Archive for February, 2010

Orleans Parish inmate who scaled fence shortly before Super Bowl is recaptured

February 11th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »


By Times-Picayune Staff
February 08, 2010, 6:43PM

An inmate who escaped from the Orleans Parish jail just hours before the Super Bowl on Sunday was recaptured Monday afternoon, a spokesman for Criminal Sheriff Marlin Gusman said.

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The sheriff’s office released very limited information about Reginald Knight’s escape, saying only that he was able to scale the “perimeter fence” in the 700 block of South White Street outside the facility’s Intake and Processing Center. The escape occurred about 3 p.m. Sunday.

“The reason for the escape seems to be human error for not following established procedures in place at the Sheriff’s Office,” a news release stated.

Knight was recaptured on Monday, said Marc Ehrhardt, a spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office. Ehrhardt would not release information about how Knight was apprehended, saying it would compromise the office’s investigation.

Knight, 40, was arrested on suspicion of theft of goods worth $500 and criminal trespassing, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

Kenner police book woman in Wednesday’s fatal crash on I-10

February 11th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »


By Ramon Antonio Vargas, The Times-Picayune
February 11, 2010, 8:44AM
carol-banks.jpegCarol Banks, 62

A 62-year-old woman accused of causing a car crash that killed three people in Kenner on Wednesday was booked with three counts of negligent homicide, police officials announced Thursday morning.

Carol Banks, of the 3600 block of Loyola Drive in Kenner, was also jailed with reckless operation of a vehicle and hit-and-run driving, Lt. Wayne McInnis said.

Meanwhile, officials identified the three victims killed in the 4 p.m. wreck on Interstate 10 between Interstate 310 and Williams Boulevard as Gerard Faucheux, 42, of Meadville, Miss.; his father, Nelson Faucheux, 72, of the St. James Parish community of Paulina; and his mother, Shirley Faucheux, 72, of Paulina.

Witnesses and physical evidence helped investigators determine that Banks sped west on I-10 in her 1998 Mercury Grand Marquis in the moments leading up to the wreck, McInnis said.

At some point, she swerved from the left lane to the center lane and struck a Toyota Sienna that Gerard Faucheux drove. The Siena slid on its side, across the median and directly into the path of Chevy Tahoe driving on I-10′s eastbound span.

Faucheux and his parents all died in the car after the Tahoe barreled into them.

Meanwhile, Banks drove on, McInnis said. She took the Loyola Drive exit, where Kenner police officers responding to 911 calls about the wreck detained her.

Louisiana law punishes negligent homicide with up to five years in prison upon conviction.

Super Bowl victory has Who Dat Nation feeling the love

February 9th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Bruce Nolan, The Times-Picayune
February 09, 2010, 7:13AM

John Pope and Bruce Nolan wrote this story.

saints-fans-reggie-bush.JPGTed Jackson / The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans Saint Reggie Bush jumps into the stands at Sun life Stadium in Miami after the Saints beat the Indianapolis Colts 31-17 in the Super Bowl.

Sixteen hours after the New Orleans Saints’ victory in Super Bowl XLIV, the crowd at Domilise’s Po-Boys was still in Who Dat heaven. Everyone who was assembling the Uptown restaurant’s iconic shrimp, oyster and roast-beef sandwiches was wearing a Saints-related T-shirt or cap, as were many of the customers, and everyone was smiling.

Into this jam-packed eatery came Joy Favor, who had made a beeline for Domilise’s after getting off a flight from Miami, where she had seen the game. Wearing a black T-shirt and carrying a golden tote bag on her left shoulder, she said two words when she crossed the threshold: “Who Dat!”

Favor said she had had no sleep, but she was clearly excited about the game and what she had seen and heard Monday morning on the way back home.

“It’s unbelievable,” Favor said. “The pilot got on the microphone and said, ‘Who Dat!’ Even the Colts fans I saw in Miami were saying, ‘You deserve that.’”

saints-fans-confetti.JPGMatthew Hinton / The Times-PicayuneBrynn Comeaux, left, and Jourdin Shockley dance as the confetti falls on Bourbon Street the New Orleans Saints defeated the Indianapolis Colts for their first Super Bowl victory Sunday.

What might have seemed surprising was that this outpouring of Saints support was occurring in what is not only a favorite restaurant of the Manning family but also a virtual shrine to its members. Among the photographs behind the bar are pictures of Peyton Manning, the Indianapolis Colts’ quarterback, and his brother, Eli, the New York Giants quarterback, holding the Vince Lombardi Trophy the year their respective teams won the Super Bowl.

Despite that strong bond, Patti Domilise, the restaurant’s manager, made her allegiance clear. Wearing a T-shirt proclaiming “Hey Shockey Way,” in honor of Saints tight end Jeremy Shockey, Domilise said there was no question about whom she and her colleagues would root for Sunday.

“When it was their turn, we were pulling for them,” she said. “It was our turn this time.”

If Sunday was a day of game-related tension, Monday was a time for afterglow.

saints-fans-kiss.JPGJohn McCusker / The Times-PicayuneSaints fans Tarak Anado and Jamie Walter share a kiss in celebration of the New Orleans Saints’ 31-17 win in Super Bowl XLIV in Miami, Fla.

It was not business as usual. Traffic in and around the city was lighter than normal; many schools were closed. Businesses seemed to run at a little less than full speed; restaurants were not so crowded.

All over town, people seemed to have no intention of making Monday a regular day. It was not. Monday was a day full of camaraderie and good cheer, a day in which the electronic sign above the northbound entrance to the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway bore a new name, Breesway, in honor of Saints quarterback Drew Brees.

Nobody was a stranger.

New Orleans was undergoing what Jim Murray called “a perfect storm” of good fortune: a New Orleans mayor’s race that, in Mitch Landrieu, produced an astonishing 66 percent consensus on the city’s next leader; a Super Bowl championship; and Mardi Gras, which, one wag suggested, could be renamed “Dat Tuesday.”

“Yeah, it’s a perfect storm. I told somebody, not since 9/11 have I felt anything like this,” said Murray, a process operator at the Dow Chemical plant in Norco. “All the divisions feel like they’re gone. It’s like for once we’re all on the same page, right?”

Lisa Smyth, an Uptowner, said the weekend’s events marked nothing less than “a sea change for the city. It’s huge.”

“Oh, this is way bigger than the Super Bowl, trust me,” said Eddie Sandifer, the community-outreach coordinator for Positive Living Treatment Center, a private mental health clinic near the corner of Canal Street and Jefferson Davis Parkway. “It’s the best day since — when? Since whenever, that’s when. This blurs all the lines: racial, income, social status, everything.

“We’re just in a holding pattern today, and it’s going to stay that way for a while, at least until the parade tomorrow.”

saints-fans-tear.JPGjohn McCusker / The Times-PicayuneKaren Licciardi of River Ridge wipes away a tear as she basks in the New Orleans Saints victory in Super Bowl XLIV in Miami.

During the warm and relaxed lunch hour, Sandifer and Darlene Jenkins, a counselor, supervised a group of a half-dozen or so clients passing a football back and forth on the broad Jeff Davis neutral ground. They are people living with depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and other problems.

But perhaps they had caught the vibe, too. “The Saints are good for everybody,” Sandifer said. “They asked whether they could bring the football out here today.”

In addition to making people happy, the Saints’ 31-17 victory inspires people, said Dr. Adrianne Brennan, an assistant professor of clinical psychiatry at LSU Health Sciences Center.

Throughout the buildup to the Super Bowl, people kept talking about “believe, believe, believe,” she said. “This is what keeps people rebuilding their houses; the belief that the city will come back. The Saints are a symbol of this.”

Brennan, who described herself as “giddy and ecstatic and hopeful and in awe, watching dreams come true,” said the good feeling may well last through Mardi Gras.

“New Orleanians have this new identity now,” she said. “We’re not the underdogs. We’re on top.”

Staff writers Benjamin Alexander-Bloch and Chris Kirkham contributed to this article.

John Pope can be reached at jpope@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3317. Bruce Nolan can be reached at bnolan@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3344.

New Orleans Saints arrive at airport to shrieking crowds of fans

February 8th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Mary Sparacello, The Times-Picayune
February 08, 2010, 3:56PM

The Super Bowl champions New Orleans Saints flew home Monday afternoon to find a throng of shrieking fans at Louis Armstrong International Airport.

saints-fans-airport.JPGBrett Duke / The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans Saints fans await their team at Louis Armstrong International Airport on Monday afternoon. The team’s charter flight from Miami touched down about 3 p.m., and players, coaches and other personnel began pulling away from the general aviation terminal in their own vehicles.

But it was extremely slow going, as the motorcade inched through thick crowds that had began lining the route before 10 a.m. By the time the plane landed, the crowd stretched back 1-1/2 miles.

Driving alone, head coach Sean Payton hoisted the Vince Lombardi Trophy out of the sunroof of his Mercedes-Benz, eliciting screams.

One of the first recognizable players in the procession was linebacker Scott Fujita. Others spotted in the line of vehicles were offensive tackle Jon Stinchcomb, tight end Jeremy Shockey and wide receiver Devery Henderson.

Deuce McAllister, the former Saints running back whom the team brought back for inspiration before this year’s playoffs, also was in the motorcade. “Thanks, Deuce,” onlookers yelled.

Team owner Tom Benson and his wife, Gayle, and his granddaughter, executive vice president Rita Benson LeBlanc, also were popular with the crowd.

Earlier, an entourage of a half-dozen vehicles, one carrying Gov. Bobby Jindal, drove to the terminal to greet the team.

About a half-hour later at the Saints training facility on Airline Drive in Metairie, a crowd of a couple hundred people were gathered as six chartered buses pulled into the facility shortly after 3:30 p.m. The crowd, parked in the area between the Saints offices and the entrance into Zephyr Field, cheered as the buses pulled in, accompanied by Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s deputies.

Meanwhile, back in Kenner, loud music was blaring throughout the day, kids were throwing footballs and the mood was jubilant, with impromptu second lines breaking out periodically.

“I’m so happy that the New Orleans Saints are bringing the Vince Lombardi trophy to the city of New Orleans,” said Sam Granger, wearing a Reggie Bush jersey. “We have waited for so long.”

“We were coming today — win or lose,” said Stan Engolia of Metairie. He and his family are among the growing number of fans who greet the Saints outside the Kenner airport after every away game.

Karla Bordelon, of St. Rose, also greets the Saints after away games.

“I think it’s better than Mardi Gras,” she said.

John Bondio Jr., of Metairie, dressed up like the “Saints Hulk” wearing a gold and black mask. He looks forward to seeing the Saints after the Super Bowl win. “It’s unbelievable,” he said. “You can’t describe what happened last night.”

Kenner police set up barricades in anticipation of the crowds greeting the Saints’ private plane, Chief Steve Caraway said.

The Saints hire Kenner officers to work the team’s arrival from away games, and police have 35 to 40 officers on the route today. That’s compared to the 18 that worked the past few games.

“We’re expecting bigger crowds,” Caraway said.

Dee Duhe-Robichaux of New Orleans said she plans to attend the Saints parade Tuesday in New Orleans but wanted to greet the players at the airport today as she does after regular-season games. She showed up outside the airport at 8 a.m., despite celebrating the Saints’ Super Bowl victory most of the night.

“Right now I’m running on pure energy,” she said.

Man Opts for Jail Over Holiday with Relatives

February 8th, 2010 | Posted in Personal Injury by bloom | No Comments »

According to a Reuters report by Deepa Babington, a Sicilian man stole sweets and a packet of chewing gum so he could get arrested and spend New Year’s Eve in a jail cell rather than be with his wife and relatives.

The 35-year old Sicilian first showed up at a police station asking to be arrested because he preferred spending the night in prison rather than with his family, but was rebuffed because he had not committed a crime, the Agi news agency said.

The man immediately went to a tobacco shop next door, where he threatened the owner with a boxcutter as he grabbed a few sweets and a packet of gum. He then waited until police arrived to arrest him for robbery, the news agency said.

If you’re in the market for a vacation from the family, jail might not be the best option. Bloom Legal can help you cut this sort of unwanted holiday short – call for assistance with any criminal matter!

Destrehan DWI offender pleads guilty in two Metairie drunken driving wrecks

February 5th, 2010 | Posted in DUI/DWI, Local Issues by bloom | No Comments »


By Michelle Hunter, The Times-Picayune
February 04, 2010, 6:01PM

Craig Codina, a multiple DWI offender from Destrehan, pleaded guilty Monday to vehicular homicide and third-offense DWI in connection with two separate Metairie car crashes.

craig.codina.jpgCraig Codina of DestrehanCodina, 26, also pleaded guilty to first-degree negligent injuring before Judge Conn Regan in Gretna’s 24th Judicial District Court, according to Trooper Melissa Matey, spokeswoman for the State Police.

The homicide and negligent injuring charges stem from an Aug. 1 wreck on Airline Drive in Metairie that killed Sandra Stevens, 30, of New Orleans, and severely injured Santos Garcia, 28.

Codina pleaded guilty to third-offense DWI as well as careless operation of a motor vehicle in connection with an October 2008 accident on Causeway Boulevard in which he crashed into the back of a vehicle driven by a teenager. She was not injured.

Despite the fact that the August fatal wreck was Codina’s fourth arrested for driving while intoxicated, he was booked only with second-offense DWI for both that crash and the Causeway Boulevard wreck.

That’s because the Jefferson Parish district attorney’s office was erroneously informed that Codina’s first conviction in St. Charles Parish in 2001 was for underage DWI, which can’t be used to enhance penalties for subsequent offenses.

The mistake came to light after a Times-Picayune article in August about Codina’s record. Codina actually pleaded guilty to first-offense DWI in 2001. Prosecutors upgraded the charge in the October 2008 crash to felony third-offense DWI, after learning about his past record.

Regan sentenced Codina on Monday to 30 days in parish prison for the careless operation charge. Neither Codina, nor his attorney, David Motter, could be reached for comment Thursday.

Sentencing for the remaining charges in both the August fatal wreck and the 2008 case is scheduled for April 6.

Michelle Hunter can be reached at mhunter@timespicayune.com or 504.883.7054.

Stop-light cameras cut violations a lot, wrecks a little, new study says

February 5th, 2010 | Posted in Traffic by bloom | No Comments »


By Michelle Hunter, The Times-Picayune
February 05, 2010, 1:00AM

An independent study of Jefferson Parish’s stop-light cameras, which were switched off last week amid disclosures of payments to the contractor’s lobbyist, provides new evidence that they reduce violations and collisions.

red_light_camera_sign.JPGJohn McCusker / The Times-Picayune archiveThe study was conducted by doctors from Tulane and Louisiana State universities’ medical schools and is scheduled for publication in March. It is the only known objective evaluation of the camera program’s effectiveness; Jefferson Parish officials, while touting the cameras and the resulting traffic tickets as a public safety initiative when they launched the program two years ago, never conducted their own study.

The Tulane-LSU team sifted through eight months of data from the intersection of Veterans Memorial Boulevard at Clearview Parkway in Metairie and determined that the cameras reduced the number of stop-light violations by 69 percent. They also found a slight drop in the number of collisions, although that trend is more difficult to track, said Dr. Georgia Wahl, a Tulane surgical resident and lead researcher for the study.

“It’s very hard to say if there’s a cause and effect with decreasing the amount of accidents. Was it by chance? Was it the red light, or people slowing down? We don’t know,” Wahl said. “But it (the traffic camera) does change long-term behavior.”

Traffic cameras started photographing stop-light violators at 11 Jefferson Parish intersections and generating citations in October 2007, after a four-week trial period. They recorded 270,344 violations as of Jan. 27, when the Parish Council suspended the program. Councilman Chris Roberts asked for the vote after discovering that the contractor, Redflex Traffic Systems of Phoeniz, Ariz., intended to direct a cut of its revenue from the ticket fines to lobbyist Bryan Wagner.

By then, the doctors at Tulane and LSU had already penned their report, which is scheduled for publication next month in the Journal of Trauma, Injury, Infection and Critical Care in March, Wahl said.

The team collected statistics on the Veterans-Clearview cameras from the parish government, Redflex and the Sheriff’s Office, including the number of warning letters, citations and collisions between Sept. 23, 2007 and June 30, 2008.

The researchers noticed a huge dip in stop-light running, especially after the four-week warning period during which drivers received a letter but no citation. The cameras averaged 2,428 violations per week during the warning period but only 356 per week in June 2008.
Red-light-camera-study0205.jpg

What most struck researchers was the effect on repeat offenders, Wahl said. Out of the 30,441 drivers who received warning letters or citations, only three ran the Veterans-Clearview signal more than once.

“That was the biggest impact I found,” Wahl said.

The doctors noted 122 wrecks at the intersection in the 10 months before October 2007, falling to 97 in the 10 months after the citations started — not a significant reduction, according to the study.

Wahl said there are several problems with trying evaluate the cameras’ effects on collisions. The Clearview-Veterans intersection already had a high rate of wrecks, and the study didn’t distinguish the type of collisions that occurred, only the total number. Similar studies elsewhere in the United States have found cameras don’t reduce the total number of wrecks but do cut down on right-angle, or “T-bone”, collisions that generally cause more serious injuries.

“All we can scientifically say is there were (fewer) collisions,” Wahl said.

When they launched the camera program, parish officials touted them as a way to improve public safety. Critics said it was just a way for politicians to raise revenue.

Parish officials collected statistics on the citations and wrecks at each of the 11 intersections but never went through with plans to study the numbers. Engineering Director Mark Drewes said officials initially were waiting for a year’s worth of data, but they shelved plans for a study when more than 300 drivers banded together in January 2008 to challenge the constitutionality of the cameras in federal court.

“We were informed by the parish attorney’s office that it’s under litigation,” Drewes said. The department was told to keep collecting the data but “to halt and not to go forward with the study.”

U.S. District Judge Sarah Vance tossed the lawsuit last year, but the plaintiffs refiled it in state court in Gretna. That suit was dismissed in January by Judge Robert Pitre, but the plaintiffs plan to appeal.

In the meantime, violators have paid fines totalling $19.7 million, money to be split among Redflex and local government agencies. All the money is sitting in escrow, pending the end of the litigation.

Wahl said the idea for Tulane and LSU to study the cameras came about when one of her staffers received a citation in the mail.

“That kind of sparked it, to see whether or not it worked or changed behavior. No one from Redflex or Jefferson Parish ever asked us; we approached them,” she said.

The doctors’ study might not have shown a significant dip in wrecks, but Wahl said the cameras have had a positive effect: “We can scientifically say that people change their behavior at these red light intersections.”

New Orleans Saints fan James Carville talking up Big Easy

February 5th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | No Comments »


By Jeff Duncan, The Times-Picayune
February 05, 2010, 1:00AM

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. – If there is such a thing as a Who Dat prototype, James Carville would be it. The Ragin’ Cajun is witty, passionate, colorful and endearing.

james_carville.jpgTed Jackson/The Times-PicayuneSuper Bowl XLVII host James Carville works radio row at the Super Bowl Media Center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., talking with Sirius Radio peronality Adam Schein on Thursday.The political strategist and commentator has lived and died with the New Orleans Saints since their inaugural season in 1967, when he attended games on weekends while working toward a law degree at LSU.

And like any longtime Saints fan, Carville’s passion masks a deep-seated insecurity, formed from years of heartbreaking losses.

He admitted Thursday he was pessimistic before Garrett Hartley’s winning field goal split the uprights against the Vikings in the NFC championship game.

“I didn’t think the ball was going to go through, ” Carville said.

To the delight of Carville and his wife, political pundit and converted Saints fan Mary Matalin, it did. Now the duo can attack their promotional duties as co-chairs of the New Orleans Super Bowl XLVII Host Committee with clear consciences.

“All I could think about was I have to go to Miami for five days, it’s going to be a Vikings-Colts game and I’m going to be sick to my stomach, ” Carville said. “That’s the last thing I want to do is go do all this promotional stuff for the city, all these meetings. Now (it’s) wow — nirvana.”

Accordingly, Carville worked the Super Bowl XLIV press center like a whirling dervish Thursday. Now a full-time New Orleans resident, he spread the gospel to every live mike in the building, from ESPN to Sporting News to NFL Network.

The highlight came during Carville’s radio show on Sirius XM, where WWL radio talk show host Bobby Hebert roused the sleep-deprived print journalists with a raucous rendition of the Who Dat chant.

On the set of the NFL Network, he proselytized to “Total Access” host Rich Eisen and analysts Warren Sapp and Jim L. Mora.

“We’re not just a city, ” said Carville, dressed in a tan NOPD hat and yellow Super Bowl XLVII shirt. “We’re a distinct and developed culture. We have our own music, our own food, our own language, our own funerals, our own architecture and our own literature. . . . Unless you are part of that culture, you can’t understand it.”

The world, Carville said, will understand just how distinctive the New Orleans culture is when it comes to town for Super Bowl XLVII in 2013.

South Florida eclipsed New Orleans as the most frequent host city for the league’s annual showcase event. This is the 10th time the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area has hosted the Super Bowl. New Orleans has played host nine times. No. 10 is coming in 2013.

But if Carville has his way, New Orleans once again will regain its spot in the regular Super Bowl rotation. That would be welcomed news for many journalists, who have endured exorbitant round-trip cab fares and hour-long shuttle bus rides between venues this week. A round-trip from the Colts’ hotel in Fort Lauderdale Beach to the Saints hotel in downtown Miami to Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens covers almost 70 miles.

The distance drastically dilutes the buzz. They’re playing a big football game Sunday, but it’d be difficult to tell in Fort Lauderdale, where the press center is wedged into a jungle of antiseptic strip malls and office plazas.

“If you took a poll in this place, these guys can’t wait to get to New Orleans, ” Carville said. “We are the ideal Super Bowl city. And one of the things I certainly hope we can do in 2013 is really do it up in spades and get back into a regular rotation where we were before. We’re going to do that. I think we’re going to have a whole lot of momentum in 2013.”

Perhaps by then, the city might have settled down should the Saints beat the Colts on Sunday. A Super Bowl victory by the Saints, Carville said, would accelerate the positive momentum already in effect in the city, and establish a lifelong memory for his daughters, Matty and Emma. He said they’ll remember the day, just as he did Billy Cannon’s epic punt return for LSU in 1959.

“It might sound cheesy, but there’s something at work here, ” he said. “The hand of providence is over this. This is something that is just so rich and so important in so many ways.

“I can’t stand the ‘It’s just a football game’ crowd, ” he said mockingly. “Just shut up. You don’t understand what’s going on.”

Spoken like a true Who Dat.

Sean Payton’s vision comes to fruition with New Orleans Saints

February 4th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, Sports by bloom | 1 Comment »


By Nakia Hogan, The Times-Picayune
February 04, 2010, 6:00AM

MIAMI – Calm and calculating, Sean Payton moves through the ballroom of a downtown hotel. Occasionally, between strides, he nods at well-wishers and slaps hands with people he knows.

sean_payton26.jpgTed Jackson/The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans Saints Coach Sean Payton answers questions during interviews at the InterContinental Miami on Wednesday in preparation for Super Bowl XLIV on Sunday.But he doesn’t miss a step. The coach of the New Orleans Saints has somewhere to go.

Since his arrival in New Orleans in 2006 as a rookie head coach, Payton has been on the fast track to success, refusing to slow down for any distractions.

So there was no chance that the coach was going to break stride for any small talk Wednesday, not with a practice to get to, not with all the preparation still needed before the Saints take on the Indianapolis Colts in Super XLIV on Sunday in Sun Life Stadium.

“Sean is Sean,” Saints defensive end Will Smith said. “Sean is still laid-back, calm, very efficient in being on time for everything.”

He’s been on time for just about everything except reaching the NFL’s championship game.

That appearance came early, considering where the team was four years ago coming off a lost 3-13 season spent on the road because of Hurricane Katrina. But to some of his closest confidants, Payton couldn’t have reached the Super Bowl soon enough.

Always known as an offensive mastermind — sometimes an offensive mad scientist — few knew how much Payton paid attention to the smallest of details.

Lost in the designs in his playbook was Payton’s desire to build a football team in the mold of past championship teams, but with the flair of his own potent offense.

“From the first time I met Sean in 1997, the one thing that has stayed consistent was he has tremendous passion and intensity, ” said Donald Yee, Payton’s agent. “He has a rare ability which I don’t see in that many people to fashion a vision of the bigger picture and at the same time manage the smallest of details to execute the vision.

“Going into this season, he felt that the program was maturing and that the culture was changing. And with a little bit of luck he knew that the organization could experience a lot of success.”

Payton’s football knowledge stems from his record-setting days as the quarterback at Eastern Illinois. He bounced around in the Arena Football League, the Canadian Football League and had a three-game stint in the National Football League as a replacement player in 1987.

His knowledge also stems from his time as a college assistant and his early time as an NFL assistant. He got his first NFL job with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1997, and by 2000 he was an offensive coordinator with the New York Giants. But two years later, his play-calling duties were stripped.

Undaunted, Payton pushed ahead, joining the Dallas Cowboys in 2003 and setting himself up for the job in New Orleans.

“He’s always been very confident in what he is doing, ” Yee said. “And from the time he arrived in New Orleans he had a very, very precise vision of exactly the type of team he wanted.”

Payton said he picked up those qualities along the way by working with highly regarded coaches like Bill Parcells, Jon Gruden and Jim Fassel.

Parcells, though, had the biggest influence.

“He knows how to win, and I learned an awful lot in a short period of time, three years, ” Payton said. “I look back on my career, and I was touched by so many people that were successful, and they’re a big reason why I’m here right now.

“I’m humbled by that. When you think about that opportunity for a young guy to work for a Hall of Fame coach, it’s invaluable.”

That’s not the only experience Payton is drawing from this week.

Payton has often thought back to a painful day eight years ago when he was the offensive coordinator for the Giants, who earned a trip to Super Bowl XXXV.

The Giants’ offense wasn’t able to do much that day in a 34-7 loss to the Baltimore Ravens. And the sting continues to pain Payton.

“There’s a lot more nightmares about that Super Bowl than there are fond memories, ” Payton said.

Still, the experience only will help the Saints this week.

“From a scheduling standpoint that has helped him in being able to tell the players, ‘Hey when I was there with the Giants, these are the things that you can expect, ‘ ” Saints offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael said. “That experience for him is valuable to talk to the team about.”

The message is clear, though, the players said.

While the Saints said they can sense the magnitude of the game by just being in Payton’s presence, they also said the coach appears as prepared as ever for Sunday’s game.

They wouldn’t expect anything else.

“Obviously, the sense of urgency is higher, but as far as being in practice and being in meetings, he’s pretty much been normal, ” receiver Lance Moore said. “And that helps make everything normal.

“You kind of feel it resonating from him. He was with the Giants in the Super Bowl, and he told us you don’t want to go to this game and lose. Almost to make it worth it, you have to win this game. You can just tell almost by his demeanor that he wants to win this. This is the first Super Bowl appearance by the New Orleans Saints, and I believe he wants to be the first head coach to win one.”

That much was obvious from the time he signed his first contract with the Saints.

“All of us aspire to be successful, ” Payton said. “And when you start the season and you go into the locker room and you hand out goals and you — I mean, you — generally at the end of those discussions, somewhere in there is a Super Bowl championship.”

New Orleans police investigate double homicide on France Street

February 4th, 2010 | Posted in Local Issues, NOPD by bloom | No Comments »


By Leslie Williams, The Times-Picayune
February 04, 2010, 7:15AM

Michael DeMocker / The Times-PicayuneA New Orleans police officer examines the body of a man shot to death Wednesday in the 1300 block of France Street as farther away police and paramedics look at a second murder victim in the front yard of a home.

Michael DeMocker / The Times-PicayuneDebra Gillmore yells “God knows!” at the gathered crowd as New Orleans police investigate a double murder Wednesday in the 1300 block of France Street.

Debra Gillmore — a self-described reverend who spreads the word on her New Orleans Access Television show “Touching Jesus Today” — spun around Wednesday afternoon on a corner in the St. Claude neighborhood and lectured a crowd that gathered to watch police detectives and others investigate the shooting death of her 23-year-old son and another man.

“My child’s blood for what,” screamed Gillmore as she looked into the crowd watching two bodies being hauled away.

“Stealing and murdering — for what?” she moaned. “Black-on-black crime for nothing.”

“Y’all know who’s doing this,” insisted the tearful mother of Calvinton “Minkie” Wallace, one of her four children.

Wallace and another man, believed to be in his twenties, were shot multiple times about 2:41 p.m. in the 1300 block of France Street, authorities said. Their bloody bodies lay a short distance from each other in front of houses on France between North Villere and Urquhart streets.

Investigators so far have no motive for the shooting or suspects, officer Hilal Williams said.

And police so far have not been able to determine what, if any, relationship existed between the two dead men, Williams said.

John Gagliano, chief investigator for the Orleans Parish Coroner’s Office, said authorities also have not yet been able to identify the second man.

Unlike the police, Wallace’s mother offered a motive.

He had just cashed a $100 check at the France Meat Market, she said, adding that he received the check after filing his taxes.

“And they robbed him,” Gillmore told the crowd.

“Demons.” “Vultures.” “Low-lifes,” she screamed.

“Ya reap what you sow. God will take revenge. So you better watch your back,” said Gillmore as some bystanders walked away.

Gillmore said her son was unemployed and had been living with her. Wallace was a “humble, lending-hand,” kind of person, she said.

“He’d do whatever you asked him to do for you,” she said.

Anyone with information is asked to call Crimestoppers at 504.822.1111 or toll-free at 1.877.903.7867. Callers do not have to give their names or testify and can earn as much as $2,500 for tips that lead to an indictment.

Available 24/7. Call 1-877-NOLATIX for immediate help.

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