unless it’s at a party or reception.

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

SUBSCRIBE

Under existing rules, they have to consume the food in person at the event where it is given. The edible gift can cost no more than $79 per person, a cutoff the Louisiana Board of Ethics adjusts every year based on the Consumer Price Index.

Beaullieu’s updated proposal would allow elected leaders and public employees to also take seasonal or holiday foods as gifts for a religious or state holiday, even outside of a party or reception. The cap on food gifts would also be $79 per person per holiday or whatever new price the ethics board adopts in future years.

Besides the gift policy changes, Beaullieu’s bill contains several ethics law modifications that would make it much harder for the state ethics board to investigate and charge people with misconduct.

The ethics board oversees enforcement of campaign finance laws and the state ethics code for public employees, elected officials and lobbyists. Anyone from a public school teacher to the governor can be subject of one of its investigations.

The adjustments Beaullieu proposes would require more members of the ethics board to vote in favor of  pursuing an investigation and give the board far less time to decide whether a person should be charged with ethical wrongdoing. People accused of ethics violations would also have more ability to push back on the allegations under Beaullieu’s bill. 

If the legislation were to pass, the new standards that would have to be met in order for the ethics board to launch an investigation would be very difficult to achieve. For example, the ethics board would have to be confident that wrongdoing had occurred in order to sign off on any preliminary probe into the alleged misconduct.

Ethics Administrator David Bordelon said earlier this month the process Beaullieu seeks would “skew” the process in favor of the public servant accused of wrongdoing. He also took issue with a new restriction Beaullieu proposed Tuesday on ethical investigations and charges. The state representative added language to his bill prohibiting the ethics board from launching an investigation based on information it received through an advisory opinion request. 

The board is frequently asked to explain how ethics laws apply in specific situations through advisory opinions. It issues at least a few of these public letters monthly providing feedback. 

“If someone submits an advisory opinion request that indicates a violation has already occurred, it should be within the board’s prerogative to initiate an investigation of that,” Bordelon told senators at a committee hearing Tuesday. 

Beaullieu said he is trying to overhaul state ethics investigations because many elected officials feel the board has been too aggressive when pursuing allegations. 

But the state’s preeminent state government watchdog, the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana, has come out strongly against the bill.

“This is designed to make sure we don’t have ethics investigations,” Steven Procopio, the organization’s president, said of the proposed changes. 

The legislation is backed by Gov. Jeff Landry, who has had several personal conflicts with the ethics board over his nine years in statewide office.

In 2023, the board charged Landry in 2023 with the ethics violation of failing to disclose flights he took on a political donor’s private plane to Hawaii for an attorneys general conference. That dispute is ongoing because the governor and board members have not reached an agreement on what Landry’s punishment for the violation should be. 

Stephen Gelé, the attorney representing Landry in this ethics dispute, also helped write Beaullieu’s legislation to overhaul the state’s ethics laws. 

The Louisiana Senate and Governmental Affairs Committee approved the bill Tuesday with no objections. An earlier version of the proposal also passed the Louisiana House unanimously, but both the Senate and the House will have to approve the amended version before it can become law.

It must pass by the Louisiana Legislature’s session adjournment June 12.

YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.

SUPPORT

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

The post Louisiana lawmakers put some limits back in place on gifts to public officials appeared first on lailluminator.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

This content reports on a legislative proposal by a Republican lawmaker aimed at loosening ethics restrictions on government officials, which aligns with typical center-right priorities of reducing regulatory burdens and increasing protections for elected officials. While the article presents various perspectives, including criticism from ethics officials and watchdog groups, it maintains a factual and measured tone without overt editorializing. The focus on the bill’s potential to limit ethics investigations and the support from Republican Governor Jeff Landry further situate the coverage in a center-right context, reflecting conservative interests in government regulation and oversight.

Continue Reading

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

LFT Fiber connected Ville Platte. Now it faces stiff competition.

Published

on

thecurrentla.com – Camden Doherty – 2025-05-28 10:49:00

SUMMARY: Five years ago, Ville Platte was one of America’s worst-connected cities, with under 50% having reliable high-speed internet. Thanks to millions in federal grants and efforts by Lafayette’s city-owned LFT Fiber, fiber internet access has expanded, providing multiple providers to rural Louisiana areas. LFT Fiber launched a $25/month Fiber Essentials plan targeting low-income families to increase subscriptions and compete with national giants like Spectrum and Brightspeed. Despite stiff competition and costly customer hookups, officials remain optimistic about growing fiber connections, aiming for a 40% take-rate. The initiative is transforming the digital landscape, promoting equity and access for education, work, and telehealth in Ville Platte.

Read the full article

The post LFT Fiber connected Ville Platte. Now it faces stiff competition. appeared first on thecurrentla.com

Continue Reading

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Louisiana homeowners might get option to insure their properties for ‘stated value’

Published

on

lailluminator.com – Wesley Muller – 2025-05-28 05:15:00


The Louisiana House passed House Bill 356, requiring insurers to offer “stated value” homeowner policies that cover homes for a declared amount instead of full market value. Sponsored by Rep. Jacob Braud, the bill aims to help homeowners without mortgages afford insurance by allowing lower premiums at the risk of out-of-pocket costs after damage. Supporters call it pro-consumer and a rare measure addressing rising homeowner insurance costs, especially in South Louisiana. Opponents warn it could mislead desperate buyers, shift costs to other regions, and increase blighted properties after storms. The bill now heads to the Senate.

by Wesley Muller, Louisiana Illuminator
May 28, 2025

The Louisiana House of Representatives approved a bill Tuesday that would require insurance companies to let homeowners purchase “stated value” policies, which cover the home for an amount they declare rather than for its full market value.

House Bill 356, sponsored by Rep. Jacob Braud, R-Belle Chasse, cleared the chamber in a 79-20 vote and will head to the Senate for consideration. 

Braud said his proposal would allow people who do not have a mortgage to purchase a more affordable homeowner’s policy. Some homeowners prefer to take on the added risk of having to come out of pocket for damages if it allows them to pay less in homeowner insurance premiums now, he added.

“The premium costs have just been through the roof,” Braud said, citing what many of his constituents have said about their policies.

He and several of his colleagues championed the bill as a pro-consumer measure. 

Rep. Tim Kerner, R-Lafitte, said Braud’s legislation might be the only one this year that actually helps homeowners with affordability.  

“The downside is that if something happens to their home during a hurricane, they’re not gonna be able to replace it if it goes down,” Kerner told Braud on the House floor. “Well, let me tell you something, I know people losing their houses now.”

Rep. Gabe Firment, R-Pollock, opposed the bill’s mandate that all residential property insurers in the state create such policies upon request. Firment, who chairs the House Committee on Insurance, has spearheaded many of the tort reform bills this session in an effort to reduce premiums.  

“If we mandate every insurance company in the state to provide this product, I think people in South Louisiana will use it,” Firment said. “They’ll be sold a bill of goods without understanding because they’re desperate.”

Firment said he believes the proposal would shift insurance costs to other parts of the state and lead to an increase in blighted property from people abandoning their damaged homes after storms.

This legislative session, lawmakers have largely addressed Louisiana’s insurance crisis on the auto coverage front, passing a package of so-called “tort reform” bills that give insurance companies certain protections or advantages in litigation, making it harder for accident victims to file successful lawsuits. 

Braud’s bill is one of the few proposals that addresses the other component of the crisis: the skyrocketing cost of homeowner insurance that has mostly affected South Louisiana. The only way to truly address the crisis was to make the provisions of his bill mandatory, he said.

“It was clear to me that the insurers did not care to make this product,” Braud said, adding that he believes it would mostly be purchased in extreme cases. 

Insurers would only have to offer a stated value policy at a homeowner’s request, rather than make it a default level of coverage.

The proposal moves next to the Senate for consideration.

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

SUBSCRIBE

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

The post Louisiana homeowners might get option to insure their properties for ‘stated value’ appeared first on lailluminator.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

This article presents a largely factual and policy-focused report on Louisiana’s House Bill 356 concerning homeowner insurance. The emphasis on pro-consumer measures alongside cautionary comments from Republican lawmakers about potential risks and market effects reflects a pragmatic conservative approach prioritizing market solutions and tort reform. The language is balanced, but the framing aligns with center-right themes such as reducing insurance litigation burdens and skepticism of regulatory mandates on businesses. There is no strong ideological rhetoric; the piece mainly covers legislative debate and viewpoints from Republican representatives, maintaining a moderate tone overall.

Continue Reading

Trending