Louisiana
Louisiana Cancer Foundation Supports Families During National Cancer Prevention Month
MONROE, La. (KNOE) – February is National Cancer Prevention Month, and the Louisiana Cancer Foundation is emphasizing the importance of prevention and early detection. The foundation offers financial assistance to patients and families affected by cancer, with a focus on both immediate needs and long-term support.
James Adams, executive director of the Louisiana Cancer Foundation, said the foundation helps ease this burden by offering scholarships to students whose families have been impacted by cancer.
“These scholarships support students who’ve faced financial hardships due to a parent’s cancer diagnosis,” Adams said. The foundation partners with the University of Louisiana at Monroe (ULM) to provide this aid.
Funds raised from events like the Mad Dash 5K, galas, and golf tournaments also support the foundation’s programs, including the Cancer Foundation League. This program helps cover medication costs, transportation, nutritional supplements, and utility bills for cancer patients.
Genevieve Wetzel, whose father was diagnosed with cancer when she was 10 and again at 13, credits the support of her family and the Monroe community for helping them through tough times.
“The community rallied around us, providing food and gift cards. We didn’t have to worry about those things, and I don’t know what we would have done without that support,” she said.
While the foundation provides vital assistance, it also emphasizes the importance of cancer prevention and early detection, offering free screenings for the community.
For more information on screenings and financial aid programs, visit lacancerfoundation.org
Copyright 2025 KNOE. All rights reserved.
Louisiana
Behind the Curtain: How Louisiana’s Parole System and Courts Shape Who Goes Free | The Lens
This week on Behind The Lens, the public gets a rare look inside one of the most powerful and least understood parts of Louisiana’s criminal justice system: the parole process.
In Louisiana, Parole Board hearings are sometimes held in public, offering families, victims, attorneys, advocates, and reporters an opportunity to witness how decisions are made about who is granted freedom and who remains incarcerated. But those hearings reveal more than individual cases. They expose the broader tensions shaping punishment, rehabilitation, public safety, and political pressure across the state.
Reporters Bernard Smith and Gus Bennett join editor Katy Reckdahl to examine how parole decisions are influenced not only by testimony inside the hearing room, but also by a growing wave of legal and political changes moving through Louisiana’s courts and legislature. From rulings connected to the Louisiana Supreme Court to election season politics and criminal justice reforms, the episode explores how policy decisions made at the highest levels can directly affect incarcerated people, victims’ families, prosecutors, and entire communities.
The discussion also breaks down how recent state actions involving sentencing, parole eligibility, election dynamics, and judicial oversight are reshaping Louisiana’s criminal justice landscape in real time. Together, the team examines the human consequences behind those decisions and what they reveal about accountability, power, and transparency inside the system.
Theme music by Podington Bear. Additional music “Fading Prospects” by Podington Bear (soundofpicture.com)
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Louisiana
Special Olympics Mississippi moves state games to Louisiana, holds swimming events in-state
BILOXI, Miss. (WLOX) — Special Olympics Mississippi will hold its State Summer Games May 22–24 at Southeastern Louisiana University in Hammond, Louisiana, with swimming competitions continuing to take place in Mississippi.
Officials with the Special Olympics said the games were moved from Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi to Louisiana because of security concerns.
“When they canceled the state games this year, it made it a little bit rough on some of the athletes, but they continued to train,” Sharon Patterson, Director for Area 3, said.
The swimming competitions will take place in Mississippi because Louisiana does not include swimming in its events. Two swimming events are scheduled for May 9, one in Tupelo and another at the Natatorium in Biloxi.
A torch run began in North Mississippi on Monday and will arrive in Bay St. Louis on Thursday.
“It’s a run, walk, or roll because we have wheelchairs in there as well,” Patterson said.
On Friday, the torch run will move through Pass Christian and travel along Highway 90, with law enforcement officers from each city carrying the torch through their jurisdictions.
The run will conclude at Keesler Federal Park in Biloxi, where the Biloxi Shuckers are sponsoring a celebration featuring the lighting of the cauldron. A special athlete will sing the “Star-Spangled Banner,” lead the pledge and recite the oath.
Special Olympics Mississippi includes nearly 20 areas across the state. Each area holds games to qualify athletes for the state games.
The organization will also send 126 athletes to the USA Games in Minnesota in June. The national competition occurs every four years.
See a spelling or grammar error in this story? Report it to our team HERE.
Copyright 2026 WLOX. All rights reserved.
Louisiana
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