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Entries categorized as ‘Eddie Jordan’

Isn’t it odd?

Thursday, December 27, 2007 · 1 Comment

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor

 

Elton Phillips, the man accidentally released from prison in New Orleans last week, has been arrested today in Hammond, according to news reports. Am I the only one who finds it odd that Phillips, the guy who reportedly sought refuge at former District Attorney Eddie Jordan’s home following a crime for which Phillips is a suspect, also happened to be accidentally released from prison?

 

Of all the people in Orleans Parish Prison, isn’t it weird that this one man – this one man who knew Jordan’s girlfriend – was let out by mistake?

 

A weird coincidence, or something else?

Categories: Eddie Jordan · NOPD · New Orleans · New Orleans District Attorney

Manning the tent

Wednesday, November 14, 2007 · Leave a Comment

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor

 

At least we know some people are committed to the Orleans Parish district attorney’s office in these uncertain times.

 

According to The Associated Press today, some committed prosecutors will not quit even if frozen bank accounts mean they will be paid only the state’s share of their salaries.

Categories: Eddie Jordan · New Orleans District Attorney

Jordan’s new job

Tuesday, November 13, 2007 · 5 Comments

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor

 

So … Eddie Jordan has taken a job with the nonprofit New Orleans Police and Justice Foundation, huh?

 

Will Jordan’s employment with this nonprofit help or hurt its fundraising efforts? Will the business community give or withhold funds from an organization that has hired Jordan?  

Categories: Eddie Jordan · New Orleans Police and Justice Foundation

Jordan’s strategy didn’t work

Friday, November 9, 2007 · 1 Comment

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor

 

It looks like Eddie Jordan’s wishes aren’t coming true.

 

When the former Orleans Parish district attorney announced his resignation late last month, he said he hoped it would “remove the threat of the imminent seizure of the office’s assets, including the office’s payroll accounts,” he said.

 

So much for those hopes; On Thursday, attorneys said they have seized the district attorney’s office’s bank accounts, including payroll.

 

Former district attorney employees who were fired by Jordan shortly after he took office in 2003 sued him for discrimination. They won a federal judgment of $3.7 million, which is now at $3.4 million following a $300,000 payment from the district attorney’s office.

 

It’s not surprising that the plaintiffs have moved forward with a seizure of assets. The city and state have dragged their feet on the issue and have made no commitments to cover the judgment.

 

But what happens to the district attorney’s office now? Who will ensure workers get paid, now that payroll accounts have been seized?

 

Mayor C. Ray Nagin said the seizure threatens the city’s recovery from Hurricane Katrina and its safety. He’s right. This is a major problem, and someone needs to find a solution quickly.

 

Categories: Eddie Jordan · Nagin · New Orleans District Attorney

Seizing DA’s assets a popular choice

Monday, November 5, 2007 · 1 Comment

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor

Apparently, some people think it is better to shut down the Orleans Parish district attorney’s office than to not pay a multimillion-dollar judgment against the district attorney’s office. 

According to New Orleans CityBusiness’ online Question of the Week, most voters think the district attorney’s assets should be seized to satisfy a judgment stemming from a racial discrimination lawsuit that former District Attorney Eddie Jordan lost. The civil rights judgment is $3.7 million. But before leaving office last week, Jordan authorized the release of $300,000 toward the judgment, leaving the office on the hook for $3.4 million. 

The poll results are astonishing, because seizing the district attorney’s assets would have the effect of shutting the office down. Do people honestly want that to happen?

Categories: Eddie Jordan · New Orleans District Attorney

The $3.7-million question

Wednesday, October 31, 2007 · 3 Comments

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor 

Imagine working for an employer and not knowing whether your job will exist tomorrow, whether some plaintiffs will decide to seize your offices assets and shut you down. 

That can’t be good for morale, right? 

That is the situation workers at the Orleans Parish district attorney’s office are in. 

A judge has ruled that employees fired under former District Attorney Eddie Jordan, who is resigning today, are owed $3.7 million in a racial discrimination case. Jordan’s inability to pay the judgment was no doubt a factor in his resignation. 

Mayor C. Ray Nagin has not committed to bailing out the district attorney’s office. Neither has the state. So it remains uncertain as to who will pay this judgment.

One possibility is plaintiffs can seize the assets of the district attorney’s office, including payroll. That would basically result in the shuttering of the office. 

In the meantime, the district attorney’s office, and its employees, is left in limbo. How can people there perform their jobs effectively if they don’t know whether they will have a job tomorrow? How can they be focused on their jobs when their offices could be seized any day? 

That can’t be good for morale and, therefore, crime-fighting, right? Or can those workers compartmentalize, focus on their jobs and not worry about the future?

Categories: Eddie Jordan · New Orleans District Attorney

Jordan resigns

Tuesday, October 30, 2007 · 7 Comments

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor

 

Embattled District Attorney Eddie Jordan stepped down today.

 

Some will no doubt celebrate the announcement. Jordan was widely criticized. In a CityBusiness story this week, a former assistant district attorney called him incompetent.

 

But it is still not known how a $3.7-million judgment against the district attorney’s office will be paid. Mayor C. Ray Nagin today offered no solution to that problem.

 

How do you react to Jordan’s resignation?

Categories: Eddie Jordan

More misfortune for Jordan

Thursday, October 25, 2007 · 4 Comments

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor 

It’s not getting any better for District Attorney Eddie Jordan. 

Today we learned an armed robbery suspect allegedly was at Jordan’s home earlier this month. 

If anyone is familiar with VH1’s “Best Week Ever”? Jordan certainly won’t be winning that honor this week.

Categories: Eddie Jordan

Jordan in a pickle

Wednesday, October 24, 2007 · 8 Comments

By Deon Roberts, Online Editor 

There’s a serious crisis looming over New Orleans’ criminal justice system. 

Officials say District Attorney Eddie Jordan’s office could be shut down if it does cough up $3.7 million to 36 workers who sued Jordan for discrimination after he fired them in 2003. 

Shut down the DA’s office? That certainly won’t help the post-Katrina recovery. 

But that’s a possibility if plaintiffs’ attorneys try to go after DA assets. 

Jordan wants the city to bail him out, according to news reports. This puts the city is a very tight spot: Help Jordan so that the city can have a DA’s office or don’t help Jordan and use the funds to keep city government running. 

What do you think the city should do?

Categories: Eddie Jordan

Racial disharmony alive and well post-K

Friday, July 20, 2007 · 3 Comments

By Richard A. Webster, Staff Writer

Everything in New Orleans tends to fall along racial lines, and the uproar surrounding New Orleans District Attorney Eddie Jordan is no different.

At Wednesday’s City Council Criminal Justice Committee meeting, called by Councilman James Carter to address Jordan’s recent dismissal of two high-profile homicide cases, the largely African-American audience stood firmly behind the embattled DA and bristled as three white Council members aggressively questioned him.

“The community is outraged,” Councilman Arnie Fielkow said to Jordan about his performance.

“No, we’re not!” someone shouted from the crowd.

“We got your back Jordan!” another said.

While Fielkow described Jordan’s recent dismissals as “unacceptable” and “unfathomable,” the crowd shot back.

“Y’all want that old racist Harry Connick back!”

“They’re tryin’ to enslave us!”

With each accusation and pointed question aimed at Jordan, unrest in the audience increased. An elderly African-American woman seated behind me called Councilwoman Shelley Midura the “lynch lady” and the “leader of the KKK.”

It wasn’t only white elected officials who found themselves in the crosshairs. Two African-American politicians, state Reps. Cedric Richmond, D-New Orleans, and J.P. Morrell, D-New Orleans, approached the podium and started off in the crowd’s favor by saying Jordan couldn’t be blamed for the crime of New Orleans.

The audience cheered them on, prompting Richmond to say, “You may not want to applaud when you hear what I have to say next.”

Richmond and Morrell called Jordan to the mat for failing to file audits for 2005 and 2006 and said they had severe reservations about his performance. When they returned to their seats, an elderly woman admonished them like children: “Y’all need to learn your history and read up on what they done to us. This new generation is ignorant.”

The crowd’s opinion of the hearing was apparent — it was an attempt by white politicians to scapegoat and bring down an elected African-American official. No matter how far the Council went to illustrate how Jordan’s alleged mismanagement of the DA’s office was negatively affecting the low-income African-American communities — those hardest hit by violent crime — the audience supported Jordan and accused the Council of wanting to go back to the days of “ol’ racist Harry Connick.”

The meeting drove home the racial divide that separates New Orleans. And the anger and resentment is not one-sided. A new batch of bumper stickers can be found plastered to light poles and stop signs throughout the city and Jefferson Parish. The messages: “David Duke for Mayor,” “Wake Up White People,” “Thank You Houston” and the ubiquitous Confederate flag.

During the mayoral election, someone wrote “Nagin Coon Town” on a lamppost on Tchoupitoulas Avenue. The racist graffiti was clearly visible at a nearby bus stop where small African-American children often wait.

And how are people of color to feel when Jefferson Parish institutes an ordinance aimed directly at eliminating Hispanic-operated taco trucks?

Just log onto one of the neighborhood chat rooms on Nola.com and the racial hatred seeps through like poison.

Lance Hill, executive director of the Southern Institute for Education and Research at Tulane University, said distrust between African-Americans and whites in New Orleans is at an all-time high. African-Americans accuse the local, state and federal governments of doing everything in their power to rid the city of low-income minorities. Whites, meanwhile, lay the blame for all of the societal ills of New Orleans squarely on the shoulders of the African-American population.

“There’s a profound racial distrust and resentment and hatred that has shaped the life of the city the last couple of years,” Hill said. “Conventional wisdom is people who went through hell are more sensitive to others, but the fact is they aren’t more sensitive. Often times they are downright indifferent to the suffering of other people.”

Hill’s theory played out in the City Council chambers Wednesday, perfectly illustrating the idea that at times it seems like the only thing the whites and African-Americans of New Orleans share is a distrust of each other.

Categories: Arnie Fielkow · Cedric Richmond · David Duke · Eddie Jordan · Harry Connick · J.P. Morrell · James Carter · Lance Hill · Nagin · Shelley Midura · racism