Victory Over Louisiana Violence

Victory Over Louisiana Violence Community based non-profit. Local and state wide humanitarian efforts. Social advocacy. Conflict Res

06/05/2026

Federal judge revives legal challenge to East Baton Rouge district map.

In June of 2024, five members of the Metro Council at the time, Cleve Dunn, Carolyn Coleman, Darryl Hurst, Chauna Banks, and LaMont Cole, along with two Baton Rouge residents, filed a lawsuit against the city-parish over a map passed by the Metro Council in 2022, which they claim weakened black voting strength, violating the Constitution, and the Voting Rights Act.

"We presented maps where we feel was equitable, was a 6-6 council, which did not get the 7 votes to pass, and our colleagues voted 7-5 to maintain the status quo," Councilman Cleve Dunn said during a June 2024 press conference on the lawsuit.

The suit claims the map packs large numbers of black voters into majority-black council districts, allowing white members of the council to hold the majority and have an additional majority-white council district.

But according to court documents, the case was closed, pending the Supreme Court's decision in Louisiana versus Callais, which WBRZ Political Analyst James Hartman says he feels was a smart move.

"Well, the judge was very wise to stop the proceedings while the Callais was winding its way through the Supreme Court, but the judge is equally wise in bringing it back to life, so there could be some resolution to this," Hartman said.

Both parties were instructed by the judge to provide paperwork detailing the impacts of Callias on this specific case.

In documents filed by the attorney on behalf of the Metro Council members, they allege intentional discrimination and claim they have provided facts that are credible.

St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Randy Smith turned himself in Thursday after he was accused of attacking a man during a fight...
06/05/2026

St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Randy Smith turned himself in Thursday after he was accused of attacking a man during a fight at a Madisonville restaurant.

According to the Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff’s Office, Smith surrendered Thursday afternoon and was booked with one count of second-degree battery and two counts of disturbing the peace. His bond was set at $10,000.

“I didn’t know who it was. He throws me to the ground, he gets up to me and he says, reeking of alcohol, ‘You’re a dead (expletive),’” Couvillion said.

A witness said they saw Smith grab a patron by the neck before several people stepped in.

“I was sitting and looked up, and I saw what I now know was Randy Smith grab a patron around his neck,” the witness said. “Three or four people jumped in and tried to pull them apart.”

URGENT BREAKING from Innocence and Justice Louisiana formally Innocence Project New Orleans Governor Landry has VETOED S...
06/05/2026

URGENT BREAKING from Innocence and Justice Louisiana formally Innocence Project New Orleans

Governor Landry has VETOED SB 125 -- a bill unanimously passed through the Legislature. Ten exonerees will lose compensation IMMEDIATELY and need your help. Please support them by donating here: https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-louisiana-exonerees-after-vetoed-compensation-bill

On June 3, 2026, Governor Jeff Landry vetoed Senate Bill 125, a unanimous bipartisan bill that would have modestly increased compensation for innocent people wrongfully convicted and imprisoned in Louisiana.

SB 125, authored by Senator Gerald Boudreaux, would have raised Louisiana’s wrongful conviction compensation cap from 10 years to 15 years. In a session where almost nothing moved without division, SB 125 earned full bipartisan support at every step.

Despite that, Governor Landry made SB 125 the ONLY bill he has vetoed this session.

This veto is deeply wrong and harmful. The Governor’s veto message makes specious assertions about abuse without acknowledging who will suffer because of his veto. 10 exonerees in 5 different parishes, whose innocence has already been vetted by the courts, will immediately lose compensation because of the Governor's veto.

The State of Louisiana sent these men to prison for crimes they didn’t commit for a combined 211 years. Because of Landry’s veto, they are being compensated for less than half of that time.

We are asking you to step in where Governor Landry refused to. He took $40,000 from each of these men for this year alone. Please supporting them directly! They are in urgent need of immediate support to maintain housing, pay bills and car notes, buy gas, and groceries. Your support will let them know that you believe they should be compensated for what the State of Louisiana did to them, even if Governor Landry does not.

IJLA will host an in-person press conference on Monday, June 8, 2026, with exonerees, advocates, and community supporters. Details will be shared once finalized.

06/05/2026

Two people shot and killed a 50-year-old woman instead of the person they were targeting at a Hammond gas station early Thursday morning, Hammond Police Chief Edwin Bergeron Jr. said.

Violence is no the solution to differences or difficult situations. - EL

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