Tag Archives: Lake Charles

SWLA Tea Party blasts IRS

By Theresa Schmidt

LAKE CHARLES, LA (KPLC) -

The Southwest Louisiana Tea Party movement began picking up steam in 2009 as members from throughout the five-parish area began gathering for rallies and becoming more visible and involved in local government and the political scene.

President Jonathan Duhon said he got involved because it seemed that too many ordinary people had become disengaged from participating in our democracy.

“We really didn’t know that much about our government anymore. We didn’t know about it on the local level; we didn’t know about it on the state level or on the federal level,” said Duhon.

Last year, the group applied to IRS for a type of tax exempt status allowed for non profits.  Duhon is convinced they received extra scrutiny because they are a Tea Party group.

“Having to wait seven months for an answer from the IRS as to whether or not we’d get the status, I mean, that’s way beyond what it normally takes. And then our next correspondence with the IRS wasn’t yes or no, it was supply more information,” said Duhon.

Read more:  http://www.kplctv.com/

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Felix Vail arrested in Texas in wife’s 1962 drowning

Written by
Jerry Mitchell

CANYON LAKE, TEXAS — Authorities charged Mississippi native Felix Vail on Friday with murder in the 1962 drowning of his wife — the oldest prosecution of a serial killer suspect in U.S. history.

The Clarion-Ledger, following a months-long investigation, detailed in an eight-page special report the peculiar circumstances surrounding the drowning of Mary Horton Vail and the fate of other women who crossed Vail’s path. The Nov. 11 report, titled “Gone,” prompted authorities to reopen the investigation.

Vail, 73, was the last known person to see three women alive — Mary Vail; his longtime girlfriend Sharon Hensley, who disappeared in 1973; and his wife, Annette Craver Vail, who disappeared in 1984.

[...]

“He’s getting what he deserves,” Horton said. “Over the years, the freak fortune of fate has benefitted him. It’s just a shame a cover-up came when my sister died, but justice is on the right path.”

At the time of his wife’s drowning, Felix Vail told authorities she had accidentally fallen into the Calcasieu River in Lake Charles after he steered to avoid a stump.
He told them he was laying trotlines.

Authorities jailed Vail for questioning, but he was released a few days later.

In January 1963, Calcasieu Parish grand jurors heard evidence against Vail, but then-District Attorney Frank Salter didn’t let them consider a murder indictment.

Salter’s father, Felix Vail and a number of Vail relatives and friends all worked for Cities Service Co., later known as CITGO.

After analyzing the autopsy of the Oct. 28, 1962, drowning death of Mary Horton Vail, renowned New York pathologist Dr. Michael Baden told The Clarion-Ledger he believes foul play took place.

Read more:  http://www.clarionledger.com/

The Pardon

ThePardonMovieReport

Published on Dec 9, 2012

The true story of Toni Jo Henry, a woman tried for the crime of murder in 1942 in the state of Louisiana. Toni Jo, a product of childhood abuse and neglect, briefly discovers love and happiness that soon turns to despair when her husband Cowboy is sent to prison and she embarks on an ill-fated plan with an accomplice Arkie to free him. Because of her beauty, Toni Jo instantly becomes a notorious celebrity, drawing the unparalleled media attention of two highly publicized and sensational murder trials. Her story is a story of hope, a story of love and a story of redemption, as Toni Jo discovers the true strength within herself and, with the help of a priest, Father Richard is able to face her life with a calm and peace that defies explanation.

http://www.thepardonmovie.com

Her bloody Valentine: Toni Jo Henry shoots man between the eyes in bid to free jailed husband

It was Valentine’s Day, 1940, and Toni Jo Henry had planned a perfect surprise, sure to show her sweetie just how much she loved him.

She was going to bust him out of jail.

No easy task, given that Toni Jo had no cash, car or weapons, and was not the type to bake quaint little cakes in which to conceal files.

Instead she used her most powerful weapon – beauty – to play on the sympathies of two men, an ex-con and a Good Samaritan. Neither realized they were dealing with a woman the press would later dub “The Tigress.” Both would pay with their lives.

Born Annie Beatrice McQuiston on January 3, 1916, nearShreveport, La., she was the baby of a family of six children. From the start, the girl was spirited, but after her mother died of tuberculosis the 6-year-old became a handful.

Read more:  http://www.nydailynews.com/

Toni Jo Henry was executed on November 28, 1942.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toni_Jo_Henry

Toni Jo Henry’s Date With Death

By Laura James

Historically, women have always had to do something particularly awful to be convicted of a serious crime, and to sentence a woman to death – oh! That didn’t happen all that often. Especially when the female in question was good looking. The law has always made an ass of itself when there’s a beautiful woman in the dock.

And don’t argue with me about it. I’ve been trying to prove it to you, see.

One of the most beautiful, indeed absolutely stunning women ever convicted of murder and sentenced to death in the United States of America was a gal by the name of Toni Jo Henry.

toni-jo-henry

That’s her, photographed in her cell on the morning of her scheduled execution. Her jailers opened up a telephone line to the governor’s office, and Toni Jo waited on her last hope in life, mindful that women – especially unusually attractive women – and especially in the South – were not generally put to death, no matter what they’d done.

And she was a looker. Nearly every description ever printed of her focused on her eyes. Toni Jo was “slim, hard-faced, flint-eyed,” “smouldering-eyed,” with her “snapping black eyes, and her long, wavy blue black hair.”

After three trials, three convictions, and three pronouncements of the awful sentence, she probably expected to die. But still she was light-hearted about it. As the photographer fussed with his camera, Toni Jo said, “I’ve smiled twice, mister. You haven’t shot yet. Have you any idea how much talent is being wasted here today?”

It was one of many jokes she cracked as she waited for the phone to ring, chain-smoking and making small talk. “That lighter is guaranteed for a lifetime,” she said at one point. “You know one person whose lifetime lighter lasted a lifetime.”

Alas, Toni Jo wasn’t always quite so funny.

[...]

Toni Jo said her dying wish was to talk to Cowboy, and though it violated the rules, they let her call him. She did all the talking and he did all the crying. ”I know it has to come and I’m ready for it, honey,” Toni Jo told Cowboy. “I’m glad to have known you for the short time that I did. I’m sorry that things had to turn out this way. But you’ve got to live right, Claude.”

Toni Jo hung up after the call with Cowboy.

The governor, by the way, never did call.

Toni Jo promised to go quietly, except she squawked when they shaved her head. They promised to hunt up a scarf for her to put over her bald head, knowing the photographers were lined up outside to see her taken to the death room. One of those photos, at right, shows her jailer looking more sad than Toni Jo.

Toni Jo Henry was electrocuted November 28, 1942. The wire services all reported that Cowboy Henry screamed and thrashed and destroyed his cell in his grief.

In a final awful coda, Cowboy was released from prison a handful of years after his wife’s execution. The decade didn’t end before Cowboy Henry was shot and killed and raced into the dark to be with his bad girl from the bayou.

Read more:  http://www.laurajames.com/

5 Louisiana airport towers could close in federal cuts

LAKE CHARLES, La. – Automatic federal budget cuts could shut down control towers at five Louisiana airports.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood warned Friday of the closing of 100 airport towers at airports that have 150,000 flights or fewer each year if automatic spending cuts go into effect March 1.

Among the airports that could be affected are Lake Charles Regional Airport, Lake Charles Chennault International Airport, Monroe Regional Airport, New Orleans Lakefront Airport and Shreveport Downtown Airport.

http://www.wbrz.com/

 

Lake Charles, LA: City police again investigating reports of windows being shot out

http://www.americanpress.com/

Child support roundup targets deadbeat parents

LAKE CHARLES, LA (KPLC) -

If you’re a deadbeat dad or mom — watch out. A child support enforcement roundup got underway Tuesday morning. Officials say if they didn’t get you this time, they plan to next time.

It was early morning, yet Calcasieu deputies had already been on the road for a couple of hours trying to pick up those seriously behind on their child support payments or who didn’t show up for court. Wendy Daigle, with child support enforcement, says they are looking for 111 men and 17 women

via Child support roundup targets deadbeat parents – KPLC 7 News, Lake Charles, Louisiana.

Lake Charles man facing numerous drug charges

A 34-year-old Lake Charles man is facing numerous drug charges after authorities said they discovered a meth lab in the truck he was driving.

Calcasieu Parish Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Kim Myers said Daniel B. Ralls, 800 Contour Dr., was arrested around 11:30 p.m. Monday.

“Deputies conducted a stop on a truck at Ashland and Wedgewood streets Charles for a traffic violation,” Myers said Wednesday in a news release. “Ralls was in possession of a methadone pill with no prescription. Ralls told deputies that he also had marijuana and several containers, which were being used to manufacturing methamphetamine, in his truck.”

American Press – Home.

Cleaning woman charged with theft from Lake Charles home

A cleaning woman is accused of stealing two rings from a Lake Charles home.

Keena S. Cooper, 49, 2517, Anderson St. in Westlake, is accused of stealing the rings, valued at $4,000, while cleaning the home, Calcasieu Parish Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Kim Myers said in a news release.

via American Press – Home.

Lake Charles man arrested in Houston in connection with vehicle theft

A 51-year-old Lake Charles man was arrested in Houston on Wednesday in connection with vehicle theft, authorities said.

Calcasieu Parish Sheriff’s Office spokeswoman Kim Myers said James P. Bertrand Jr. was arrested at a Houston motel and charged with possession of stolen property. Bertrand also has an outstanding warrant in Houston for DUI.

via American Press – Home.

Four arrested in connection with weekend slayings

American Press – Home.