A Louisiana decide gave an accused rapist custody of the kid conceived from the 2005 assault and finally ordered his underage sufferer to pay little one assist, a report mentioned.
Crysta Abelseth advised WBRZ that she was raped at 16 years previous when a person practically twice her age promised to offer her a trip house from an area restaurant after an evening out with associates.
“As a substitute of bringing me house, he introduced me to his home,” Abelseth mentioned about John Barnes, who was 30 years previous on the time. “As soon as inside, he raped me on his front room sofa.”
The teenager turned pregnant and had a daughter, who’s now an adolescent herself, the station mentioned.
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“Everybody assumed it [the pregnancy] was from a boyfriend, and I allow them to consider that,” Abelseth advised the outlet.
Barnes reportedly got here again into the image 5 years later when he discovered the kid is likely to be his.
“When my daughter was 5 years previous, he discovered about her, and as soon as he discovered about her, he pursued custody and wished to take her away from me,” Abelseth mentioned, explaining {that a} DNA take a look at proved with close to certainty that he was the daddy.
“They granted him 50/50 custody even if [the child] was attributable to rape.”
Abelseth filed rape fees towards Barnes in 2015 after she discovered it was inside Louisiana’s statute of limitations, the station reported.
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“I assumed if I didn’t do it the subsequent day, there was nothing I might do about it,” Abelseth reportedly mentioned. “I went to a trauma counselor, and he mentioned, ‘No, you have got 30 years after you flip 18.’”
The case was nonetheless open with the Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff’s Workplace, and no fees had been filed, in response to the station.
“It was by no means assigned to a detective, and nothing was ever investigated,” Abelseth mentioned.
The now-32-year-old mentioned she has struggled to realize any traction with the justice system and reportedly misplaced custody over her daughter over allegations she gave her a mobile phone.
Courtroom information in reference to the case have been inexplicably sealed, in response to the article.
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“He’s properly linked,” Abelseth advised the station of Barnes, who owns Gumbeaux Digital Branding, an online firm in Ponchatoula that works with native police.
“He’s threatened me a number of instances, saying he has connections within the justice system, so I higher watch out and he can take her away anytime he needs to. I didn’t consider him till it occurred.”
Advocates and attorneys mentioned the sequence of occasions was troubling.
“After I discovered she was a rape sufferer, and this rapist might doubtlessly get full custody, that’s after I stepped in and mentioned one thing must be achieved about this,” Stacie Triche of the non-profit group Save Lives reportedly mentioned.
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“She’s been pressured to pay her perpetrator,” Triche mentioned. “Pressured to pay her rapist little one assist and authorized charges and quit custody of the kid that’s a product of the rape. It is mindless.”
Authorized observers famous that even when allegations of forcible rape couldn’t be confirmed, the age distinction between Abelseth and Barnes would represent statutory rape. The age of consent is 17 in Louisiana.
“It appears fairly straight ahead that not solely did against the law happen, however because of the crime, this particular person shouldn’t have custody of the kid,” Sean Cassidy, a lawyer with the Louisiana Basis In opposition to Sexual Assault mentioned, in response to the article.
Barnes declined to remark to the outlet, together with Choose Jeffrey Cashe, who reportedly made the controversial custody ruling.
ADDIS, La. (WAFB) – Since the 1880s, trains have been rolling through the small town of Addis in West Baton Rouge Parish. But for its first few decades, the town had a different name, Baton Rouge Junction.
“It was because to go west, the people from Baton Rouge had to come here to catch the trains,” said Jocelyn Myhand Gauthreaux.
In 1915, Baton Rouge Junction was given a new name.
“And they changed it to Addis because it was too confusing for the people not knowing where Baton Rouge Junction was different from Baton Rouge,” Gauthreaux said.
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John Wesley Addis was a superintendent of the Texas and Pacific Railroad.
When I drive around Louisiana, I pass through these small towns and I often wonder why is this town where it is? Why is Addis here?
“Well, it started on the river and it’s here because of the railroad,” said Gauthreaux.
Gauthreaux is one of the volunteers who researched the town’s history, collected artifacts, and opened a museum in a century old bank building. Even the building has a story,
“But only seven years after it was built, it closed because they had the great depression plus a railroad strike,” Gauthreaux said.
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The building later served as the post office and a grocery. Ella Thibodaux’s father worked for the local railroad.
“They would inspect the railroad. They would pull off the old ties that needed to be replaced. This had to all be done by hand,” said Thibodaux.
Train stations would have a clock like this, and railroad workers like Thibodaux’s dad would carry a pocket watch.
“Every morning. They had to synchronize that watch with the watch at the depot, and that was so they could get what they called a timetable so they would know when these trains were coming through, they had to get off that track,” Thibodaux said.
You can see an old conductor’s hat, train tickets, a ticket puncher, and items used to serve passengers. There are old telephones before the devices would fit in your pocket. And the old phones replaced the railroad telegraph. Outside the town park has a caboose, something else that railroads no longer use. The museum has a collection from local military veterans, old housewares and clothing, schools that are long gone, and radios that once were the center of family entertainment. It’s quite a collection for a group of volunteers who value their history.
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“You might not have a lot of interest now, but down the road, somebody’s gonna wanna know something about their grandparents that they didn’t know. And we wanna preserve all those memories here,” said Thibodaux.
And today. You can still see the railroad activity in front of the Addis museum. The town’s history is still an important part of its future.
More information about the Addis Train Museum can be found on Heart of Louisiana’s website.
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With a minute remaining and the Southern Miss men’s basketball team clinging to a one-point lead, a Christian Watson layup and a handful of clutch free throws down the stretch lifted the Golden Eagles to a 67-59 win over Louisiana on Saturday night.
Scoring summary
Southern Miss scored early with the first two baskets to take a 5-0 lead. Louisiana then answered and rattled off an 11-0 run to take its first lead. The conference rivals traded the next few baskets before Southern Miss guard DeAntoni Gordon drained a jumper to start a 7-0 run and allow his team to climb back.
A dunk by Watson tied the game at 20-20 before an Alfred Worrell, Jr. layup gave the Golden Eagles their first lead since the short run after tipoff. The first half’s final minutes were back and forth before Southern Miss narrowly pulled away with a 35-31 lead at halftime.
The Ragin’ Cajuns jumped out in the second half to a 43-36 lead before Christian Reid knocked down a free throw to knot the game back up at 45-45. Louisiana regained and maintained a small lead until the final few minutes of play.
Star big man Denijay Harris gave Southern Miss a 60-57 lead before Louisiana forward Mostapha El Moutaouakkil nailed a layup to cut the lead to one point with just over a minute remaining.
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That’s when the clutch layup from Watson happened and Louisiana began to foul. Free throws from Neftali Alvarez, Harris, and Worrell sealed the game and gave Southern Miss its first road win of the season.
What the coach said
Southern Miss head coach Jay Ladner, who reached his 150th career win with the victory over Louisiana, noted after the game that his team was successful in changing its mindset after an overtime loss to Texas State a week ago.
“I thought we let some factors beyond our control effect the way we played during the first half, and we had a little come to Jesus meeting at halftime about controlling ourselves. But to our guys’ credit, they responded with a mature attitude,” Ladner said. “You certainly can’t overreact to every call, and I think we let a few factors from last week against Texas State get into our heads.”
Numbers never lie
It took 16 road games for Southern Miss to get its first victory away from Reed Green Coliseum this year. The win was also the team’s first in Lafayette since 2009.
Led by Gordon (13 points), the Golden Eagles were able to spread out offensive production with Cobie Montgomery (12 points), Watson (10 points), and Worrell (10 points) all scoring in double digits.
Harris was unable to continue his double-double trend, grabbing 10 rebounds but scoring nine points.
El Moutaouakkil paced Louisiana with 23 points and eight rebounds. Kentrell Garrett added 13 points.
Southern Miss outrebounded the Ragin’ Cajuns 42-31 but did turn the ball over 15 times.
Next up
Southern Miss will continue its road trip and head to Troy to play the Trojans on Monday, Jan. 27. The game was originally set for last week but rescheduled due to Winter Storm Enzo. Tipoff is at 5 p.m. CT.
Houston Christian Huskies (9-11, 6-3 Southland) at SE Louisiana Lions (12-8, 6-3 Southland)
Hammond, Louisiana; Monday, 7 p.m. EST
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BOTTOM LINE: SE Louisiana takes on Houston Christian after Sam Hines Jr. scored 22 points in SE Louisiana’s 86-63 victory against the Incarnate Word Cardinals.
The Lions are 4-1 in home games. SE Louisiana ranks sixth in the Southland with 32.3 points per game in the paint led by Jakevion Buckley averaging 6.0.
The Huskies are 6-3 in conference play. Houston Christian is 4-5 in games decided by 10 points or more.
SE Louisiana averages 72.5 points per game, 1.5 more points than the 71.0 Houston Christian gives up. Houston Christian averages 7.5 made 3-pointers per game this season, 0.2 more makes per game than SE Louisiana gives up.
The Lions and Huskies square off Monday for the first time in Southland play this season.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Hines is averaging 16.4 points and 6.5 rebounds for the Lions. Kam Burton is averaging 1.7 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.
Julian Mackey is shooting 36.1% from beyond the arc with 2.2 made 3-pointers per game for the Huskies, while averaging 14.8 points. Bryson Dawkins is averaging 13.1 points over the past 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Lions: 8-2, averaging 75.6 points, 32.3 rebounds, 12.2 assists, 7.2 steals and 2.1 blocks per game while shooting 46.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 68.6 points per game.
Huskies: 6-4, averaging 67.7 points, 30.3 rebounds, 11.1 assists, 9.1 steals and 3.3 blocks per game while shooting 42.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 69.9 points.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.