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Louisiana’s Tough-on-Crime Policies Stand to Cost Taxpayers Millions More for Years to Come

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Louisiana’s Tough-on-Crime Policies Stand to Cost Taxpayers Millions More for Years to Come


The day after a shooting last month killed a teenager and injured five people at the Mall of Louisiana, Gov. Jeff Landry blasted what he referred to as “hug-a-thug” policies — reforms put in place prior to his tenure when the state was trying to shed its reputation as the nation’s incarceration capital. He also demanded harsher penalties for violent minors.

“I’m done with them. It doesn’t matter how old they are,” Landry, a Republican, said during a news conference in Baton Rouge. “We’ve got 18,000 acres at Angola — if it was up to me, I would send them all there for the rest of their lives.”’

Landry’s push for harsher punishments that would keep people in prison longer came as little surprise. Soon after his 2024 inauguration, he won a package of tough-on-crime bills that drastically changed the state’s sentencing laws. A Landry spokesperson at the time brushed off concerns from civil rights groups and incarceration experts that it would swell the prison population and plunge the state into financial disaster, insisting that “less crime means greater economic opportunity for everyone.”

Two years later, the governor wants to add hundreds more beds in Louisiana’s largest prison and spend more on medical costs as prisoners stay longer behind bars. His proposed $798 million corrections budget, which the Republican-controlled legislature is expected to pass by June 1, represents a 9% increase from the inflation-adjusted total spent in fiscal year 2024, the last budget passed before his tenure. The increased budget is the first indication that the rising inmate population resulting from Landry’s policies is costing Louisiana taxpayers.

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ProPublica and Verite News have spent more than two years investigating how Landry’s policies have impacted Louisiana’s criminal justice system. The number of prisoners paroled under Landry has plummeted to its lowest point in 20 years, due in part to a law he signed that cedes much of the power of the parole board to a computerized algorithm. And the prison population as a whole is expected to become older and sicker since Landry and the legislature eliminated medical parole.

Landry also ushered in a law that lowered the age at which the justice system must treat defendants as adults from 18 to 17 years old to combat what he characterized as an epidemic of violent crime committed by minors. But an investigation by ProPublica and Verite News found that 69% of 17-year olds in three of the state’s largest parishes were arrested for offenses that Louisiana law does not consider violent crimes.

Many experts say the full impact of these changes won’t be felt for at least another decade. The Crime and Justice Institute, a Boston-based nonpartisan public-safety research organization, predicts that by 2034, Landry’s rollback of inmates’ ability to shave time off their sentences through good behavior will double the size of the state’s prison population, double the number of nonviolent offenders being held and cost an estimated $2 billion for new prisons to accommodate the population.

Here is how Landry’s policies have already begun to impact Louisiana’s prisons and budget.

Prison Population Change

In the two years after Landry took office, the number of state prisoners has increased by about 8%, and Landry’s budget indicates that number will continue to rise. The governor is asking for an additional 688 beds at the state’s largest prison, the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, which will require the hiring of 150 correctional officers.

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A corrections department spokesperson said the increased capacity is necessary because under the previous administration, “beds were significantly decreased, correctional officer positions were cut, facilities closed, and funding [was] eliminated.”

In 2017, a bipartisan coalition of Louisiana legislators had passed an ambitious package of bills designed to reduce the number of nonviolent offenders behind bars — and with it the state’s nation-leading prison population.

By 2021, the number of nonviolent offenders in state prisons and jails dropped by 55% and the overall prison population by 26%, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Louisiana’s Prison Population Has Continued to Go Up Under Gov. Jeff Landry

After years of steady decline due to a bipartisan prison-reform package, the state’s incarcerated population started climbing again in 2022, after the height of the coronavirus pandemic, as courts reopened and crime rates rose. The increase has continued as a result of Landry’s criminal justice rollbacks.


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Gov. Landry’s

term began in

January

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Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

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Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

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Gov. Landry’s

term began in

January

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Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

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Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

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Note: Prison population totals as of Dec. 31 of each year. Source: Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections.

Chris Alcantara/ProPublica

But in early 2024, Landry signed a series of bills that repealed most of those reforms. The governor and his allies in the legislature eliminated parole for anyone convicted of a crime committed after Aug. 1, 2024, and required prisoners to serve at least 85% of their sentences before they can reduce their time through good behavior. The elimination of parole also got rid of medical parole and put additional restrictions on medical furlough — both of which had been offered to severely ill or injured inmates.

The rising number of prisoners has applied additional pressure on overcrowded local jails, where more than half of Louisiana’s inmates are held instead of state-run prisons. Landry is asking the legislature for an additional $17 million to increase the rate paid to local sheriffs to house state inmates by $3 per day, from $26 to $29.

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Louisiana Has More State Prisoners in Local Jails Than Any Other State in the Nation

More than half of Louisiana inmates are held in local jails instead of state-run prisons.


Share of prisoners in local jails

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Share of prisoners in local jails

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Share of prisoners in local jails

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Share of prisoners in local jails

Share of prisoners in local jails

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Share of prisoners in local jails

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Note: Data as of 2023. Source: Department of Justice report on prison population released in September.

Chris Alcantara/ProPublica

Some lawmakers and prison reform advocates say there are indications that the Department of Corrections is seeing the need for a shift in strategy.

State Rep. Mandie Landry (no relation), a Democrat from New Orleans, said corrections department officials asked her to sponsor a bill that allows prisoners who earn an associate’s degree to shave 90 days off their sentences. And while that might not seem like much, she said, it’s a move in the right direction. “I think they’re realizing that what the legislature did a few years ago is going to explode into a nightmare in prison,” she said.

The legislature passed the bipartisan bill in April.

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A corrections department spokesperson declined to respond to questions concerning the impact of Landry’s policies on the prison population and corrections budget, how those policies are impacting inmate medical care and if the department is seeking to gradually reverse any of Landry’s policies. Landry’s spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment.

Rising Corrections Budget

Landry is asking for an additional $82 million for next year’s corrections budget — 11% more than currently allotted. Over the past decade, the amount of state tax dollars spent on correctional services has fluctuated, especially during the coronavirus pandemic, when federal aid temporarily supplemented the corrections budget. But Landry’s policies will ensure the need for additional funds, said James Austin, a national corrections policy expert.

Landry’s Proposed Budget Could Push Statewide Prison Spending to Its Highest Level in a Decade

The actual spending in 2027 by the Department of Corrections could be even higher, based on past trends.


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$750 million spent on

correctional services

Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

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Proposed

$33 million addition

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Proposed

$33 million

addition

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Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

$750 million spent on correctional services

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Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

Advertisement

Proposed

$33 million

addition

$750 million spent on correctional services

Advertisement

$750 million spent on

correctional services

Advertisement

Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

Proposed

Advertisement

$33 million addition

Proposed

Advertisement

$33 million

addition

Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

Advertisement

$750 million spent on correctional services

Advertisement

Gov. Landry’s term

began in January

Proposed

$33 million

Advertisement

addition

$750 million spent on correctional services

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Note: Louisiana’s fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30. Fiscal years 2016 to 2025 represent actual taxpayer spending on corrections after adjusting for inflation, using the most recent rate as of April. The amount of state funding dropped in fiscal years 2020 and 2021 because the state used federal pandemic aid to supplement its corrections budget. A key reason for the state funding increase in fiscal year 2025 was the cost of major repairs at two prisons. The figures for fiscal year 2026 represent the department’s budget as of December 2025 plus an additional amount the Landry administration has requested through June. Source: Louisiana Division of Administration.

Chris Alcantara/ProPublica

While overall state spending during Landry’s tenure is projected to drop by 2% when adjusted for inflation, corrections spending will increase by 9% if the governor’s proposed budget passes.

“There’s no indication that the need for more beds and more staff is going to flatten out. And I don’t think this governor will talk about increasing taxes,” Austin said. “All that’s left is to cut programs in other areas.”

A new report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington, D.C., determined that the proposed increase in corrections spending would come at the expense of education. Landry has proposed cutting $165 million in education funding, including $40 million for state colleges and universities and $125 million for K-12 education, including teacher pay. (Landry backed a measure that would have paid for teacher raises by liquidating three education trust funds, but voters rejected the proposal in the May 16 election.)

“They have made the decision to boost the funding for prisons while deprioritizing the investments in teachers,” said Michael Mitchell, author of the report.

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The state is forced to make cuts because Landry and the Republican-controlled legislature pushed through their 2024 criminal justice bills in less than two weeks without the typical debate over costs, said Sarah Omojola, director of the Louisiana office of the Vera Institute of Justice, a nonprofit focused on criminal justice reform.

“These rollbacks were very partisan and not supported by research, data or even fiscally sound policy,” Omojola said. “They just approved the bills before the legislative staff even computed what the full expenses were.”

A Landry spokesperson did not respond to requests for comment.

Rep. Debbie Villio, a Republican from Kenner who sponsored the 2024 bills that eliminated parole and significantly reduced the ability of prisoners to reduce their sentences through good behavior, did not respond to a request for comment.

“It is my position that this legislation will not ramp up prison population and costs,” Villio texted the Times-Picayune at the time the bills were passed.

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An Older, Sicker Prison Population

The need for additional healthcare funds is yet another indicator of the costs associated with Landry’s changes to the state’s sentencing laws, said Bruce Reilly, deputy director of Voice of the Experienced, a New Orleans nonprofit that advocates for the rights of incarcerated people. Without the benefit of parole or the ability to reduce their sentences through good behavior, inmates will spend more time behind bars. That extra time will create an older and sicker population, Reilly said.

The number of older prisoners was already on the rise prior to Landry due, in part, to lengthy sentences secured in the 1980s to 2000s by previous New Orleans district attorneys.

Landry has asked for an increase of $14.3 million to pay for medical care in prisons for the next fiscal year, which begins in July. The administration is also asking for an additional $33 million for the current fiscal year to pay for medical care, overtime and supplies.

Louisiana Prisoners Over the Age of 70 Experienced the Highest Change in Population Since 2019

Since Landry took office in 2024, the population of prisoners over 70 has gone up 28%, while the overall prison population rose by 8%. Prisoners over 70 typically represent a small portion of the overall prison population.


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Change in Louisiana prison

population by age group

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Change in Louisiana prison population by age group

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Change in Louisiana prison population by age group

Change in Louisiana prison

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population by age group

Change in Louisiana prison population by age group

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Change in Louisiana prison population by age group

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Note: Prison totals used to calculate the rate for each age group are from Dec. 31 of each year. Source: Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections.

Chris Alcantara/ProPublica

A 2024 investigation by Verite News and ProPublica detailed allegations of unconstitutional medical care provided to inmates being held in Angola’s medical ward. Austin, the corrections expert, said that a medical system that for decades has struggled to care for its most vulnerable will “only worsen” under the strain of a rapidly expanding and aging population.

In March, a federal appeals court threw out a lower-court order to have a court-appointed team oversee medical care at Angola, calling the proposed remedy “micromanagement” that violated the federal Prison Litigation Reform Act. The case has been sent back to the lower court.

For years, as both attorney general and governor, Landry has defended Angola’s healthcare system, claiming that inmates are entitled to only “adequate” medical care — not specialized care or the best care possible.

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The legislature proposed two healthcare bills this year that would reduce medical costs. One that would restore medical parole and medical furlough as exceptions to the elimination of parole recently passed. Another, which would expand the time an inmate can be released into hospice, is still being considered.

Current law allows prison officials to release terminally ill prisoners two months prior to their expected death, which is the shortest hospice-release window in the country, according to Families Against Mandatory Minimums, a nonprofit focused on criminal justice reform. The proposed bill would double that time to four months, which would still be the shortest by a wide margin. Alabama, South Carolina and Tennessee have the next shortest window, at six months.

“These people are on their death bed. Some of these people don’t even realize they’re in prison,” said corrections secretary Gary Westcott at a March hearing on the proposed bill. And the costs associated with caring for these inmates can be extraordinarily high, Westcott said.

“We’re talking about changing diapers, feeding them. Most of them cannot do anything on their own,” he said, noting that once they are transferred to a hospital, those costs are picked up by Medicaid.



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Louisiana

Louisiana Lottery Powerball, Pick 3 results for June 20, 2026

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The Louisiana Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.

Here’s a look at June 20, 2026, results for each game:

Winning Powerball numbers from June 20 drawing

16-20-44-48-50, Powerball: 15, Power Play: 2

Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.

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Winning Pick 3 numbers from June 20 drawing

1-8-2

Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Pick 4 numbers from June 20 drawing

1-4-7-5

Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Pick 5 numbers from June 20 drawing

6-6-2-7-9

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Check Pick 5 payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Easy 5 numbers from June 20 drawing

01-06-18-25-33

Check Easy 5 payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Lotto numbers from June 20 drawing

09-13-16-17-33-41

Check Lotto payouts and previous drawings here.

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Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize

All Louisiana Lottery retailers will redeem prizes up to $600. For prizes over $600, winners can submit winning tickets through the mail or in person at Louisiana Lottery offices. Prizes of over $5,000 must be claimed at Lottery office.

By mail, follow these instructions:

  1. Sign and complete the information on the back of your winning ticket, ensuring all barcodes are clearly visible (remove all scratch-off material from scratch-off tickets).
  2. Photocopy the front and back of the ticket (except for Powerball and Mega Millions tickets, as photocopies are not accepted for these games).
  3. Complete the Louisiana Lottery Prize Claim Form, including your telephone number and mailing address for prize check processing.
  4. Photocopy your valid driver’s license or current picture identification.

Mail all of the above in a single envelope to:

Louisiana Lottery Headquarters

555 Laurel Street

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Baton Rouge, LA 70801

To submit in person, visit Louisiana Lottery headquarters:

555 Laurel Street, Baton Rouge, LA 70801, (225) 297-2000.

Hours: 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. This office can cash prizes of any amount.

Check previous winning numbers and payouts at Louisiana Lottery.

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When are the Louisiana Lottery drawings held?

  • Powerball: 9:59 p.m. CT Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
  • Mega Millions: 10 p.m. CT Tuesday and Friday.
  • Pick 3, Pick 4 and Pick 5: Daily at 9:59 p.m. CT.
  • Easy 5: 9:59 p.m. CT Wednesday and Saturday.
  • Lotto: 9:59 p.m. CT Wednesday and Saturday.

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Louisiana editor. You can send feedback using this form.



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How Louisiana nitrogen gas executions could be affected by court ruling on Alabama

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How Louisiana nitrogen gas executions could be affected by court ruling on Alabama


Advocates for death row inmates in Louisiana are praising a decision this month by the U.S. Supreme Court that barred Alabama from carrying out its latest scheduled execution by nitrogen gas, while Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill panned the outcome as the work of a “rogue judge.”

The unsigned 6-3 decision in the case of Alabama double murderer Jeffery Lee denied Alabama’s emergency request to lift a lower court ban on killing him with nitrogen gas. For now it places executions by nitrogen gas on hold in Alabama, the first state to use the method on death row prisoners. Alabama has put seven prisoners to death using the method since 2024.

The court declined to spell out its rationale for pausing the Alabama execution, leaving uncertain the impact on Louisiana, the only other state to complete an execution by nitrogen gas. Louisiana falls under a different federal circuit.

Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall responded to the high court’s decision by asking the Alabama Supreme Court to let the state execute Lee by lethal injection instead. Marshall’s office did not respond to questions about whether or how Alabama intends to defend its use of nitrogen hypoxia at this point.

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But Murrill downplayed the impact on executions in Louisiana. The Republican attorney general, who has pressed to restart Louisiana’s execution chamber in earnest, did not respond when asked how the decisions could impact the state’s future use of nitrogen gas.

“The United States Supreme Court has allowed it, and there are procedural explanations for the vote in the Alabama case,” Murrill said in a statement.

“Alabama, like Louisiana and other states, wants to carry out criminal sentences and deliver long-delayed justice that was promised to victims and their families in these heinous crimes,” she added. “So the pivot in this case to another method simply signals that Alabama does not intend to allow anti-death penalty activists to delay the execution.”

Advocates for inmates on death row hope the legal developments serve as more than a speed bump for the handful of states that have authorized nitrogen gas executions.

Lee’s case involved some of the same experts from a challenge last year to Louisiana’s first execution in 15 years, when the state used nitrogen gas in March 2025 to kill Jessie Hoffman for the 1996 rape and murder of Mary “Molly” Elliott.

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In Hoffman’s case, a 5-4 majority of the U.S. Supreme Court denied an application to stay his execution. Arkansas, Mississippi and Oklahoma also have authorized executions by nitrogen gas but have not used it.

Capital attorney Cecelia Trenticosta Kappel of the New Orleans-based Promise of Justice Initiative said the lower courts’ reasoning in Lee’s case applies just as well here.

“Louisiana’s protocol for nitrogen gassing is a copycat of Alabama’s, so the factual findings of the district court and the Eleventh Circuit should apply to Louisiana with full force,” Kappel said in a statement.

“And unlike the federal Constitution, Louisiana’s Constitution goes further, explicitly banning torture and providing stronger safeguards against cruel, unusual, or excessive punishment.”

Murrill has pressed local courts to clear more death row inmates for execution. No others have taken place since Hoffman, though the Legislature has set tight new deadlines to quicken the post-conviction review process for condemned prisoners. Louisiana now has about 56 prisoners on death row.

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Does nitrogen gas cause ‘needless suffering?’

In Alabama, Lee was convicted of a shotgun double killing during a 1998 robbery of a pawn shop. A jury settled on life in prison, but a judge overrode the decision with a death sentence, in a practice later outlawed.

U.S. District Judge Emily Marks, who was nominated to the federal bench by President Donald Trump, at first rejected Lee’s challenge to the nitrogen gas death under the Eighth Amendment’s ban on “cruel and unusual” punishment.

After a trial, Marks ruled that Alabama’s nitrogen gas protocol didn’t cause “needless suffering,” though she found it caused one to three minutes of “severe air hunger and corresponding emotional distress, anxiety, physiological stress, and physical discomfort.”

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals concluded differently, saying “the overall suffering described by the district court, which lasts for one to three minutes, presents a substantial risk of serious harm over and above death itself.”

The appeals court sent the case back to Marks, who then decided that Lee’s chosen alternative — a firing squad — while not approved by Alabama, was “feasible, readily implemented, and significantly reduces the substantial risk of serious harm posed by the Protocol.”

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Marks issued a permanent injunction that the appeals court upheld, reasoning that if it didn’t, the state could moot the case by killing Lee. Alabama then asked the Supreme Court to step in. Granting Lee’s challenge would be “unprecedented in American history,” the state claimed, expanding “the concept of cruelty well beyond the bounds of the Eighth Amendment.”

Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch dissented from the denial of the state’s petition.

Nitrogen gas vs. firing squad vs. other methods

The U.S. Supreme Court has a long history of staying out of challenges over methods of state executions. Lee’s was the first involving nitrogen gas where the justices were asked to suspend a permanent injunction issued by a lower court long enough for Alabama to kill him.

Before then, the high court had allowed eight executions by nitrogen hypoxia to go forward.

One legal scholar argued that Louisiana “just may think it’s not worth it” to pursue more nitrogen gas executions after Alabama’s response to the recent court ruling.

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“The litigation in Alabama has set a road map for attorneys to follow if it goes all the way up to the Supreme Court. It’s a pretty good yellow brick road in terms of the cost, the controversy, the chaos that’s involved in dealing with such a very challenging and difficult method of execution,” said Fordham University law professor Deborah Denno.

In a recent paper, Denno argued that the U.S. has entered a new era of “crueler, sloppier, and more reckless” executions, with some states tapping older techniques like the firing squad and others approving nitrogen gas, a new one.

The last execution using nitrogen gas came last October in Alabama, when condemned inmate Anthony Boyd appeared to take longer to die than any others using the method. The Associated Press reported Boyd shaking and heaving for more than 15 minutes before the curtain closed on the execution chamber.

Louisiana lawmakers approved nitrogen gas along with the electric chair as options in 2024 legislation after the state struggled for years with access to lethal injection drugs. The choice of methods under the law is left to the state corrections secretary.

Supreme Court ‘shadow docket’ leaves reasoning murky

Some legal observers cautioned that the court may have denied Alabama’s plea for reasons not entirely related to Lee’s fate.

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Stephen Vladeck, a Georgetown University professor who has studied the court’s growing use of its “shadow docket” to settle legal issues through emergency decisions, argued in an amicus brief that the court shouldn’t let that docket be used to clear a path for Lee’s execution.

John Blume, a Cornell University law professor, said the court’s actions on the shadow docket are notoriously hard to decipher.

“So, it could mean that the refusal to lift the (injunction) stay means a majority thinks the District Court and the Court of Appeals got it right. It could also mean that they might hear the case on the merits and vacating the stay would moot the case,” Blume said.

“Or it could just mean that they did not see what has (been) until this Court came along the difficult standard for a stay being satisfied.”

Blume said the court has granted the vast majority of emergency relief requests from orders staying executions.

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“But most of those were preliminary injunctions,” he added. “This was a permanent one.”

Lee’s legal team with the Arnold & Porter firm in Washington, D.C. praised the decision while noting that it didn’t clip Alabama’s right to kill him, only how.

“We are asking only that the execution be carried out by a constitutional method,” the firm said, adding that the high court ruling “ensures the opportunity for a full review of the trial and appellate record before any execution proceeds.”



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Talent, fitness honors awarded on Preliminary Night 2 of Miss Louisiana

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Talent, fitness honors awarded on Preliminary Night 2 of Miss Louisiana


Miss Louisiana preliminaries closed Friday with Miss Louisiana Port City sweeping health and fitness and evening wear, and a newcomer earning another night of preliminary wins.

Shelby Bordelon, Miss Louisiana Port City, won health and fitness and evening wear preliminaries. Miss Natchitoches City of Lights Eva Delatte won the talent preliminary.

Miss Heart of Pilot Lauryn Vernon won both the newcomer health and fitness and the newcomer evening wear awards, earning $500 in scholarships. Kelly Lohman, Miss Avoyelles Arts & Music Festival, received the $500 newcomer preliminary talent scholarship.

Other scholarships that were presented Friday night included:

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  • Women in Business ($1,000 Scholarship): Miss Louisiana Tech University De’Ahmya Whaley
  • Women in Education ($1,000 Scholarship): Miss Southeastern Louisiana University Miranda Sensat
  • Women in Health Sciences ($1,000 Scholarship): Miss Ruston Emma Calhoun
  • Women in Marketing ($1,000): Miss Louisiana Tech University De’Ahmya Whaley
  • Women in Mass Communication ($1,000 Scholarship): Miss Louisiana Port City Shelby Bordelon
  • STEAM ($500): Miss Ruston Emma Calhoun, Miss Cane River Olivia Grace Dyrek, Miss Monroe Jalia Shepherd
  • Champions of Faith ($1,000): Miss Louisiana Christian University Destanee Stewart
  • Glenda Moss Memorial Passion for Dance Scholarship ($1,000): Miss Krewe of the Twin Cities Anna Claire Lemoine
  • Origin Bank Leadership & Culture ($1,000): Miss Avoyelles Arts & Music Festival Kelly Lohman
  • American Heart Association − Raised over $1,000: Miss CENLA Lauragrace Rader, Miss Louisiana Port City Shelby Bordelon, Miss Louisiana Tech University De’Ahmya Whaley
  • AHA Winner − Raised over $5,000: Miss Union Parish Hannah Brotherton
  • Sharon Turrentine Health Living ($1,000): Miss University of Louisiana Monroe Katherine McCullars
  • Community Service 1st Runner Up: Miss Avoyelles Arts & Music Festival Kelly Lohman

Who are the Miss Louisiana contestants?

The Jazz Group consists of:

  • Miss Slidell Maddie McMahan
  • Miss Spirit of Fasching Caroline Pierce
  • Miss Minden Sadie Brown
  • Miss Belle of the Bayou Jansen McDonald
  • Miss Spirit of the Red Elyce Thomas
  • Miss Ouachita Parish Jasmine Henson
  • Miss Bossier City Adreaunna Scott
  • Miss Heart of Pilot Lauryn Vernon
  • Miss Red River City Courtney Patterson
  • Miss Lincoln Parish Sarah Cook
  • Miss Twin Cities Addison Jackson
  • Miss Southeastern Louisiana University Miranda Sensat
  • Miss Union Parish Hannah Brotherton
  • Miss University of Louisiana at Monroe Katherine McCullars
  • Miss Louisiana Port City Shelby Bordelon

The Blues Group consists of:

  • Miss Avoyelles Arts & Music Festival Kelly Lohman
  • Miss Northwestern Lady of the Bracelet Nilah Pollard
  • Miss Pride of Monroe Shelby Weaver
  • Miss Krewe of the Twin Cities Anna Claire Lemoine
  • Miss Louisiana Christian University Destanee Stewart
  • Miss Louisiana Bayou Makenzie Tillery
  • Miss Ruston Emma Calhoun
  • Miss Natchitoches Parish Hannah Reeder
  • Miss Louisiana Stockshow Jacie Brent
  • Miss Cane River Olivia Grace Dyrek
  • Miss Natchitoches City of Lights Eva Delatte
  • Miss Monroe Jalia Shepherd
  • Miss CENLA Lauragrace Rader
  • Miss Louisiana Tech University De’Ahmya Wiley

Follow Ian Robinson on Twitter @_irobinsonand on Facebook at https://bit.ly/3vln0w1.





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