Louisiana
Louisiana public school classrooms now required to display ‘In God we trust’ motto
/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/gray/OO2R3MPYIFAJTDFOC55LM2QSNE.png)
NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) – Louisiana public schools were met with a new requirement Tuesday (Aug. 1), as a state law took effect mandating that the national motto “In God we trust” be displayed on a printed poster inside classrooms.
“Our national motto declares who we are to the world as a nation and when (President Dwight) Eisenhower made that our official motto, I believe it was because of all the horrors of war that he had seen,” said State Rep. Dodie Horton (R-Haughton).
Horton authored the new law that requires the nation’s motto to appear in all Louisiana public elementary, secondary and postsecondary education classrooms.
“It doesn’t preach any particular religion at all, but it certainly does recognize a higher power,” Horton said. “It’s a positive message in this world that throws so many negative things at our children.”
But others, such as advocacy strategist A’Niya Robinson of ACLU Louisiana, have concerns the new law puts religious pressure on students.
“Do teachers have the resources to actually execute all of the requirements that the legislature is asking them to fill?” Robinson asked.
The law gives schools the option to spend public dollars on the posters or accept donated displays. The poster or framed document must be at least 11 by 14 inches. And the motto must be the central focus and printed in a large, easy-to-read font.
Robinson worries the posters are a distraction, divisive, and might pressure students into adopting certain beliefs.
“It’s our belief that parents, not school officials, should be responsible for shaping their children’s religious education,” Robinson said. “Will it send a message that only students who believe in God are welcome in public spaces?
“It’s something that we are still monitoring and just keeping tabs on.”
The Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education said it took no official position on the bill.
Another law went into effect Tuesday that allows public schools to offer a high school elective teaching the history and literature of the Bible. That law says the course must maintain religious neutrality and accommodate diverse perspectives.
See a spelling or grammar error in our story? Click Here to report it. Please include the headline.
Subscribe to the Fox 8 YouTube channel.
Copyright 2023 WVUE. All rights reserved.

Louisiana
Louisiana jockey’s shocking shortcut leads straight to jail

A racehorse jockey found himself fleeing State Police on Saturday as a result of an investigation into cheating allegations at the Delta Downs Racetrack and Casino near Lake Charles.
Detectives with the Louisiana State Police Gaming Enforcement Division were conducting post-race checks of each jockey when 41-year-old Ricardo Hernandez-Perez, of Vinton, bolted from the stables. During his brief escape attempt, the jockey removed a battery-operated shocking device from his clothing and tossed it into one of the horse stalls, State Police said.
Officers quickly apprehended Hernandez-Perez and booked him into the Calcasieu Correctional Center. He faces charges of unnatural stimulation of a horse. Louisiana law prohibits the possession or use of devices designed to unnaturally stimulate, depress, or excite a racehorse before or during a race. The law also extends to racetrack stables, sheds and other facilities where eligible horses are kept.
If convicted, Hernandez-Perez could face a fine ranging from $1,000 to $5,000 and a prison sentence of one to five years.
Louisiana
Berre, the Broadmoor Bear, taken to nature area by LDWF agents early Saturday

A bear that took up residence in a tree near Broadmoor Methodist Church for a day was finally returned to the woods Saturday by agents of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.
“Hot bear summer 2025 has come to an end as LDWF biologists were able to safely sedate and relocate Mr. Broadmoor Bear or ‘Berre’ as the kids call him,” the department posted to Facebook.
Berre’s exit came around 2 a.m. Saturday, after biologists were able to tag him, and take blood and fur samples for testing.
According to LDWF, he was being released back to a “wildlife management area.”
The bear had ambled into the neighborhood along South Riveroaks Drive on Friday morning, then spent the day in a tree as LDWF agents waited below and onlookers watched from a safe distance.
Biologists with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries pose with ‘Berre,’ the Broadmoor Church bear, after he was successfully sedated.
John Hanks, LDWF’s large carnivore program manager, said bears sighted in the area are usually adolescents looking for a place to establish a home range. A bear was spotted earlier this week in Central, and a third sighting came in Zachary in April.
Hanks had predicted that the bear would try to leave from his tree perch once the pressure of onlookers had passed. Often, when bears wander from bayous or woodlots into a city they are able to find their way back out, and only about 25% of the time does LDWF need to capture them.
Staff at the church’s preschool summer camp said children were never in danger and spent Friday indoors.
Louisiana
New noninvasive heart surgery saves New Orleans twins. They graduated Kindergarten in May.

Ashley Lane gave birth in July of 2019 to twins 17 weeks before her due date.
Both boys had patent ductus arteriosus, or PDA, a congenital heart defect where a blood vessel that allows blood to bypass the lungs in the womb, fails to close after birth — along with other health concerns like lung damage.
“With being so premature,” Lane said. “There were so many what-ifs and question marks and things in the air of what would be wrong with them.”
The Metairie family waited three weeks for the holes in their children’s hearts to heal on their own.
They did not.
Then, the family met with Dr. Ivory Crittendon, a pediatric cardiologist and the co-chief of pediatric cardiology at Ochsner Medical Complex in New Orleans.
Crittendon wanted to try a new FDA-approved method and device, the Amplatzer Piccolo Occluder, to close the twins’ hearts using a catheter in the leg.
The Lane family said yes.
“That first day with Dr. Crittendon set the tone for our whole story. We definitely had such a sense of peace,” Lane said. “When your kids are born that young, and everything that you planned was totally out of your control, and you had to learn to let go very, very, very quickly and trust strangers with your most prized possession, it’s very vulnerable.”
One week later, the twins were taken into back-to-back procedures as among of the first patients in Louisiana to receive treatment.
The previous treatment for PDAs was to perform open-heart surgery, where the doctor would create an incision along the side of the body and crack the chest of the child.
“I think there’s been enough data through all the years to prove that open-heart surgery probably wasn’t the best form of PDA closures,” Crittendon said. “Because a lot of kids struggled for a number of reasons afterwards.”
PDAs are more common in premature babies than mature babies, according to Crittendon. The more mature a child is born, the more likely the hole in the blood vessel is to close on its own.
In this new procedure, Crittendon and his team at Ochsner insert a catheter into the leg of an infant as small as 700 grams (the twins were 770g and 817g at the time of the surgery). Then, through the catheter tube, the surgeon places a device that will facilitate tissue to grow around the hole in the heart.
“It starts the natural process of the PDA closing,” Crittendon said. “It basically augments that process and tissues, sort of envelops around the device and closes the PDA on both sides.”
According to the Crittendon, the most impactful part of the noninvasive procedure is that the recovery time is exponentially higher for the very small, vulnerable patients.
“We take out that hollow tube and take out that small IV and just leave a Band-Aid on the leg,” Crittendon said. “And there’s really no real recovery from the procedure, which is the best part.”
The Lane twins’ hearts have since grown over the devices, and, after five years of checkups, they have gotten their approval from Crittendon to wait another three years for their next visit with the doctors. They both graduated kindergarten in May.
According to Lane, the twins are doing every sport they can get their hands on — soccer just ended, and they are looking to pick up baseball this summer.
“We know that there are so many babies out there that are not as fortunate, and families that are not as fortunate to have this procedure,” Lane said. “This is their second time around playing all these sports. They are really getting the hang of it and enjoying their sporting activities and being competitive against each other as twins.”
Treating patients in the future
The team of physicians, nurses and anesthesiologists that performs the new Piccolo procedure is based at Ochsner Children’s Hospital in New Orleans.
While the team has made moves to travel between hospitals within New Orleans to perform the live-saving procedure, they have also transported patients from around the state and Mississippi for treatment.
“That’s something that we’ve been proud of that we’ve been able to do,” Crittendon said. “However, we’ve sort of led the nation on trying to bring the therapy to the babies, rather than transporting them.”
Going forward, the team hopes to expand their ability to perform the procedure to patients outside of New Orleans, to hospitals within the health system across the state.
-
World1 week ago
Neo-Nazi cult leader extradited to US for plot to kill Jewish children
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Movie review: 'Dogma' re-release highlights thoughtful script – UPI.com
-
Technology1 week ago
Discord might use AI to help you catch up on conversations
-
Business1 week ago
Plastic Spoons, Umbrellas, Violins: A Guide to What Americans Buy From China
-
World1 week ago
Cade Cunningham Gains $45 Million From All-NBA Honors
-
Movie Reviews6 days ago
MOVIE REVIEW – Mission: Impossible 8 has Tom Cruise facing his final reckoning
-
Politics1 week ago
Defense secretary announces pay raises for Army paratroopers: 'We have you and your families in mind'
-
Education1 week ago
Video: Judge Blocks Trump Move to Ban Foreign Students at Harvard