Saturday, August 22, 2009

American Zombie

My personal congrats to Ashe' Dambala over at the American Zombie blog for being the 2009 recipient of the Ashley Morris award.



From the Rising Tide blog, the award is named in honor of the late Ashley Morris,. It is awarded to a NOLA blogger who passionately works to defend and improve New Orleans through their actions and blogging.


Ashley Morris passed away at a young age in 2008. As a New Orleans blogger Ashley represented the true spirit of someone who loved the city of New Orleans with such a fierce spirit untouched by anyone else. The American Zombie blog is constantly digging into the politics in and around New Orleans to bring all of the scuzzbucketry to the light of day.

Thanks for all you do, Dambala. You deserve this honor.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Another blow for the scuzzbucket dynasty

The long time kingdom of Jefferson scuzzbucketry took another blow today as Mose Jefferson was found guilty by a federal jury on four charges that he bribed an Orleans Parish School Board member (and former squeeze)Ellenese Brooks-Simms.

The bribery involved payments made to Brooks-Simms while she was a member of the Orleans Parish School Board. The jury acquitted Jefferson of the third bribery count, which involved a payment made after Brooks-Simms was off the School Board.



Two of the seven felony counts faced by Mose Jefferson, 65, stem from what federal prosecutors describe as two attempts to cover up the bribes by meeting with Brooks-Simms and trying to persuade her to give the feds a bogus explanation for the $140,000 she accepted from him.

Unbeknownst to Jefferson, Brooks-Simms had already cut a deal with the government. At both meetings, she wore a wire to record her conversations with Jefferson, according to a source close to the case.

Mose's brother, theformer U.S. Rep. William Jefferson who was convicted two weeks ago of abusing his congressional office to enrich himself and his family.

Yes indeed.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Come on, participate, NOLA-ians



Levees dot org is requesting that concerned citizens contact AP reporter Becky Bohrer and ask that she become a responsible reporter and stops using good old shorthand when describing the federal levee failures in metro New Orleans that devastated the city.

The shorthand refers to reporters' usage of terms to slide thru the facts that New Orleans was flooded due to the failure of the USACE levees during Katrina. This lack of details could lead the reader to believe that the storm surge from the Katrina overtopped the levees in the city when in fact the levees gave way due to poor structural integrity.

Can't find a direct email address to Becky, but I am told via their website that you can contact AP at "info@ap.org".

Thanks

BTW, if you want to see more discussion on this and other subjects regarding NOLA, be sure to visit the Rising Tide website and maybe sign up to attend this Saturday.

I won't be there due to the fact that us northshore people aren't seen in a very nice light to most NOLA bloggers. I'll keep my ass safely here in Slidell and check it out from afar.

Scuzzbucket justice

Last October I posted about a woman who was under the influence of who knows what killing a wheelchair bound man. According to the initial report:

Witnesses told deputies that they saw a white Buick Rendezvous, driven by Kimberlin Edwards, traveling at a high rate of speed along the roadway when the accident occurred. The 53-year-old victim died at the scene.



Today the bee atch was sentenced to 17 years in prison .

She pleaded guilty to the charges after a 12-member, St. Tammany Parish jury had already been impaneled, but before opening arguments had been given in her trial.

State Judge Allison Penzato accepted Edwards' plea and sentenced her to 17 years in prison.

According to records, Edwards has prior convictions in New Orleans for armed robbery and attempted armed robbery in 1993, according to the St. Tammany district attorney's office.

In St. Tammany, she also has possession of cocaine convictions from 2009 and 2005; and misdemeanor convictions for unauthorized use of a movable, possession of drug paraphernalia and open containers from between 1999 and 2006.

Edwards is scheduled for a multiple offender hearing, at which time Assistant District Attorney Scott Gardner likely will attempt to label Edwards a repeat offender under the state's habitual offender statute.

If Edwards is found to be an habitual offender, she would face possible life imprisonment. Wouldn't that be a shame.

Monday, August 17, 2009

The levees FAILED

John McQuaid discusses certain errors made in the
review of the novel Zeitoun, (a nonfiction story of one family’s experience of Hurricane Katrina) by NYT book critic Timothy Eagan. One such mistake is that the levees were overtopped. WRONG.


The responsibility for most of the damage to New Orleans and the awful events immediately following the storm lies with the Corps – that is, the federal government. This is not in dispute; three distinct investigations have laid the blame on the Corps, including the Corps’s own study. In any assessment of what happened – scientific, political, historical – this is crux of what went wrong, a terrible failure American know-how whose broader implications are alarming and remain mostly unexamined. New Orleanians and Louisiana politicians and media types do their best to remind the powers that be of these scandalous facts.

Camille


Hurricane Camille's fury remembered 40 years later
By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN (AP)


GULFPORT, Miss. — Scouring an aerial photograph taken three days after Hurricane Camille crashed ashore on Mississippi's Gulf coast, Richard Rose points to the spot where his father's body washed into the chimney of a ruined home.

Rose was only 10 when one of the most powerful hurricanes to batter the U.S. mainland in the 20th century struck on Aug. 17, 1969. But he vividly remembers his older sister wailing, "Daddy's dead" once word reached family members who had sought safety at a relative's home some 100 miles inland.

"I just burst into tears," said Rose, whose father was swept away while trying to wade through Camille's surging waters.

Fred Rose is one of 172 names etched on granite slabs that ring a memorial to Camille's Mississippi victims, including the missing who may not have counted toward the storm's official death toll.



On Monday, Richard Rose plans to visit the beachfront memorial in Biloxi for a ceremony marking Camille's 40th anniversary. A commemoration also is planned Monday at a cemetery in Gulfport where three unidentified Camille victims are buried under the names "Faith," "Hope" and "Charity."

Hurricane Katrina in 2005 eclipsed Camille as the most destructive hurricane ever to strike Mississippi's Gulf coast, but survivors of the earlier storm will never forget its fury.

Camille was a Category 5 hurricane with howling winds of 190 mph when it crashed ashore near Bay St. Louis, Miss., just before midnight that Aug. 17. The storm had strengthened after brushing the western tip of Cuba, and also swiped the boot of southeast Louisiana as it roared ashore, its storm surge peaking at about 24 feet.

The storm claimed 256 lives, including more than 100 in Virginia, where its remnants triggered widespread flooding and landslides. Camille joined the Woodstock music festival and the Apollo moon landing to put the summer of 1969 into the history books.

Bill Read, director of the National Hurricane Center, was a meteorology student at Texas A&M University when Camille struck. Months later, he drove over from Texas to see the damage for himself.

Katrina and Camille were "very similar stories," he said.

"They were history-changing events for the people who lived along the Mississippi Gulf Coast," said Read, who is to deliver a speech Monday in Biloxi on Camille's impact and advancements in hurricane forecasting since 1969.

In 1969, Read said, hurricane forecasters had to rely on a satellite making one or two passes a day over a storm.

"You weren't getting constant pictures like you are now," he added.

Camille's intensity surprised George Mixon, who was a 21-year-old rookie sheriff's deputy when Camille's rising water chased him, his father and brother onto the roof of their home in Mississippi's Harrison County.

Terrified, the family rode out the storm on that rooftop for what seemed like eight or nine hours, but Mixon wasn't counting.

"I was too busy praying," he said. "All you could hear was the constant roar ... We were getting hit with debris and pine limbs. We kept our faces down and held onto the house and one another."

At dawn, Mixon joined other deputies in collecting the bodies.

Generations of coastal Mississippi residents assumed no storm could top Camille. Then along came Katrina, blamed for more than 1,600 deaths and tens of billions of dollars in damages.

"I would have to say that Katrina was worse than Camille, and that's a hard thing to say," said Mixon, now a county fire marshal who rode out Katrina in an emergency operations center.

Charles Sullivan, the archivist at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College, is the author of "Hurricanes of the Mississippi Gulf Coast: Three Centuries of Destruction," a book first published in 1986. He included Katrina in a revised version this year.

"Katrina was so horrible that I didn't see the 40th anniversary of Camille coming," he said. "I didn't think anything could make me forget about Camille."

For Sullivan, the lessons of both storms are the same: "Don't build anything near the beach," he said. "If you build it there, it is going to be taken by the sea."

But some like Rose, a Gulfport resident, have never considered leaving.

"This is where we live. This is where we belong, no matter what dangers are present," Rose said.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Psycho Woman



New York's Betsy McCaughey, the former lieutenant governor most remembered here for oddly standing throughout Gov. George Pataki's 1996 State of the State speech - then running against him after he dumped her from his ticket.

McCaughey, 60, is back as a self-styled expert whose writings on Obama's health care plans are increasingly being cited by agitated conservatives at town hall meetings as proof - falsely, other experts and the President himself say - that he wants to "pull the plug on Grandma."

McCaughey got the ball rolling on ex-Sen. Fred Thompson's radio show on July 16, when she called the bill "a vicious assault on elderly people" that will "cut your life short."

She then wrote a column July 24 that claimed Obama advisers don't want to "give much care to a grandmother with Parkinson's or a child with cerebral palsy."



Read more: here

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Roadkill

H/T to HumidCity via Twitter , this
find in the TP:



According to the paper,

Some artistic fiend has created a stencil of a black tire tread superimposed on a squashed version of a rather familiar blue dog. This poor puppy was found on St. Claude Avenue.

Crazy times in Boutte

I love this story from the T.P.:


Alligators are a common sight in St. Charles Parish waterways, but they rarely travel by bicycle.

So when sheriff's deputies saw Terron D. Ingram riding his bike down Goodchildren Street in Boutte with a 3-foot-long gator draped over his neck late Friday, they had a few questions.

Ingram dropped the reptile and his bike and ran off, but was apprehended a few blocks away.

"We don't know what his intentions were," said Sheriff's Office spokesman Capt. Pat Yoes. He said it wasn't clear where Ingram had captured the gator.

Ingram, 38, of 158 Boutte Estates Drive, was booked with a variety of charges, including cruelty to animals by abandonment, resisting arrest and possession of drug paraphernalia.

He was being held on $15,000 bond.

All ended well for the gator, however. Alligator Control Officer Kenny Schmill said he released it into the marsh near Bayou Gauche.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Debunking Lies

So many lies. It seems as if some of the NOLA blogosphere is out there with opinions on these lies, wishing to provide info to prove them as lies. Here are some links:


Greg Peters provides a link to Reasic dot org where the healthcare lies are debunked.

First Draft discusses how all the sensationalism is creating a "blind panic" among the uninformed.

Talking Points Memo article on what Sarah Palin started. She's such white trash.

Here's one about a "protester" that was actually a GOP official

Knowledge is power.

It's unbelievable the rabid pitch that the "Death Panelers" (one of them is Sarah Palin, which is certainly no surprise to me) have stooped to regarding the current health care reform activity taking place across the country. I find it extremely distasteful that this Tea Party group would stoop so low as to scare the elderly. But of course this was done during Kathleen Blanco's run for governor, wasn't it?. So it is a bipartisan dirty politic kind of thing.


I truely wish that all of the people who believe everything that's told to them about the health care reform would do their homework. With access to the internet, it's not too difficult to find the bill itself and read through it. Here's the link to all 1,015 pages:

It's in "pdf" format, so if you don't have it you'll have to download adobe.

There is a very bright young woman named Adriana Maxwell out of Atlanta who is in the process of reading the bill. She's sharing her interpretation of the bill at a neat website I just found today called ireport dot com. Here she is seen discussing the first 150 pages. Of course it is her interpretation, but I would believe her before ever listening to some of these wackos that show up at the town hall meetings taking place this month.

Actually I find it quite amusing to see some of thes pompous asses in the congress and senate having to put up with the stresses of a hostile audience. They need a little taste of life in the trenches.

For more myth debunking, go to this link.

The SCOTUS Women

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