One would reasonably believe that the watch would resume with the official revelation that the plaintiffs had been subjected to unlawful treatment. It was also reasonable to believe that there was a difference between being apprehended for questioning and officially learning from the authorities that the action was manifestly illegal. The history of our families, our cities and our parishes has always interested me greatly. As the clerk of the evangeline parish, becoming the custodian of these important documents is a dream come true. As a banker, it was rewarding when people asked me to help them with their personal finances and trusted me. I am also excited to help our citizens of Evangeline Parish learn about their past or start a new story with a land purchase, marriage and birth certificates for their children, while trusting that I will keep their records safe. “This model or practice is widespread in both agencies and has been around for a long time. Between January 2012 and December 2014, EPSO – an agency of four detectives overseeing a jurisdiction of just 33,000 inhabitants – cited “blocking investigations” as the sole basis for more than 200 arrests. During the same period, the VPPD arrested people more than 700 times as a result of investigations, while overseeing a jurisdiction of only 7,300 inhabitants (10% of the total urban population). A group cut off at the opening of Freedom Behavioral at 800 East Main St., Ville Platte, took place on Tuesday, June 28. September 2021 at its location at Mercy Regional Medical. But the lawsuit was quickly dismissed by the presiding judge, who ruled that the plaintiffs had waited too late to file their complaint.
In a disturbing warning about the dangers of investigative sanctions, the report states: “The willingness of officers from both agencies to arrest and detain people who are only possible witnesses in criminal investigations means that literally anyone in Evangeline Parish or Ville Platte can be arrested and put on hold at any time.” He said the practice was “routine” and that both agencies had admitted they had used prohibitions to investigate criminal activity for as long as anyone in the agency could remember. “The arrests include individuals suspected (without sufficient evidence) of committing crimes, as well as their family members and potential witnesses,” he said. But like those who were wrongly convicted and served long prison sentences before being exonerated and subsequently deprived of cash prizes, victims of the Evangeline Parish Sheriff`s Office and the Ville Platte Police Department are excluded from recovery. Brignac told KVPI News that he hired Christopher Ludeau, a native of Ville Platte, to replace Fontenot. Ludeau attended LSU for his bachelor`s degree and graduated from LSU Law School in 2012. He currently practices law with another assistant attorney, Marcus Fontenot, at the law firm of Fontenot & Ludeau, LLC in Ville Platte. When he spoke to Ludeau, he said he had attended the D.A. a few times. asks when there are vacancies in the office.
Some of these openings occurred when Greg Vidrine left after being elected a City Court judge, and when Shelly Deville left the office to move to Slidell. He said that when he learned of Fontenot`s departure, he sent a message to the D.A. expressing his interest. He then met with the D.A., who offered him the job. There is an old axion that says that justice delayed is justice denied, and in the case of a number of citizens of Evangeline Parish, the term has never been more accurate. As for your luck to no longer live in Louisiana, I have a nagging fear that we are not unique — not safer, but also no worse than many states. You have, for example, Tom Cotton and Sarah Huckabee Sanders. The Department of Justice concluded that it “found reasonable grounds to believe that EPSO and VPPD are engaging in a systematic or practice of violating the Fourth Amendment by arresting and detaining individuals without probable cause. In addition, we are very concerned that these agencies are using blocks to obtain forced statements that interfere with the criminal convictions of unlawfully detained persons. According to a press release from the Evangeline Parish Sheriff`s Office, Chad Richard, 54, of Branch, and Nick Bischoff, 49, of Eunice, will be charged with drug-related offenses after the May 13 traffic stops.
The arrests, known as “pre-trial detention”, were regularly used by the VPPD and EPSO in their criminal investigations, which used threats of continued unlawful detention to persuade detainees to provide information. Authorities also threatened their family members and potential witnesses, according to the report. (Editor`s note: The following article was submitted by Patricia Duplechin, Director of Resident Activities at Heritage Manor Nursing Home in Ville Platte. Look at the other states and the people who vote for them: Kentucky, Florida, North and South Carolina, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Illinois. The mentality is epidemic. A federal judge has dismissed a class action lawsuit against the Evangeline Parish Sheriff`s Office and the Ville Platte Police Department after ruling that the plaintiffs waited beyond the statute of limitations to file their lawsuit, shielding law enforcement from liability for gross violations of fundamental civil liberties. Richard was charged with possession of methaphetamine weighing more than 4 grams and a traffic ban. “For more than two decades, EPSO and VPPD officials have used unlawful detention in criminal investigations. Most possessions operate as follows: Huval was charged with possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, possession of heroin, possession of fentanyl, possession of oxycodone, possession of alprazolam, 2 counts and possession of hydrocodone. EVANGELINE PARISH, Louisiana. Between Friday, 13.
In May and Monday, May 16, several people were arrested in Evangeline Township for possession of fentanyl and possession of methamphetamine, heroin and oxycodone. The U.S. Department of Justice`s Civil Liberties Division provided a REPORT in 2016 concluding that there were reasonable grounds to believe that the City Platte, Louisiana Police Department (VPPD), and the Evangeline Parish Sheriff`s Office (EPSO) “were involved in an unconstitutional pattern or practice of behavior” that “to the extent that anyone (in either department) can remember.” The investigation will be conducted “without a warrant, without proving that the testimony is substantial and impractical to obtain it by subpoena, and without any attempt to obtain prior judicial approval,” the report said. I think if he had existed, he would have done extensive research. My hobbies are attending cattle shows in the southern United States and often helping young people feed, groom, and exhibit their own 4-H and FFA projects to the best of their ability so they can learn the discipline and appreciation of quality needed to succeed in such an endeavor. and working in my garden.



