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Lies, half-truths, misinformation and bipartisan blunders from Louisiana politics in 2023 – Louisiana Illuminator

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Lies, half-truths, misinformation and bipartisan blunders from Louisiana politics in 2023 – Louisiana Illuminator


Louisiana politics featured a number of lies, half-truths, misinformation and blunders during 2023. 

Some of last year’s questionable claims were continuations of deeply entrenched misinformation, lies and conspiracy theories that took root within far-right political circles nationwide when former President Donald Trump was in office, while others were unique to issues in our state last year and originated from the Louisiana Democratic Party.

The following list is not exhaustive but includes some of the more notable incidents, statements, actions and inactions that grabbed headlines in 2023.  

Democratic delusions

One of the biggest headscratchers of last year was Louisiana Democratic Party chair Katie Bernhardt’s decision in January to air a television commercial statewide that seemed to position her as a potential candidate for governor, though without saying so explicitly.  

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Bernhardt told the Illuminator the motivation behind the TV ad was to draw attention to Democrats in general — and not to her own potential campaign.

Louisiana Democratic Party chair under fire for endorsement moves

“Rarely do we have an opportunity to have media backing,” Bernhardt said. “This is an opportunity to get people talking as far as candidates are concerned.”

What might have been a toe in the water to test Bernhardt’s electability ended up as an anchor around the party’s leg that many Democrats believe sank their chances of fielding a competitive candidate against eventual winner Jeff Landry.

Shortly after the ad aired, state Rep. C. Travis Johnson, D-Vidalia, stepped down as first vice chairman of the Louisiana Democratic Party because he had lost faith in Bernhardt.

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“Because of dysfunction, lack of trust, consistent turmoil, and the possibility of me becoming chair, I resign effective immediately,” Johnson said in a statement.  

Mugshot misstatement

State Rep. Bryan Fontenot, R-Thibodaux, sponsored a bill last year that would have effectively repealed most of a law that took effect in 2022. That law generally prohibits law enforcement from publishing or publicly releasing booking photos of people accused — but not yet convicted — of most non-violent offenses, though it allows law enforcement to still publish mugshots if they believe the suspect poses a threat to public safety.  

During debate in a Senate Judiciary C Committee hearing in May, Fontenot falsely claimed the existing law prevents the public from being made aware of child molesters in their neighborhoods. When Sen. Gary Carter, D-New Orleans, asked Fontenot a series of questions, Fontenot became agitated and said the current law prevents parents from being able to see “who raped their child.”

Carter pointed out the inaccuracy of those claims, explaining how the law already contains exceptions for violent offenses and fugitives. 

Fontenot’s bill underwent several amendments before a much milder version became law and left intact most of the 2022 law that prevents the release of mugshots of nonviolent suspects. 

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Undermining elections

The so-called “Big Lie” that Trump perpetuated about the 2020 presidential race outcome and myriad related falsehoods persist within the Republican Party and continue to plague state and local election officials nationwide. 

Former Louisiana Secretary of State Kyle Ardoin, a Republican, gave a candid assessment of the situation in a farewell letter in April, explaining his decision to not seek reelection and calling out the outlandish conspiracy theories.

“I hope that Louisianans of all political persuasions will stand against the pervasive lies that have eroded trust in our elections by using conspiracies so far-fetched that they belong in a work of fiction,” Ardoin said. “The vast majority of Louisiana’s voters know that our elections are secure and accurate, and it is shameful and outright dangerous that a small minority of vocal individuals have chosen to denigrate the hard work of our election staff and spread unproven falsehoods.”

Despite Ardoin’s stance, new Secretary of State Nancy Landry, his former second-in-command, still claimed there were “very troubling allegations” of voting irregularities in swing states. 

Likewise, loyal Trump supporter Gov. Jeff Landry has dodged questions on whether he believes Trump’s lies or thinks the former president interfered with the 2020 election. 

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Juvenile jumble

Gov. John Bel Edwards’ strategy for handling the state’s most troublesome incarcerated juveniles arguably created just as many problems as it sought to solve. 

The administration sought to house them temporarily in a revamped facility at Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola that formerly housed death row inmates. That move led to a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of conditions, with lawyers for some teens claiming they were kept in isolation for extended periods and not provided required rehabilitative services.

Edwards preempted federal court action by relocating the youth to a facility in Jackson Parish, but there has been no indication from new Gov. Jeff Landry that teens couldn’t be sent back to Angola. It won’t happen for the time being because the same death row building is now temporarily housing women who had been incarcerated at the old Jetson Center for Youth in Baker.

They had to be moved from Jetson to hold three teen girls who were convicted as adults in the fatal carjacking of a 73-year-old New Orleans grandmother.          

Who drew the maps?

This mystery still persists. During the Louisiana Legislature’s 2022 redistricting session, a handful of Republican lawmakers quietly hired an out-of-state law firm and outside consultants to help them draw political maps that ultimately became the subject of Voting Rights Act lawsuits over racial gerrymandering. 

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In early 2022, the lawmakers disclosed the name of one of the law firms but refused to answer questions about the other consultants who performed the work. More than a year later, it appeared Louisiana Republican Party chairman Louis Gurvich let slip the name of one of the consultants during the Republican State Central Committee Meeting in July. 

Gurvich told his colleagues that Baton Rouge pollster John Couvillon of JMC Analytics “largely did the legislative redistricting” that took place in 2022. But in a written statement a couple of hours after Gurvich’s comments, Couvillon denied that he took part in the work. 

Book bans

A sign opposing Louisiana’s recent trend of book banning and librarian terminations greets motorists on North Tyler Street in Covington on June 18, 2023. (Wes Muller/Louisiana Illuminator)

U.S. Sen. John Kennedy, R-Louisiana, is one of several GOP senators who’ve thrown fuel on the fire of falsehoods in a far-right effort to ban certain books from public libraries, claiming they are unsuitable for children. 

At a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in September, Kennedy read excerpts from two of the most challenged books in the nation. One of them included a description of a sexual act. What Kennedy neglected to say was that neither of those books are shelved in the children’s section at libraries. 

Some conservatives have gone so far as to accuse librarians of using sexually explicit literature to “groom” children and claim book bans aren’t bans at all because the books can be purchased elsewhere. 

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Parental rights

Louisiana legislators passed an anti-LGBTQ+ bill last year that would have allowed teachers and school employees to refuse to use a student’s chosen name or pronouns that differ from the ones given to them at birth unless a student’s parent provides written permission. 

Republicans who supported the measure, including its sponsor, Rep. Raymond Crews, R-Bossier City, couched it as a parental rights bill because it would essentially make sure students couldn’t come out as transgender without their parents’ permission. 

The bill would have only protected the rights of parents of a certain ideology because a major provision in the bill said even if parents do provide permission, a teacher could override those parental rights if they disagree with the parents on religious or moral grounds. 

At the same time, the bill would not allow teachers who hold a different religious or moral position to overrule parents who oppose their child’s LGBTQ+ sexuality and preferred pronouns. 

“This is a culture war bill designed to impose one group’s values over the rest,” Rep. Joe Marino, I-Gretna, said during debate on the House floor. “This is not a parents’ rights bill unless the parents believe the same thing Rep. Crews does.” 

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Gov. John Bel Edwards vetoed the bill.     

Gender-affirming care

State lawmakers, with the help of a handful of Democrats, successfully overrode the governor’s veto of a bill that prohibits minors from receiving gender-affirming medical care. The law went into effect last week. 

During debate on the bill, some supporters invoked medical misinformation about gender-affirming care, claiming doctors were mutilating children with dangerous surgeries or that puberty blocking drugs were irreversibly harming children. 

Gender-affirming procedures, such as top surgery, which adds or removes breast tissue, or bottom surgery, which constructs a vagina or penis, are generally not recommended for minors, according to Dr. Kathryn Lowe, a pediatrician who represents the American Academy of Pediatrics Section on LGBT health and wellness. 

In rare cases, an older minor may be given top surgery after extensive counseling, although there is no evidence such procedures are available in Louisiana. 

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Treatments are individualized to the patient. Some young patients will be prescribed fully reversible puberty blockers, giving the patient time to consider their options. Later, a patient may be given hormone treatments to help them go through puberty in a way that allows their body to change in ways that align with their gender identity. These treatments are partially reversible. 

The American Academy of Pediatrics and other major medical associations endorse such treatments, which are supported by a large body of research. 

Anti-vax efforts

Many of the outlandish claims that peppered coronavirus debate a few years ago have subsided, but last year lawmakers sought to prohibit K-12 public and private schools from requiring COVID-19 vaccinations as a condition of enrollment. 

The Legislature approved the bill from Rep. Kathy Edmonston, R-Baton Rouge, who falsely testified that COVID-19 is not a vaccine-preventable disease and that there were no Food and Drug Administration-approved vaccine doses available in Louisiana at the time.

Gov. Edwards rejected the bill, noting in his veto message that “perpetuating mistrust in vaccines that are safe, effective, and essential to public health is reckless and extremely dangerous.” 

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Edmonston also got a bill passed that would have required the state to send parents information about exempting their children from vaccine requirements. The governor vetoed that proposal as well, although it came just a few votes shy of being overridden. 

Technically, Louisiana students are required to be inoculated for polio, measles, mumps and other ailments that have been eradicated or contained through mass vaccinations, but families can obtain an exemption.       

Higgins hype

Since he was first elected to office in 2017, Republican Congressman Clay Higgins of Port Barre has spewed numerous lies and disinformation on a wide manner of topics, ranging from the 2020 presidential election to gun violence statistics. 

An unquestioning Trump supporter, Higgins has repeated far-fetched conspiracy theories so often that some Louisiana Democrats refer to him as “Conspiracy Clay.” 

Higgins’ outlandish claims aren’t just contained to social media. In one example, during a Feb. 8, 2023, committee hearing, he falsely accused Twitter employees of rigging the 2020 presidential election and even claimed they would soon be arrested, according to a Washington Post article. 

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Most recently, at a Nov. 15 committee hearing, Higgins accused the FBI of having “ghost buses” full of informants impersonating Trump supporters during the Jan. 6 insurrection. His evidence included a photo from inside the Union Station parking garage of several buses, which he noted were painted “completely white” as if that were an unusual color for such vehicles. 

The photo shows the buses actually weren’t completely white but were emblazoned with company names, logos and other lettering consistent with common charter buses that any number of groups could have used to travel to the Capitol that day. 

Like many other Republicans on the day of the insurrection, Higgins publicly condemned the violence as he and his colleagues hid from the mob of Trump supporters who attacked police and called for the execution of Vice President Mike Pence and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as they breached the Capitol. 

“Violence and lawlessness are unacceptable. This must end now. This is not American,” Higgins tweeted on Jan. 6, 2021.

He later went on to defend the attackers after order was restored and now claims, without evidence, that federal authorities and “the left” orchestrated the revolt.

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Louisiana’s LHSAA softball state tournament fields are set with the championships scheduled for Saturday

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Louisiana’s LHSAA softball state tournament fields are set with the championships scheduled for Saturday


Louisiana’s LHSAA softball state tournament fields are set with the championships scheduled for Saturday originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The state tournament fields for Louisiana’s LHSAA softball championships are set with the semifinals scheduled for Friday, May 1.

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The championship games will then take place on Saturday, May 2, and there are currently three teams alive that are ranked in the MaxPreps national rankings. The Calvary Baptist Academy [Shreveport] Cavaliers are still riding high in the No. 3 position, competing for the state’s Select Division III championship while also harboring national title aspirations.

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The No. 39 Sam Houston [Lake Charles] Broncos and the No. 44 Walker Wildcats, meanwhile, were both defeated this week in their pursuit of the LHSAA’s Non-Select Division I state championship. Walker was the #1 seed and lost in a stunning upset Tuesday night in the regionals to the #16 seed Central [Baton Rouge] Wildcats which, in turn, lost, 4-3, to the Hahnville [Boutte] Tigers in the quarterfinals on Friday.

WATCH: LOUISIANA LHSAA SOFTBALL ON THE NFHS NETWORK

Sam Houston was the #2 seed, meanwhile, and the Broncos also lost, 10-4, in the quarterfinals Friday to the #10 seed Live Oak [Watson] Eagles.

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Calvary Baptist Academy, meanwhile, will try to keep its national and state championship hopes alive after winning their two games this week against the #16 seed Fisher [Lafitte] Gators (15-0) and Bunkie Panthers (8-0). They’ll take on the D’Arbonne Woods Charter Timberwolves in Friday’s semifinal with the winner advancing to take on the winner of the Notre Dame [Crowley] Pioneers vs. the Parkview Baptist [Baton Rouge] Eagles.

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LHSAA Non-Select Brackets

LHSAA Select Brackets

Key dates for the Louisiana LHSAA softball playoffs

DATE

PLAYOFF DEADLINES

5/1/26

Semifinals

5/2/26

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State Tournament

National Top 50 contenders by division

Louisiana has three teams ranked in the national Top 50 in the latest MaxPreps rankings. However, it’s likely that Sam Houston and Walker will drop out this coming week after failing to even make the state tournament.

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Division III Select

The Calvary Baptist Academy [Shreveport, LA] Cavaliers are the state’s top-ranked team, checking in at No. 3 nationally. They earned a first-round bye before winning their first two playoff games this week by a combined score of 23-0. They are 35-1 on the season ranked behind the Barbers Hill [Mt. Belvieu, TX] Eagles and the Murrieta [CA] Mesa Rams.

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“Who Killed Roxanne Sharp?” podcast leads to 4 arrests in decades-old murder of girl in Louisiana

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“Who Killed Roxanne Sharp?” podcast leads to 4 arrests in decades-old murder of girl in Louisiana


Louisiana police say a podcast helped them solve the decades-old killing of a 16-year-old girl and announced Friday that four men now face criminal charges in connection with her rape and murder.

In 1982, teenager Roxanne Sharp was killed in the woods of St. Tammany Parish, about 30 miles north of New Orleans. Police struggled to solve the case due to a lack of evidence and witnesses willing to come forward. But then, investigators approached a local media company, which agreed to produce a podcast, “Who Killed Roxanne Sharp?” renewing public interest in the case after its six-part series aired last year.

Louisiana State Police spokesperson Marc Gremillion credited the podcast with generating crucial tips from the public and prompting new witnesses to approach investigators.

“It helped our investigators piece together where Roxanne was days before to the time she died, to where we’re at now,” Gremillion told The Associated Press. “It was a very large help with getting that message out to the public, and then, therefore, those witnesses getting back to us.”

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Over the past few days, police charged four men with aggravated rape and second-degree murder: Perry Wayne Taylor, 64; Darrell Dean Spell, 64; Carlos Cooper, 64; and Billy Williams, Jr., 62.

Cooper and Taylor were already in prison on unrelated charges, and Williams and Spell were arrested earlier this week. Sharp was an acquaintance of the four arrested suspects and was known to frequent the neighborhood where they lived, Gremillion added.

“We appreciate the hard work and love that has been shown to Roxanne Sharp’s case,” Sharp’s niece, Michele Lappin, said in a statement on behalf of her family. “We hope that with justice will come healing and closure for our family, her loved ones, and the community.”

This photo provided by Michele Lappin shows Roxanne Sharp in Covington, La., in 1980. 

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AP


Billy Williams Jr.’s son, Billy Williams III, said his father is innocent of the crime.

“He thinks they’re putting him in for something he didn’t do,” the younger Williams said. “He says he would never in his life hurt anyone.”

The St. Tammany Parish clerk of court did not have attorneys listed for any of the suspects. Family members of Spell, Cooper and Taylor did not respond to requests for comment via phone numbers associated with them.

“When we started the podcast, we kind of thought nobody cared – we were quickly corrected,” said Charles Dowdy, vice president of Northshore Media, which produced the podcast. “A lot of people stepped up and said they knew Roxanne, they remembered her, they were friends with her.”

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Dowdy recorded audio as investigators recreated the crime scene using measuring tapes to mark the exact locations where Sharp’s body was found and where other pieces of evidence were uncovered.

“It clearly showed that she’d been grabbed on the street and dragged into the woods,” Dowdy said.

Police had once thought the case solved after serial killer Henry Lucas claimed responsibility for Sharp’s murder. But Lucas, known for making false confessions, later retracted his claim, and other evidence disproved his connection to the murder.

St. Tammany Parish resident Justin Joiner, 39, told the AP that his father, a Covington police officer, had been one of the first law enforcement to arrive at the scene of Sharp’s death and remained frustrated about the lack of closure for the rest of his life. He kept a briefcase full of his notes on the case until he passed away last year.

“It’s been a big black cloud on the community,” Joiner said. “Nobody would talk about it — it was hush, hush, you talk about it in your house, not in public.”

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Joiner added that the podcast opened up discussion about the case across generations and throughout the community.

“Cold cases don’t close themselves,” Covington Police Department Chief Michael Ferrell said in a statement. “They close because people show up, year after year, and refuse to quit. That is exactly what our agencies did, and today, Roxanne and her family finally have the justice they have waited so long for.”

District Attorney Collin Sims echoed that sentiment.

“This case is a powerful example of what persistence, collaboration, and advancements in investigative technology can accomplish. For more than four decades, this victim and her family have waited for answers,” Sims said in a statement. “Today’s arrests reflect our unwavering commitment to pursue justice—no matter how much time has passed—and to hold those responsible fully accountable.”

Podcasts have helped law enforcement solve other cold cases recently. Last year, detectives in Illinois solved a missing person’s cold case and credited the podcast “Somebody Knows Something,” which the Elgin Police Department itself launched.  In 2024, a sheriff in South Carolina credited a podcast with helping to identify a 1975 cold case victim, formerly known as “Mr. X.”

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Gov. Jeff Landry describes evacuation from White House Correspondents Association

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Gov. Jeff Landry describes evacuation from White House Correspondents Association


Gov. Jeff Landry said he and first lady Sharon Landry were able to safely evacuate the White House Correspondents Association dinner after shots were fired outside the ballroom, forcing them, President Donald Trump and a host of other top leaders to evacuate.

“I’m back and safe and everything’s okay,” the governor said calmly in a phone interview shortly after evacuating.

Law enforcement officials said one officer was shot in the bulletproof vest and is expected to be okay. The FBI said a suspect was in custody.

Landry said he and his wife were sitting at ABC’s table, “pretty close up to the main stage.” They were close to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and other members of Trump’s cabinet.

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Then he heard the muted sound of gunfire from a floor up above the ballroom.

“It was almost like somebody dropping a pot or something,” the governor said.

Landry knows the hotel well; it’s where Washington Mardi Gras, the annual gathering of Louisiana political, business and nonprofit leaders, is held.

Landry praised how law enforcement handled the incident, saying he did not feel threatened.

“The Secret Service came in, they got everybody down,” Landry said. “I mean, they did a great job of taking everybody out.”

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Landry said he was able to leave the scene and make it back to his hotel without incident.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican from the Shreveport area, said in a statement on X that he and his wife, Kelly, were also there.

“We’re thankful no innocent people were harmed and everyone is now safe,” Kelly said. “We’re grateful as always for the law enforcement and first responders who acted so quickly to bring the situation under control.”

Johnson added: “Praying for our country tonight.”

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-Jefferson, also said he was there.

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“I’m incredibly grateful for the brave members of law enforcement who acted quickly to protect all of us attending tonight’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner,” Scalise wrote on X. “This is an event meant to bring people together. Violence has NO place in our country.”



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