Louisiana
Shreveport will soon be official Stuffed Shrimp Capital of Louisiana
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Shreveport soon will officially be known as the Stuffed Shrimp Capital of Louisiana, a city that traces the origins of the delicacy to the historic Freeman & Harris Cafe, which was one of the oldest Black-owned restaurants before it closed permanently in 2006.
House Bill 9 by Democratic Shreveport Rep. Joy Walters cleared the Senate May 26 on a unanimous 36-0 vote and will become law with Gov. Jeff Landry’s signature.
“We don’t talk enough about the positive things that happen in Shreveport,” Walters said in an interview with USA Today Network. “It’s exciting for me to be able to amplify our culinary and hospitality reputation.”
Though Freeman & Harris closed, its legacy is carried on by family-connected restaurants like Eddie’s Seafood and Soulfood and Orlandeaux’s Cafe. Eddie’s was named one of the “Best Soul Food Restaurants in the South” by Southern Living in 2015.
Walters said her favorites are the Freeman & Harris Cafe legacy restaurants Eddie’s and Orlandeaux’s, but many eateries offer the Shreveport-style stuffed shrimp in the city.
Democratic Shreveport Sen. Sam Jenkins carried the bill for Walters in the Senate on Tuesday, where he told colleagues this was their chance to vote for “the tastiest and most delicious bill of the Session.”
“It’s a big deal in Shreveport,” Jenkins told USA Today Network.
Like Walters, Jenkins said his top spots for the dish are Eddie’s and Orlandeaux’s.
Shreveport also plays host to the annual Stuffed Shrimp Festival each spring.
Visit Shreveport-Bossier promotes the dish, describing Shreveport-style stuffed shrimp as “large, succulent shrimp are stuffed with fiery Creole dressing, deep-fried and served with a spicy tartar sauce.”
Greg Hilburn covers state politics for the USA TODAY Network of Louisiana. Follow him on Twitter @GregHilburn1.
Louisiana
Maryland woman describes ICE detention conditions in Louisiana
A woman from Maryland detained by ICE last year told News4 conditions are challenging inside the detention center where she’s been held since August.
Maryland does not have ICE detention centers, so detained immigrants are sent to detention centers in other states. That includes Richwood Correctional Center in Monroe, Louisiana, which has faced complaints in the past about detainee care and facility conditions.
“Ensuring the safety, security, and well-being of individuals in our custody is a top priority at ICE,” the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.
“I miss my family,” Damaris Gomez-Laurens said from inside Richwood. “They treat us like a, like a criminal. I feel like that. I feel like that.”
Gomez-Laurens called her family one day when the News4 I-Team visited them in Maryland. The signal was unstable, going in and out. Those detained have to pay for the calls. This one cost just over $3.
The I-Team’s asked Gomez-Laurens what it has been like being away from her husband and two sons.
“It’s really hard,” she said. “We’ve never been separated. And I have more than seven months without them.”
Gomez-Laurens lived a full life in Prince George’s County for more than 20 years. Pictures provided by the family tell the story of a mom surrounded by her husband, their boys and extended relatives.
“Without her, these past holidays were tough, very difficult – not having her and thinking what she was going through by herself too,” said her niece Heisy Garcia. “She’s the key part of our family. She keep us together too.”
Garcia said her aunt was detained during her annual ICE probation check-in in Baltimore. She had a work permit and operated an electrical business with her husband, Garcia said. She has no criminal record and has been trying to become a legal citizen since 2014, according to Garcia.
The detention has cost her family both emotionally and financially.
“Just her own attorney that she files for emergency stays, for her appeal to reopen her immigration case, you’re talking about from $5,000 to $6,000,” Garcia said. “Now, going through consultations from attorney to attorney, it’s $500 at each consultation. And then having a different attorney in another state, that’s another $6,000.”
Visiting is hard because the facility is almost 1,000 miles away. The family told News4 their trip to Richwood earlier this year was tough for other reasons too.
“After months of not seeing her, so, we hugged her and one of the officers start yelling ‘Stop! Stop! You can only hug her for 10 seconds!’” Garcia said. “I was like, ‘10 seconds? They told us three minutes.’”
‘Worst of the worst’
The family told us they visited during the snowstorm that hit in January, leading to problems at the facility.
“It seems like the pipe burst and they were without water for 48 hours,” said Garcia.
A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson told the I-Team in a statement:“Due to the freezing temperatures in January 2026, there was an issue with the water supply for a short period of time and, like always, ICE was prepared for this contingency. Bottled water was immediately issued, and portable water tanks were introduced to enable proper cycling of toilets. Detainees were NOT made to wait 48 hours for water and were given access to water bottles immediately.”
During the video phone call, Gomez-Laurens discussed other challenges. “The bathroom is really bad conditions. They always wet, because they are always leaking. Leaking, leaking. Always is wet,” she said.
“Richwood, I think, is the worst of the worst,” said Vincent Rivas Flores, an immigration attorney with Amica Center for Immigrant Rights.
He told the I-Team he’s heard complaints about cleanliness and other issues from clients from Maryland who also are detained at Richwood.
“For months, my clients have told me that there has been mold problems in the bathrooms and the toilets and the showers,” he said.
According to a 2023 DHS office of inspector general report, inspectors found health and safety violations, including poor housing conditions and unclean showers. DHS said it addressed these issues with renovations.
“So much can change if Richwood actually listened to the complaints. These complaints are not new,” said Rivas Flores.
The OIG report also noted that Richwood restricted detainees’ access to legal visitation and calls without providing justification.
ICE said it complies with all standards and logs whether any restrictions have to be made.
“Sometimes I will not be able to talk to my clients for several days, unless they call me. And if they’re calling me, they have to use their own account. They have to use their money in order to make that phone call, and it’s not a private call,” said Rivas Flores.
The I-Team asked him what he thinks Richwood can do to improve things.
“The number one thing that they can do is fix the food,” he said. “That’s probably the first thing that can do, and it almost certainly would be the easiest.”
Gomez-Laurens also talked about the food.
“The food is not really good. Since I came in I have, I don’t have any fruit, real fruit,” she said. “We stay one week with bologna sandwich. One bologna, two piece of bread, and cookie or chips for a week, lunch and dinner.”
DHS responded via statement, telling the I-Team: “All detainees are provided with 3 meals a day, clean water, clothing, bedding, showers, and toiletries, and have access to phones to communicate with their family members and lawyers. Certified dieticians evaluate meals. It is a longstanding practice to provide comprehensive medical care from the moment an alien enters ICE custody. This includes medical, dental, and mental health services as available, and access to medical appointments and 24-hour emergency care. This is the best healthcare than many aliens have received in their entire lives.”
Gomez-Laurens spoke to the I-Team from the room where she sleeps. The I-Team asked how many people often share the room.
“100. Now it’s 93, I think. Sometimes we have around 108,” said Gomez-Laurens.
Gomez-Laurens told News4 she ended up at Richwood after flying from Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport in Maryland to Alexandria International Airport in Louisiana. While we don’t know how many others from Maryland are there, according to data collected from the ICE Flights Monitor project almost 60% of all ICE flights from Maryland since January 2025 were bound for Alexandria. That’s 91 flights through April of this year.
A local father shot by ICE officers during a Christmas Eve arrest in Glen Burnie is now pleading guilty to a federal charge and at risk of deportation.
‘Everything is coming down’
While Gomez-Lauren’s case is still going through the court system, her husband, Kevin Gomez, worries about the impact her absence is having, especially on their two young sons.
“Sometimes they demonstrate rebelliousness or they don’t want to do the things they usually did before,” he told our Telemundo 44 partners in Spanish.
He’s concerned about what happens next, including possible deportation.
“After so many years of living in this country, having many things built together, it’s like everything is coming down, and she has 20 years in this country, practically a life made. You have to return to a country that maybe you don’t know,” said Gomez.
Meanwhile, Gomez-Laurens’ family said she’s earned a nickname among the women in detention. They call her “Pastor.” She holds Bible studies and spends money sent by her family on higher-quality food from the commissary to feed the women during the holidays.
She said faith and hope are what sustains her.
“I’m preaching in this place. I know God has hope and that I really have hope on God,” she said. “I’m trusting him, and his justice. He will make justice. I know.”
The DHS spokesperson told the I-Team in a written statement: “Nearly every single day, DHS responds to media questions on FALSE allegations about ICE detention facilities. Any allegations of inhumane conditions are false. […] ICE has higher detention standards than most US prisons that hold actual US citizens.”
Richwood is a private facility. News4 also reached out to the company that runs Richwood for ICE, LaSalle Corrections, but has not heard back.
Louisiana
Louisiana legislators pass bills for local seafood industry
NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) – Memorial Day typically signals the start of summer for many across the U.S., but in South Louisiana, the holiday rings in something extra: the end of crawfish season and the start of inshore shrimp season.
For the influx of hungry customers at the Westwego Shrimp Lot, the vendors at the open-air market fully stocked up on the delicacy, including Amy’s Seafood.
“Fresh shrimp season just opened a few weeks ago, so we have shrimp all across our tables,” staffer Bridgette Wilson said.
The holiday sales are just a snapshot of the $2.4 billion that the Louisiana seafood industry rakes in each year, according to the LSU AgCenter.
But with the threat of imported, foreign seafood undercutting local fishermen’s prices, Louisiana lawmakers set out to pass legislation to keep the state’s crucial industry afloat.
State Rep. Tim Kerner, Sr. (R-Lafitte) introduced HB 857 this legislative session. The measure cracks down on co-mingling seafood, which is when a vendor, market or restaurant sells a product that is mixed with both domestic and foreign seafood.
Kenner’s bill requires that all co-mingled products have to be labeled as such, and if anyone is caught passing mixed seafood as fully, locally-caught seafood, there will be a $15,000 fine for the first offense, a $25,000 fine for the second offense and a $50,000 fine for the third.
“The best way would be to catch [co-mingling] at the processing plant, where they are doing millions of pounds of it,” Kerner said in front of the legislature.
While HB 857 waits for Governor Jeff Landry’s signature, he already signed HB 121 into law. It now allows the Agriculture Commissioner to seize and destroy illegal seafood, including improperly labeled products.
It was one of several bills from State Rep. Jessica Domangue (R-Houma) pushing for more transparency from the state’s seafood industry and stricter penalties for violators.
“We’re looking at combating bad actors at every level, from the dock to the fishermen, to the restaurant to the grocer,” Domangue said in front of the Louisiana House.
The measures are ones that Dave Williams, the founder of SeaD Consulting, supports.
For years now, Williams has led a team of scientists and testers that go to local restaurants and markets to see if the local seafood they are advertising were actually caught in Louisiana waters.
He said he supports the seafood bills coming out of the legislature this year since they provide more guidelines and oversight into the state’s industry and continues promoting local fishermen, dock workers and vendors.
“[The bills are] based on everything being authentic throughout the distribution chain,” Williams said. “I just want a leveled playing field, and I want people to enjoy what people come to Louisiana and live in Louisiana for.”
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Louisiana
Jazz Fest 2026 Celebrates Louisiana Culture with Two Unforgettable Weekends of Music, Drumming, Food, and New Orleans Magic
The 2026 New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival took place on April 23-26 and April 30-May 3rd. Jazz Fest organizers announced that 475,000 fans took part in the event, which is now regarded as one of the world’s greatest celebrations of music and culture.
As always, the festival combined local acts and legends, Rock, R&B, Hip-Hop, Gospel, Jazz, Blues, World Music, and more. Due to rain, many acts in the first weekend were cancelled. Weekend one did include Rod Stewart (David Palmer,) David Byrne (Mauro Refosco/Tim Keiper,) St. Vincent (Mark Guiliana,) The Isley Brothers, and Headhunters (Herlin Riley/Bill Summers.)
The second weekend included headliners the Eagles (Don Henley / Scott Crago,) The Black Keys (Patrick Carney,) Widespread Panic (Duane Trucks/ Domingo S. Ortiz,) Lake Street Dive (Mike Calabrese,) Alabama Shakes (Noah Bond/ Lewis Wright,) Lainey Wilson (Matt Nolan,) Dragon Smoke (Stanton Moore,) Lettuce (Adam Deitch,) George Porter Jr. (Terrence Houston,) Leo Nocentelli (Jamal Batiste,) Terence Blanchard & Ravi Coltrane (Oscar Seaton,) Anders Osborne (Chad Cromwell,) Dumpstaphunk (Deven Trusclair,) Little Feat (Tony Leone / Sam Clayton,) Jason Marsalis, Teddy Swims (DeAndre Hemby,) Earth, Wind & Fire (John Paris,) Herbie Hancock (Jaylen Petinaud,) Mavis Staples, and Galactic (Stanton Moore.)
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Closing out weekend two (as always) was Trombone Shorty (Joey Peebles.) There was a surprise reunion of the surviving Allman Brothers Band (with the exception of Oteil Burbridge) when the last surviving founding members of the Allman Brothers (Jaimoe, Warren Haynes, and percussionist Marc Quinones) all joined the Tedeschi Trucks Band (Tyler Greenwell / Isaac Eady) for the Allman Brothers’ songs “Dreams” and “Whipping Post.”
“What happens at Jazz Fest isn’t just a moment—it’s part of a living cultural legacy,” said CEO of Festival productions and Director of the Festival Quint Davis. “We’re proud to carry that tradition into the future, and we look forward to welcoming everyone back next year.” The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Foundation, Inc., is the nonprofit organization that owns the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival presented by Shell. The Foundation uses the proceeds from Jazz Fest, and other raised funds, for year-round activities in education, economic development, and cultural enrichment. The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival presented by Shell is a co-production of Festival Productions, Inc.- New Orleans, and AEG Presents.
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