Archive for January, 2010

Gary Coleman Arrested following Domestic Disturbance

January 26th, 2010 | Posted in Celebrity Justice by bloom | No Comments »

A lesson on why you should always show up for your court date:

Former child star and actor Gary Coleman was arrested Sunday after police responded to a domestic disturbance call at his Utah home. The officers quickly determined that no crime had been committed, but arrested Coleman on an outstanding warrant.

The warrant stemmed from a prior domestic violence incident, in the wake of which Coleman failed to appear for a court date at which point the warrant was issued. Coleman was held until Monday on $1,725 bail.

A flat tire, a medical emergency, a family crisis: there is no shortage of incidents that can lead to a missed court date, but remember that the matter will not just disappear. If you’ve missed a court date or have a warrant out, contact Bloom Legal now! We can put our experience and skill to work for you, and in many cases can appear in you place, saving you time away from work and home!

New Orleans Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey relishes opportunity to play in Super Bowl

January 26th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By John DeShazier, The Times-Picayune
January 26, 2010, 3:02AM

This whole Super Bowl thing isn’t completely foreign to New Orleans Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey. He already has been a member of a team that played for the NFL championship, a team that actually won Super Bowl XLII in an epic upset.

shock.jpgTed Jackson/The Times-PicayuneHobbled New Orleans Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey congratulates running back Pierre Thomas after he scored on a 38-yard pass from Drew Brees against the Vikings in the first quarter of the NFC championship game Sunday at the Superdome. But the similarities cease there.

Shockey’s team in 2007, the New York Giants, played in that game. Shockey, then an injured tight end, only attended the game. Reportedly, after a falling out with management, he flew to the game in Arizona on his own dime, wasn’t allowed to stay in the team hotel and watched from the press box because he wasn’t allowed on the Giants sideline.

His relationship with the Giants had deteriorated, and Shockey was traded to New Orleans in exchange for second- and fifth-round draft picks before the 2008 season, which is why he’s bordering on giddy in anticipation of battling the Indianapolis Colts in Super Bowl XLIV on Feb. 7 in Miami.

“It’s completely different,” Shockey said. “I’ll be playing in this game, unlike the last one. It’s a surreal feeling. It still hasn’t hit me. God works in mysterious ways, man. It’s a blessing to be a part of this organization and this team. A lot of hard work has paid off.

“Some things happened (with the Giants), but I’m not dwelling on that. I’m dwelling on the fact that we’ll be in Miami, my adopted city, and we’re all excited about that in this locker room.”

Few, of course, are as excitable as Shockey.

He is the peerless towel waver, willing smack talker (to opponents), excitable playmaker. The chance to do all of that, and more, for the Saints in Super Bowl XLIV — just two seasons after the four-time Pro Bowler was labeled a pariah in New York — well . . . there’s no way the thought can’t create a smile.

“I think it’s certainly a goal of his to get back in this game and to be a participant rather than to have to watch it, as tough as that is,” New Orleans Coach Sean Payton said. “But people forget how important he was to that team the year they won the Super Bowl.

“When you go back to look at the early two-thirds of the season that year before his injury, he had a lot of big plays. It’s just hard, I’m sure, for any player when you can’t finish the season — and then you see the team that you’ve played for having success, and you can’t be a part of that. I think that is difficult for any player.”

You have to figure that even if Shockey can’t play against the Colts (he has been slowed by a knee he injured against the Arizona Cardinals in an NFC divisional playoff game, and he didn’t do himself a favor while playing against the Minnesota Vikings in the NFC championship game), the Saints will welcome him on the team plane, in the team hotel and on the team’s sideline.

“We’ll see (with the injury),” he said. “We’ve got a lot of time. Two weeks in the NFL is like two years for a person. We’ll take it day by day and be smart about it, (and) get an early start on (looking at) our opponent. There’s no doubt in my mind that everyone in this locker room knows how much is at stake. We didn’t come this far just to make a trip to Miami to get a suntan.

“I felt like a pogo stick out there on one leg, but I have no doubt in my mind it’ll be a lot better in two weeks. It’s probably a three- or four-week injury, but there was no way I was going miss that game. There’s no way I’m going to miss the next one, either.”

No, you figure Shockey is going to do everything he can to be on the field this time.

That would benefit the Saints, whose offense isn’t quite the same when he isn’t on the field.

There’s a reason New Orleans acquired Shockey, who caught 48 passes for 569 yards and three touchdowns during the regular season. Simply, he was an upgrade and remains the preferred choice.

No one knows better what Shockey can do than Payton, who was an assistant with the Giants from 1999-2002, the last three years as offensive coordinator. Shockey was drafted by New York in 2002 and caught 74 passes for 894 yards and two touchdowns as a rookie.

No one appreciates more than Shockey what Payton offers as an offensive mind.

“I knew it would work (in New Orleans) because I’ve worked with Sean before,” Shockey said. “He believed in me and drafted me coming out of college. I’d seen the Saints on offense a number of times, and I’d seen (quarterback) Drew (Brees) play a number of years in this league.

“I knew it was going to work. It was just a matter of me staying healthy and being able to be on the field and help the team win. Sean taught me, when I came into the league, about mismatches and about the things that defenses have to think about. Just the personnel matchup. He’s the best at that. He instilled that in my brain at an early age in the league, and I’m just happy that he taught me that.”

Together, they’ll learn what it’s like to experience the Super Bowl, not just attend it.

“It’s going to be fun,” Shockey said about returning to Miami, where he played college ball. “But first and foremost, we’re going there to win the Super Bowl. I’m not going there to have a party. I’ve had plenty of those there.”

John DeShazier can be reached at jdeshazier@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3410.

DWI law changes weighed by governor’s task force

January 26th, 2010 | Posted in DUI/DWI, Legislation, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »

By Ed Anderson, The Times-Picayune
January 25, 2010, 7:14PM

Gov. Bobby Jindal’s Task Force on Driving While Intoxicated and Vehicular Homicide agreed Monday to look into the possibility of increasing fines and penalties for drunken driving, but delayed a vote on specific proposals until more research is done.

The task force will examine the laws and fines in states with lower fatality rates, and possibly make its recommendations to the Legislature based on that information, said John LeBlanc, executive director of the Louisiana Highway Safety Commission and a member of the task force.

norma_broussard.JPG’We don’t want children to be driven by someone who just rolled out of jail,’ said Norma Broussard, an assistant district attorney in Jefferson Parish who handles DWI cases.

“I am not opposed to additional fines,” LeBlanc said, “but before we proceed, we should do the study.”

* In July, Gov. Bobby Jindal signed three bills changing drunk drivng laws.

Louisiana recorded 451 alcohol-related highway fatalities in 2008 and 427 in 2009, although not all data has been compiled, commission spokeswoman Jamie Ainsworth said.

“The fines and costs have not been increased in a while,” said Norma Broussard, an assistant district attorney in Jefferson Parish who handles DWI cases. “It needs to be looked at. Hitting people in the pocketbook is a good way” to reduce drunk driving.

Recommendations could be adopted at the task force’s Feb. 22 meeting.

LeBlanc said he also will look at possibly increasing the criminal penalties for DWIs if lawmakers don’t want to increase fines. “We don’t want to propose anything that would not be successful,” LeBlanc said.

Murphy Painter, chairman of the task force and director of the state Office of Alcohol and Tobacco Control, cautioned the task force to focus on a handful of issues for the legislative session, possibly three to five recommendations that have a good chance of passing.

Painter said the panel will probably zero in on changes on how the state monitors the use of ignition interlock devices for those convicted of DWIs. He said that sometimes a person gets the device and pays for six months of service then lets the payments lapse or uses another car.

The devices require drivers to blow into them before turning the ignition; if the device detects alcohol on the driver’s breath, it bars the vehicle from starting.

The task force also is looking at legislation to require school bus drivers who have been cited for a DWI to “self-report” the incident before picking up kids again.

“This would prevent someone getting a DWI at 1, 2, 3 o’clock in the morning and getting on a school bus with 50 kids” later in the day, Painter said.

Rep. Jonathan Perry, R-Kaplan, a member of the task force, said the panel may want to require the driver to self-report to the local school board and leave it up to the school board to assess a possible administrative penalty such as suspending the driver.

“We don’t want children to be driven by someone who just rolled out of jail,” Broussard said.

Broussard also suggested a change in the law that now requires judges to order the seizure and sale of vehicles of drivers convicted for third and subsequent DWIs. “I have not spoken to any district attorneys in the state that have implemented this,” Broussard said, conceding the law requires the judges to order it as a part of sentencing.

She said that district attorneys and police should be cut in on some of the proceeds of the sale of seized vehicles, possibly encouraging more stringent enforcement and use of the seizure and sale provisions of existing law.

Broussard suggested that 60 percent of the proceeds go to local police agencies, 20 percent to district attorneys and the other 20 percent to a special insurance commission that studies auto insurance rates and law changes.

Committee members agreed that if police, who must pay storage and auction costs of vehicles seized, are paid, judges may be more likely to enforce that portion of the DWI law for repeat offenders.

A vote on the measure was deferred until next month to give task force members a chance to see how often judges use the seizure and sale segment in sentencing.

Ed Anderson can be reached at eanderson@timespicayune.com or 225.342.5810.

New Orleans Saints-Minnesota Vikings battle scores huge TV ratings

January 25th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By Dave Walker, The Times-Picayune
January 25, 2010, 6:39PM
saints-super-bowl-sign.JPGMichael DeMocker / The Times-PicayuneWith an average national audience of 57.9 million, Sunday’s game between the New Orleans Saints and the Minnesota Vikings was the most-watched NFC Championship game in nearly three decades.

The New Orleans Saints’ overtime playoff victory over the Minnesota Vikings was the most-watched non-Super Bowl TV broadcast since the May 1998 “Seinfeld” finale.

And it had a better ending.

With an average national audience of 57.9 million — 40 percent larger than last year’s NFC Championship Game between the Philadelphia Eagles and Arizona Cardinals — Sunday’s game was also the most-watched NFC Championship game in nearly three decades.

The January 1982 conference title playoff between the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers — broadcast by CBS and won by Dwight Clark’s leaping, last-minute reception know as “The Catch” — attracted 68.7 million viewers nationally. The “Seinfeld” finale drew 76.3 million.

In New Orleans, the Saints-Vikings game had a 63.2 average rating, the largest local rating ever for an NFL postseason game, according to a Fox network news release.

The local Saints-Vikings rating eclipsed the previous high for an NFC playoff game in an individual city, a 59.5 in Milwaukee for the 1997 NFC Championship Game.

A local rating point represents 1 percent of total TV homes, or about 6,340 households in New Orleans.

“The people here completely love this team,” said Joe Cook, general manager of local Fox affiliate WVUE-Channel 8, purchased in 2008 by Saints owner Tom Benson. “You can’t compare it to any other situation.

“The people here are not only Saints fans — they needed this victory, (which was) well-deserved.”

WVUE’s audience for the championship game was higher than any home-market Super Bowl rating ever recorded. The previous record, a 63.0 rating, belonged to a Chicago station for the Super Bowl XX broadcast.

The Saints’ local TV appeal has been one of the many threads winding through the magical story of this season.

Two “Monday Night Football” broadcasts — carried locally by WDSU-Channel 6 and ESPN — had combined ratings of 63.9 and 66.7.

The second “Monday Night Football” game, the Nov. 30 Saints victory over the New England Patriots, is the second largest national cablecast ever, topped only by ESPN’s Green Bay Packers-Minnesota Vikings game Oct. 5.

For most of the regular season, local Fox affiliate WVUE flirted with the all-time local record for a single-station game broadcast.

The Saints games this season have routinely outrated recent past Super Bowls — in New Orleans, the 2009 Super Bowl drew a comparatively paltry 45.7 rating — which are generally the most-watched TV event of each year.

Ratings-gatherer Nielsen doesn’t measure out-of-home viewership in local markets, so a substantial number of New Orleans viewers — who watched in barrooms, dorm rooms and emergency-room waiting rooms — weren’t counted in Sunday’s record numbers.

Sunday’s game had an 82 local share, the percentage of viewership among homes with a set in use.

“We spent all (Monday) morning trying to think where the other 18 percent of people were,” said Joann Habisreitinger, media director for local advertising agency Zehnder Communications. “Of course, they were in the bars, contributing to viewing anyway.”

“I can’t believe that we didn’t have another 10 rating points at least,” Cook said.

In Minneapolis, numbers for the game were a 58.7 rating/80 share. The third-highest rated city was Milwaukee, with 47.4/64.

In New Orleans, the audience peaked during the 9:15 p.m. quarter-hour at 67.4/86.

“I can’t imagine anything being that high anywhere ever in the history of (local) TV viewing,” Habisreitinger said. “I can only imagine what the Super Bowl is going to do.”

TV columnist Dave Walker can be reached at dwalker@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3429. Comment and read more at nola.com/tv

NFC South Final Word: Vikings at Saints

January 24th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


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By Pat Yasinskas
AFC Championship: Graham | Kuharsky » NFC Championship: Seifert | Yasinskas

Five nuggets of knowledge about Sunday’s NFC Championship Game between the Minnesota Vikings (13-4) and the New Orleans Saints (14-3).

Scott Cunningham/Getty ImagesA victory in the NFC Championship Game would be a signature win for quarterback Drew Brees.
1. This is Drew Brees’ game. Yes, all the hype has been about Brett Favre. When a 40-year-old legend gets his team this far, that’s expected. But I think this game is more about the legacy of Brees. For the past few years, he has put up numbers that put him in the conversation with Peyton Manning, Tom Brady and Favre as the league’s best quarterback. But the one thing Brees doesn’t have that they all do is a signature win. It might be time for Brees to sign his autograph.

2. Reggie Bush will be a huge factor. I wrote in this space a week ago that Bush would be a huge factor against the Cardinals — and he was. My logic was simple. When you throw a bunch of good athletes on the field, the best athlete out there will rise up and make plays. Once again, I think Bush is the best athlete stepping onto the Superdome floor Sunday.

3. Matchup of the week? It seems like the ultimate mismatch with New Orleans left tackle Jermon Bushrod going against Minnesota defensive end Jared Allen. On paper, it probably is. But let’s face it, the Saints aren’t going to leave Bushrod on an island by himself. They’ve been covering him up with help all season as he’s filled in for an injured Jammal Brown. Bushrod hasn’t really been exploited because the Saints help him and their offense is designed for Brees to get rid of the ball quickly. This matchup might not be as big a deal as many people think.

4. Payton’s big chance. We already mentioned how important this game is for Brees’ status. It’s kind of the same deal for his coach, Sean Payton. This will be two NFC Championship Games in four seasons. Win this one and Payton will go from being just a great offensive mind to being a great head coach.

5. Sharper image. We’ve heard all week about New Orleans safety Darren Sharper’s familiarity with Favre. A lot of people have said that could work to the Saints’ advantage. But Payton has done his best to downplay that aspect and frequently said players going against former teams is overrated. I disagree. I think Sharper’s knowledge of Favre is important, and I’m guessing that the Saints have been tapping into it all week. But I think the real issue here isn’t so much what Sharper can tell his teammates. I think it’s whether Sharper can take all his knowledge of Favre and come up with an interception against his former teammate.

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NFC North Final Word: Vikings at Saints
January, 22, 2010
Jan 22
4:02
PM ET
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By Kevin Seifert
AFC Championship: Graham | Kuharsky » NFC Championship: Seifert | Yasinskas

Three nuggets of knowledge about Sunday’s NFC Championship Game between the Minnesota Vikings (13-4) and the New Orleans Saints (14-3).

1. Hopefully you’ve caught most of our preview work this week. If not, click here for a filtered refresher. New Orleans and Minnesota seem pretty evenly matched, but one fact seems clear: We’re guaranteed a fresh NFC storyline no matter who advances to the Super Bowl. The Vikings have lost in their past four appearances in the NFC Championship Game (1977, 1987, 1998 and 2000) and haven’t been in the Super Bowl since the 1976 season. The Saints, meanwhile, are making only their second appearance in this game. It’s the first time they’ve hosted it. If they win, the Saints will become the first team in NFL history to advance to the Super Bowl after losing its final three regular-season games.

AP Photo/Paul BattagliaThe Saints will want to put more than one person on Minnesota defensive end Jared Allen.
2. Recent Saints-Vikings games have been wild, and the circumstances of this game — the teams ranked No. 1-2 in scoring this season — promise another entertaining affair. There have been four other conference championship games that featured the regular season’s top two scoring teams. Seven of the eight participants scored at least 20 points in those games, and the winner has always scored at least 30 points. The only offense that went belly-up in that situation was the 1989 Los Angeles Rams, who lost 30-3 to San Francisco. So if you’re into the over-under, odds are you should take the over.

3. Defensive linemen Ray Edwards and Kevin Williams both are battling knee injuries and won’t be 100 percent for Sunday’s game. That will place even more emphasis on the matchup between Minnesota defensive end Jared Allen and New Orleans left tackle Jermon Bushrod. It would make sense for the Saints to give Bushrod plenty of help, but they probably will balance it with their schematic desire to get tight ends and running backs into the pass routes. Allen has torn up most one-on-one matchups he’s faced this season and is fast enough to get to quarterback Drew Brees even on three-step drops.
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NFC North, 09 NFCCG Final Word, 09 CG Final Word, Jared Allen, Minnesota Vikings, Kevin Williams, Pat Williams, Drew Brees, Jermon Bushrod, 09 vikings-saints final word

Local commerce will temporarily halt for today’s New Orleans Saints game

January 24th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »

By Jaquetta White, The Times-Picayune
January 24, 2010, 6:15AM

One could credit the New Orleans Saints’ unexpectedly successful football season with sending team merchandise sales skyrocketing, canceling a few Carnival parades and inspiring many local musicians to pen celebratory songs. And today the team’s winning season will get credit for one more feat: halting local commerce.

closedsign.jpgDavid Grunfeld/The Times-PicayuneGordon’s in Metairie is closing early today because of the Saints game.”Nobody’s going to stay open and miss that,” said Greg Dombourian, who owns Dombourian Rugs on Magazine Street and is president of the Magazine Street Merchants Association. Instead of closing at 5 p.m., Dombourian Rugs will remain closed all day.

The Magazine Street store will not be alone. Several area retailers and service providers say they will either not open or close early on Sunday in deference to the NFC Championship game.

No orders will be taken at the popular Mid-City eatery Mandina’s Restaurant after 5 p.m. Sunday. The restaurant, which usually closes only on Thanksgiving and Christmas and for mandatory hurricane evacuations, will shut down early this weekend, general manager Martial Voitier said.

“We’re figuring that probably by about 4 p.m. there will be nobody on the streets or in the restaurant,” Voitier said. “They’ll be in the Superdome or in somebody’s house.”

‘No one would be out’

A sign posted on the door of Gordon’s of Metairie alerts customers of the store’s plans to close on Sunday.

“We knew that no one would be out shopping,” said Robyn Soileau, manager of the craft store. “I’ll be at home celebrating with the family.”

Soileau said the 100 employees between Gordon’s two stores in Metairie and Kenner were thrilled to get the day off.
“Everybody was excited and very grateful that they can stay home and watch it,” Soileau said.

Although they won’t get the entire day off, employees at Creole Creamery, which is usually open until 10 p.m. on Sunday, will be able to leave early this weekend. The store, which has a location Uptown and another in Lakeview, will close at 5 p.m., 20 minutes before the game’s scheduled kickoff.

“All of our employees want to see the game,” Creole Creamery Chef Bryan Gilmore said. “If we stay open, by the time the game is over and people filter out we’re going to be about to close anyway.”

Pam Clark, who owns Aesthetics & Antiques, said the slow pace of business during last week’s playoff game convinced her to close this week. Business was so slow, Clark said, that she and other shop owners spent much of their time last Saturday watching the Saints game on the television of a nearby restaurant while standing in the street and keeping an eye on their respective businesses.

“We were open. We partied, but there was no business,” Clark said. “I really thought we’d have more business that day but it seems like everybody was tailgating.”

Gilmore said the slow pace of business during last week’s game was also a factor at Creole Creamery.

“Last week we brought in TV, but there was nobody in here but the employees,” Gilmore said. “When a game comes up like this it’s kind of like a local holiday.”

‘It’s hurting me’

Not everyone will close.

Although he’s expecting business to be slow, Vic Loisel, who co-owns vintage furniture store Neophobia, doesn’t plan to close the shop on Sunday. Loisel said he has no real interest in football and admits that the successful season has disrupted his business.

“It’s hurting me, businesswise. It’s a little frustrating too,” Loisel said.

Meanwhile, Feet First does its most brisk business when people are in a “joyous mood, throwing caution to the wind,” much like they feel before a Saints game. The shoe boutique will operate as usual on Sunday, said Evie Poitevent, the store’s co-owner.

“You want to be open as long as possible to catch all the tourists who will be in town,” Poitevent said. Feet First has locations on Royal Street in the French Quarter and on Magazine Street Uptown.

Some Saints games have provided banner sales for the shoe boutique and the later the game, the better, because potential customers have a full day to shop and are in a joyous mood, Poitevent said. “Given that the game is on Sunday after 5 p.m, we’re expecting it to be really busy.”

Should the Saints win today’s game and earn a spot in the Super Bowl, area business owners and operators say they are already prepared to close again.

Voitier of Mandina’s has had two black and gold signs printed. In the case of a Saints loss, a sign will display the restaurant’s earlier operating hours on game day. But if the home team advances, the sign will read, simply: Closed Super Bowl Sunday.

Jaquetta White can be reached at jwhite@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3494.

Two police misconduct lawsuits settled

January 23rd, 2010 | Posted in Courts, Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »

By Brendan McCarthy, The Times-Picayune
January 22, 2010, 7:13PM
sportsmans_corner.JPGMichael DeMocker/The Times-Picayune archiveThe Sportsman’s Corner bar was photographed in June 2007.

Attorneys for the city of New Orleans recently settled a pair of high-profile federal lawsuits alleging police misconduct.

One alleged brawl, involving city transit workers and off-duty officers, took place on Mardi Gras night at the Beach Corner bar in Mid-City. The other case centered on an incident in July 2006 inside a Central City bar.

On Friday, the city attorney’s office reached a settlement in federal court with the American Civil Liberties Union, which represents Steven Elloie, a bar manager who alleged he was beaten, twice shocked with a Taser stun gun and falsely arrested inside the Sportsman’s Corner bar.

According to the suit, Elloie was taking inventory in the stockroom that night when the officers “entered the bar in an aggressive and belligerent manner” and announced they were looking for two young black men wearing blue jeans and white T-shirts. The 16 customers inside the bar told the police that no one fitting that description had come in.

Though they had no search warrant or permission to search the bar, the officers began “forcefully opening and attempting to open doors,” and one officer grabbed Elloie and told him he was going to jail, the suit alleged. Elloie said four or five cops then began hitting and kicking him.

Police booked him with resisting arrest and battery on one of the police officers, but the charges were later dropped. The Elloie family filed Public Integrity Bureau complaints with more than a dozen supporting witnesses. The internal affairs division of the NOPD found that Elloie’s claims were “unsubstantiated.”

Elloie’s attorney, Katie Schwartzmann of the ACLU, declined to release the settlement amount, which is in addition to attorney’s fees.

“The settlement in this case is a great outcome for Steven Elloie, but until we have meaningful internal accountability for officers who break the law, we will continue to have problems with police misconduct in this City,” Schwartzmann said in a released statement. “People must be able to trust the police.”

Police spokesman Bob Young did not immediately return a request for comment Friday. The city attorney, Penya Moses-Fields, did not return a request for comment late Friday afternoon regarding the Elloie case.

Some of the same officers involved in the Elloie incident were later involved in another well-publicized case. That case, closed Friday in federal district court, was brought by a Regional Transit Authority employee who alleged he, and some co-workers, were beaten and falsely arrested in a racially charged bar brawl with off-duty officers in 2008. The dismissal came two weeks after the two sides reached an agreement.

Lamont Williams, the RTA worker, alleged that he and three co-workers, who are all black, were subjected to racial epithets, followed outside and beaten by off-duty, plainclothes officers. He also alleged that a police officer pulled a gun from a co-worker’s car, planted it on Williams, then falsely arrested him for possession of a gun – a charge that was later dropped.

The city settled the case for $25,000, according to Moses-Fields.

“The City of New Orleans decided it was a good business decision to settle the cases because litigating them to completion would have cost more than $25,000,” Moses-Fields wrote in an e-mail message. “The City of New Orleans entered into the settlement with absolutely no admission of liability.”

One of the officers, David Lapene, was dropped from the lawsuit “after it became apparent that the officer had absolutely nothing to do with” the incident, Moses-Field noted.

Police attorney Frank DeSalvo said Friday that the “whole case was a sham” and that the small settlement amount shows the allegations had little merit.

Attorney Stephen Rue, who brought the case, said Williams had difficulty identifying the specific officer who punched him. Ultimately, Williams wanted to settle the case and move on, Rue said.

The NOPD’s own initial investigation concluded that five officers broke police conduct rules and then lied to investigators, with at least one officer coercing a civilian witness to lie.

Police Superintendent Warren Riley fired two officers: Sgt. Warren Keller Jr, who allegedly exchanged harsh words with Williams inside the restroom stall, kicking off the imbroglio; and Lapene, who was dropped from the federal suit, and who allegedly threw a punch that landed on William’s face. Both officers have appealed their terminations to the city’s Civil Service Commission.

The NOPD initial investigation also concluded that another off-duty officer, Jennifer Samuel, committed wrongdoing. She was suspended for 80 days.

A criminal inquiry into the officers’ actions was opened, but charges were never filed. Then-District Attorney Keva Landrum-Johnson’s office responded to the NOPD in writing, saying the matter had been refused for prosecution because an essential witness, RTA worker Kennis Hagan, had drowned in an unrelated incident.

Brendan McCarthy can be reached at bmccarthy@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3301.

Court efficiency strategy has support of adversary lawyers, but not judges

January 23rd, 2010 | Posted in Courts, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »


By Laura Maggi, The Times-Picayune
January 22, 2010, 11:05PM
leon_cannizzaro_gallier_hall.JPGTed Jackson, The Times-Picayune archiveDistrict Attorney Leon Cannizzaro was photographed on the night of his State of the Criminal Justice System address Jan. 19 in Gallier Hall.

In a rare example of cooperation between two institutions created to be adversarial, the Orleans Parish district attorney and public defenders offices believe they have come up with a way to work more efficiently: change the method of assigning cases at Criminal District Court.

Although they agreed to the plan months ago and introduced it to the judges last fall, the proposal has faltered, with judges thus far unwilling to implement the new system. This week, Orleans Parish District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro upped the pressure, giving a public address before key players in the criminal justice system that highlighted the proposal as crucial to improving the prosecution of crime,

Notably, the judges did not attend his speech.

Although the topic seems procedural, Cannizzaro said in an interview this week he believes changing the way cases are distributed to the 12 criminal court trial is a key component of improving the prosecution of violent crime. Chris Flood, deputy director of the Orleans public defenders, agrees, saying the system Cannizzaro proposes would help his time-strapped defense attorneys better represent their indigent clients.

Currently, cases are allotted to a particular judge’s section only after the district attorney files charges, which may occur up to 60 days after a defendant is arrested. Under the DA’s proposal, worked out with assistance from the Vera Institute of Justice, a New York-based nonprofit that has been working in New Orleans, a case would be preassigned to a courtroom from the moment of arrest, given to a particular judge based on the day the alleged crime was committed.

Because prosecutors are assigned to specific sections of court, the change would mean that a case would not get bounced from one lawyer to another.

“It allows us to keep one single individual prosecutor involved with prosecuting the case from its inception all the way through the trial process,” Cannizzaro said.

Flood said his attorneys are compelled by state law and national standards to represent defendants from the moment of arrest. Knowing which section of court the case was heading to would allow him to assign the cases to attorneys on that basis, he said.

This change would end the current reality for public defenders, who now run from section to section, trying to keep up with clients. It’s a situation that sometimes seems to annoy the criminal court judges, who often question the whereabouts of a particular public defender.

jon_wool.jpgJon Wool is the Vera Institute project director in New Orleans.

Jon Wool, the Vera Institute project director in New Orleans, said the proposal would mean just a few public defenders would be handling cases in a particular courtroom. That means when a judge is ready to move on a case, the defense attorney would be close at hand, he said.

It would be an arrangement very similar to the pre-Katrina method of public defense, when attorneys were assigned to sections of court and picked up cases after charges were filed. “It gets them closer to what they used to have: their own public defenders who worked in their sections,” Wool said.

In a statement issued on Friday, the criminal court judges stated that changing the allotment system would violate provisions of the judicial code of conduct requiring them to operate independently of the other parts of the criminal justice system.

The judges noted that the district attorney can file a bill of information at any time, which effectively assigns the case to a court section. “To engineer the process otherwise is not the best interest of the citizens,” the statement said, without further explaining the point.

The criminal court judges skipped the State of the Criminal Justice System address that Cannizzaro gave at Gallier Hall on Tuesday, where the proposal was first announced publicly. In a statement issued around the same time the district attorney began speaking, Chief Judge Arthur Hunter said the judges declined to attend to avoid any “appearance of impropriety.”

Cannizzaro said the judges, in a letter to his office, raised unspecified concerns about due process for defendants if the allotment process was changed. Wool said he has researched various systems across the state and believes it would not violate any state or federal standards.

The proposed system is used by the 19th Judicial District Court in Baton Rouge, which, like the New Orleans courts, divides the duties of judges into criminal and civil jurisdictions. The system has yet to produce any “challenges or disagreements,” said Jo Bruce, the judicial administrator, adding that she believes it fits the Louisiana Supreme Court mandate that allotment of criminal cases is done on a random basis.

“That is pretty random in that we are pretty sure that most crimes are not committed by criminals who look up to see if a (particular) judge is on duty,” Bruce said.

Cannizzaro said the allotment change would allow him to break up his screening division, which now reviews police reports and talks to officers about the facts of a case. Those prosecutors decide whether to accept a case for prosecution, but then hand it over to another set of prosecutors assigned to a particular section of court. That group handles the trial work.

If the system was changed, one group of prosecutors could be involved both in the initial review of the facts of a case and the actual prosecution, he said.

The division between a group of prosecutors who screen cases and those who actually try the cases is not the norm throughout the country, Wool said.

Along with asking the judges to change the allotment system, Cannizzaro said he plans to move all nonviolent misdemeanor cases away from criminal court to New Orleans Municipal Court. That change, which is expected to occur within weeks, the district attorney can make on his own, without the approval of the judges.

The transfer of these minor cases — many of them arrests for first-offense marijuana possession — will help unclog criminal court dockets, Cannizzaro said. This will give judges more time to spend on the increased number of felony cases his office has been prosecuting, he said.

New Orleans Saints First-and-10: Streak of parity in the NFC

January 22nd, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Jeff Duncan, The Times-Picayune
January 22, 2010, 5:05PM

sainsts fan.JPGMichael Democker/The Times-PicayuneFirst (take) …

Regardless of who wins the NFC Championship Game on Sunday, it will extend a remarkable streak of parity in the conference.

The Saints or Vikings will be the ninth different NFC team in a row to make the Super Bowl.

The streak began in 2001 when the St. Louis Rams defeated the Tennessee Titans in Super Bowl XXXVI. Since then, in order, the Buccaneers, Panthers, Eagles, Seahawks, Bears, Giants and Cardinals have represented the NFC in the Super Bowl.

If you include the Falcons (1998) and Packers (1997), the NFC will have sent a remarkable 11 different teams to the Super Bowl in the past 13 years. That’s in direct contrast to the AFC, which has sent just seven teams to the big game during the same span. New England, Pittsburgh and Denver have made multiple appearances since 1997.

The Vikings have not been to the Super Bowl since 1977. They are winless in four appearances.

The Saints, of course, have never been in the 43-year history of the franchise.

So, one way or the other, a long drought will end on Sunday. But the NFC’s string of remarkable parity will continue.

… And 10 (more observations)

1. Casual locker-room observation of the week: If the Saints are tight you sure couldn’t tell it from the way the Saints conducted themselves in the locker room this week. They were extremely loose. On Friday Sedrick Ellis and Mike Bell waged an aerosol spray can war, which Ellis eventually won. The defeated Bell actually scaled the locker stalls along one side of the locker room to escape the deodorant drenching. On Thursday, Anthony Hargrove duct-taped assistant equipment manager Shaun Alfred and dumped him cold-water tub in the training room to the delight of several teammates.

2. Tweets of the week: “Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” – Jeremy Shockey, 2:57 p.m., Jan. 22.

3. Quote of the week: “They can fly you safely to your destination or they can take you right into a mountain.” – Saints coach Sean Payton on the importance of quarterback play in the NFL postseason.

4. Didya notice of the week: Anthony Waters was the one Saint excused from practice this week. Waters missed Friday’s practice to attend the funeral of former Clemson teammate Gaines Adams in Easley, S.C. Adams, a defensive end for the Chicago Bears, died Sunday of heart failure. He was 26.

5. Fact of the week: Thanks to his breakout performance last week, Reggie Bush now has three Saints postseason records for longest touchdowns. They are: the longest punt return TD (83 yards vs. Arizona); the longest rushing TD (46 yards vs. Arizona); and longest pass reception TD (88 yards vs. Chicago, 2007). Bush is only the second player in NFL history – and the first in more than 60 years – to produce touchdowns on a rushing play and a punt return in a postseason game. The only other player to do it was Hall-of-Famer Charlie Trippi, playing for the Chicago Cardinals in the 1947 NFL Championship Game. Playing against the Eagles, Trippi scored on a 44-yard run in the first quarter and on a 75-yard punt return in the third quarter. The Cardinals went on to win the game, 28-21, the only time in their history that they have won a league championship game.

6. Encouraging stat of the week: This from Yahoo.com’s Jason Cole: In 18 home games during his two seasons with the Vikings, including two playoff games, Jared Allen has 21 sacks. By contrast, in 15 road games in two seasons, he has 11 sacks. Clearly Allen is a different player on the road than at home, where he can take advantage of the crowd noise at the Metrodome to get a jump on opposing offensive linemen.

7. Disturbing stat of the week: The Vikings have won their last three matchups in the Superdome against the Saints and are 2-0 against New Orleans in the postseason. Overall, they have won eight of the last 10 games in the season and 12 of the last 15, including the last four in a row.

8. Something I liked from the divisional round: The pass defense. As they’ve been all season in the Superdome, the Saints were tough on an opposing quarterback. Kurt Warner, who entered the game with the second highest passer efficiency rating in NFL postseason history, posted just a 73.4 rating. He’s the third Super Bowl-winning quarterback that the Saints have shut down in the Dome this season. The collective passer efficiency ratings of Warner, Eli Manning and Tom Brady in their three games against the Saints this season was 55.9.

9. Something I didn’t like from the divisional round: The shaky run defense early. Tim Hightower’s 70-yard touchdown run on the first play from scrimmage was the fourth long touchdown run the Saints have surrendered this season. They also gave up scoring runs of 68 yards to Ricky Williams, 66 yards to DeAngelo Williams and 67 yards to Jonathan Stewart. Each run came in the first quarter. In fact, Williams and Stewart’s scores came on the second play from scrimmage.

10. Fearless prediction for the NFC Championship: The Vikings lost their final three road games of the season by a combined score of 92-54. Now they face their toughest road test of all. With the Saints hosting their first NFC title game ever, the atmosphere in the Superdome is certain to be electric. If the Vikings can’t beat the Panthers or Bears on the road I can’t see them putting together the kind of complete game it will take to win Sunday. The Saints have been at their best in big games this season and this one’s the biggest of them all. If the Saints get off to a fast start, the Vikings could be in touble. My prediction: Saints 41, Vikings 20.

Excitement over New Orleans Saints bolsters donations for Haiti

January 22nd, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, National Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Robert Rhoden, The Times-Picayune
January 22, 2010, 6:22PM
saints.jerseys.jpgELLIS LUCIA / TIMES-PICAYUNELee Road School students and teachers participate in a fundraising event for Haitian earthquake victims Friday. Any student or teacher making the monetary donation were allowed to forgo school uniforms and wear the black and gold Saints colors and jeans.

Across St. Tammany Parish, agencies and students pitched in to raise money for victims of the earthquakes in Haiti, invoking the memories of similar assistance that came to Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina.

In the schools, the drive provided an opportunity to teach the value of giving and parlayed student excitement over this weekend’s Saints’ game into donations.

Slidell Police and Slidell Memorial Hospital kicked off a fundraising drive Friday morning to benefit Operation Blessing, a group that arrived in the area several days after Katrina to provide food, medical attention and even assistance removing tree limbs from houses.

“During Katrina, Operation Blessing was one of the first to help,” Slidell Police Chief Freddy Drennan said.

“Everyone wants to do something to help,” he said.

The group is on the ground in Haiti now and just finished setting up a water purification system at one of the country’s hospitals, Drennan said.

Anyone who wants to donate can bring checks to the Slidell Police Department, 2112 Sgt. Alfred Drive, or to the hospital’s Human Resources Department at 1111 Gause Blvd. Members of the police department will also be collecting checks, and Drennan said anyone who wants to donate can just “flag down an officer.”

Because of the nature of the fundraising drive, officers will not be accepting cash donations, Slidell Police spokesman Capt. Kevin Foltz said.

St. Tammany public school students and school officials also spent the day raising money for the American Red Cross, mainly through a donation drive that allowed students to ditch their typical school uniforms Friday in favor of black and gold attire in exchange for a $1 donation, public schools spokeswoman Meredith Mendez said.

“Superintendent (Gayle) Sloan thought it was important for us to come up with a special project to help the people of Haiti because after Katrina we got so much help from all across the country and around the world,” Mendez said.

Lee Road Junior High School near Covington, which upped the ante by asking $2 of each student, raised about $4,000 through the effort and is also selling passes that will allow students and employees to wear jeans next week, Mendez said.

School system officials had not yet tallied the total amount raised by the drive, which involved students, faculty and staff at all public school facilities, Mendez said. However, she noted that in addition to helping the victims of a disaster the effort also taught students a valuable lesson about assisting those in need.

Mandeville Middle School will also hold a garage sale next weekend to benefit the fundraising effort.

Catholic schools also held events to raise money and collect goods.

Students at Pope John Paul II Catholic High School raised about $1,000 for relief efforts in a similar fundraiser Friday, according to school officials. The event, planned by the senior class officers and the Student Council, allowed students to dress in Black and Gold in exchange for donations, which were turned over to St. Luke the Evangelist Catholic Church to help the people of Haiti.

At St. Scholastica Academy in Covington, students were encouraged to dress in Black and Gold in exchange for donating to a Haiti relief fund or bringing in canned goods for a food bank, according to the school.

Jeff Adelson can be reached at jadelson@timespicayune.com or 985.645.2852.

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