Louisiana House members support probation extension bill

<p class="p1">BATON ROUGE — Southwest Louisiana House members supported legislation here that rolls back a probation change that was approved last year as part of a 10-bill criminal justice reform package.</p><p class="p3">House Bill 195 by Rep. Sherman Mack, R-Albany, increases a person’s probation period from three to five years. It was approved 61-30 and moves to the Senate. Mack said a longer probation would allow judges more latitude and would ultimately keep offenders out of prison.</p><p class="p3">Voting for the bill were Reps. Mark Abraham, R-Lake Charles; James Armes, D-Leesville; Mike Danahay, D-Sulphur; Stephen Dwight, R-Moss Bluff; A.B. Franklin, D-Lake Charles; and Frank Howard, R-Many. Reps. Johnny Guinn, R-Jennings; Bob Hensgens, R-Abbeville; and Dorothy Sue Hill, D-Dry Creek, who is on a week’s medical leave, were all recorded as absent..</p><p class="p3">Rep. Joe Marino, No Party, Gretna, was chief spokesman for the opposition. He said supporters of the Mack bill weren’t giving criminal justice reform a chance to prove its success. Opponents are worried about their re-election chances, he said, but they would be supported when the reform effort is successful.</p><p class="p3">Marino said the longer probation will increase the workload of probation and parole officers when each is already handling 140 cases. He said the change isn’t minor, but a substantial setback. </p><p class="p3">Judges wanted the major tweak to last year’s change to give them more authority to extend probation, Mack said, and more authority over earned (good-time) compliance credits they receive while on probation. </p><p class="p3">Mack said the Louisiana District Attorneys Association wanted the change. </p><p class="p3">Gov. John Bel Edwards advocated for last year’s changes that he said will reduce the state’s No. 1 incarceration record and save costs involved that money can be used for better retraining of inmates before they leave prison. </p><p class="p3">He opposed the probation change.</p><p class="p3">District attorneys wanted the change because they said persons preferred to stay on probation for 18 months (half of the three years if on good behavior) rather than participate in drug and other specialty courts.</p><p class="p3">Other legislation on the agenda deals with restitution payments by offenders. </p>

SportsPlus

Local News

Longhorns stymie LSU to claim weekend series

life

SW La. school lunch menus March 24-28

life

Gratitude in Guatemala: Seeing beauty beyond the poverty

Business

Names in the News: People shaping the future of Lake Area business

Local News

LSU bullpen implodes as Texas snaps Tigers’ win streak

McNeese Sports

A double downer: Cowboys lose NCAA game, Wade

Local News

BREAKING: Wade inks 6-year deal with NC State

Local News

Community meeting on CO2 projects set for Monday

Jim Beam

Jim Beam column:Veteran firings sorry episode

McNeese Sports

Guzzardo new MSU women’s coach

Informer

The Informer: ‘Sleeping giant’ that was Chennault awakened in 1986

Local News

LSU tops Texas, Tigers now alone atop the SEC

life

PHOTO GALLERY: Special Olympics Spring Track and Field

Jim Gazzolo

Gazzolo column: Redemption tour for more than Wade

Local News

Another giant lay ahead

Crime

3/21: Calcasieu Parish Sheriff announces arrest list

life

Grab hope by the reins: Fundraiser benefits ailing horses

Local News

McNeese’s NCAA Tournament game win about more than just basketball

Local News

Jim Gazzolo Notebook: Breed back in old stomping grounds

Local News

Detained Columbia University student activist Mahmoud Khalil appears in immigration case

Local News

Higgins letter says he will not run for Senate

life

Touch A Truck returns: Free, family-friendly fun set for Saturday

Local News

Kevin Lambert teaches history as a guide to living

Local News

Jennings mayoral candidates Guinn, Adams outline visions for city