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Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days Changes Ownership

“SOLD!!”

Ms. Angela Merrit, the Administrative Assistant at Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days & RV Park in Arcadia announced that ownership of Louisiana’s largest swap meet changed ownership during an auction held earlier today.  Mr. Ray Worsham sold the 130+ acre property to the highest bidder for a reported figure of over $600,000 to Jimmie D. and Rhonda Sapp of Benton, LA.

Ms. Merrit said that while many specifics are still unknown, to dispel rumors to the contrary, the current staff would remain and that the park itself would also remain unchanged, as the new owners have expressed interest in leaving the park just as it is.

A special party is being planned on June 16th, 2012 to say ‘So Long!’ to Mr. Ray Worsham who bought the property about 4 years ago, and to welcome the new owners.  

To learn more about the Bonnie & Clyde saga and the swap meet that has gained equal notoriety, go to our previously published article about the locally celebrated 75th anniversary (2009) of the capture of the infamous couple that took place right here in Bienville Parish, Louisiana by clicking here: “Locals Capitalize On Bonnie & Clyde”

 

The Fount Online News

(c) 2012 –All Rights Reserved

Eat Right With Color

LSU AgCenter Bienville Parish Extension Celebrates “National Nutrition Month” With A Youth Nutrition Program At Arcadia HS 9AM March 26, 2011

EAT RIGHT WITH COLOR

March is National Nutrition Month, which is sponsored annually by the American Dietetic Association.  The theme for March 2011 is “Eat Right With Color”.

To eat right with color, begin with fruits and vegetables.  Fruits and vegetables come in terrific colors – red, purple, orange, green, and white – but their real beauty lies in what’s inside.   Compared with people who consume a diet with only small amounts of fruits and vegetables, those who eat more generous amounts as part of a healthful diet are likely to have reduced risk of chronic diseases, including stroke, high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes and certain cancers.

For optimum health, create a colorful plate with these naturally beautiful hues:

  • Tomatoes, red peppers, cranberries, cherries and other naturally red foods will help maintain a healthy heart, memory function and urinary tract health.
  • Blue/purple foods such as blueberries, purple grapes, purple cabbage and others help maintain healthy aging, memory and urinary tract health.
  • Yellow/orange foods like carrots, sweet potatoes, yellow peppers, oranges and pumpkins also help maintain a healthy heart, immune system and night-vision.
  • Green fruits and vegetables like spinach, broccoli, kiwi, green grapes and green peppers help prevent macular degeneration and cataracts.
  • White foods like bananas, garlic, apples, onions and cauliflower help maintain heart health and lower the risk of some cancers.

Take a good look at your dinner plate.  Vegetables, fruits and whole grains should take up the largest portion of your plate.  Be sure to use a normal or small size plate and not a platter.

Instead of a high calorie snack from a vending machine, bring some ready-to-eat vegetables or fruit from home.  One snack-size bag of corn chips (1 ounce) has the same number of calories as a small apple, 1 cup of whole strawberries and 1 cup of carrots with ¼ cup of low-calorie dip.  Select one or two of these choices instead of the chips, and you will have a nutritious, satisfying snack with fewer calories.

MyPyramid recommends 2 cups fruit and 2 ½ cups of vegetables each day based on a 2,000-calorie-a-day meal plan.  For the most health benefits, consume a wide variety of fruits and vegetables of different colors each day.  Remember “5 A DAY THE COLOR WAY”!

SAVE THE DATE:  Saturday, March 26, 9:00 a.m. – 12:00, Arcadia School Focusing On Childhood Obesity…A Healthier YOUth, Sponsored by Links, Inc.  This volunteer service organization is planning an event you will not want to miss focusing on health and services to youth.  Please visit the LSU AgCenter Exhibit for more information to take home on “Eating Right With Color”.  I hope to see your family there!

Diane Uzzle, Financial Resource Management Agent, Family Consumer Sciences, LSU AgCenter, 2710 Maple Street, Arcadia, Louisiana.

 

Membership and participation in activities are open to all citizens without regard to race, colors or national origin, gender, religion, age, veteran status, or disability.  If you have a disability which requires special assistance for your participation in a meeting, please contact the Bienville Parish Extension Office at (318) 263-7400 three days prior to the meeting.

Greater Faith COGIC Celebrates 16th Anniversary

Pastor McClendon Winbush Sr., Greater Faith COGIC, Arcadia LA

On Sunday March 6, 2011 Greater Faith Church Of God In Christ of Arcadia, LA celebrated her 16th church anniversary.  McClendon Winbush Sr. is Pastor and Sister JoAnn Scruggs is the Assistant Pastor of Greater Faith.  Pastor Winbush also pastors Whites Temple in Shreveport, LA.

Among many friends and guests in attendance, included were members from the Eden Worship Center of Shreveport, LA. Their choir sang A & B selections and their pastor Bishop J. Gregory Jones preached from Revelation 2:1-5 a sermon entitled “The Cheating Church.”

We pray you are as blessed as we were by this powerful and anointed Word of God. The sermon in its entirety can be found in 2 parts below. Blessings To You & Yours —Rev. David J. Dill

DVD’s are available: david@thefount.org

LSU AgCenter Offers Free Tax Advice

Diane Uzzle, LSU AgCenter, Financial Resource Management Agent Submits Info Regarding Federal Incentive Payments for Low-Income Workers

The 2010 Earned Income Credit

The Federal Earned Income Credit (EIC) is the largest federal aid program available to working low-income families and individuals.  Families who qualify can receive a lump sum payment of up to $5,666 at tax time, or advance payments to increase their wages during the year.  Most families use this payment to pay down their bills, make consumer purchases, increase emergency fund savings, purchase or repair a car, or pay for education.  Unfortunately, in one study, only 62% of eligible working families claimed this federal incentive payment.

For 2010, there is both a federal and a state EIC for workers in Louisiana.  The Louisiana Department of Children and Family Services says benefits through their office are NOT affected by claiming the EIC.  Many legal working immigrants may also qualify if they meet eligibility requirements.  It is important to know that if workers were eligible for the EIC in previous years, and did not claim the EIC, then they may also be eligible to file amended tax returns and claim the payment for prior qualifying years.

Federal and state tax return forms must be completed to claim this EIC payment.  The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has trained tax preparers to complete the necessary federal and state forms for FREE at IRS VITA (Volunteer Income Tax Assistance) sites all over Louisiana.  To locate the nearest FREE tax preparation IRS VITA site, simply call 2-1-1.

If you want to complete the forms yourself, you do not have to itemize deductions in order to claim the EIC.  Workers without children file Form 1040EZ.  Workers with children can file Form 1040A or Form 1040.  File Schedule EIC with your tax form to determine your Earned Income Credit amount.

How is eligibility determined?  Earned income and adjusted gross income, either from earnings from a business owned by the worker or from wages paid to the worker by an employer, must each be less than:

$43,352 for singles ($48,362 for married filing jointly) with 3 or more qualifying children

$40,363 for singles ($45,373 for married filing jointly) with 2 qualifying children

$35,535 for singles ($40,545 for married filing jointly) with 1 qualifying child

$13,460 for singles ($18,470 for married filing jointly) with no children

Tax Year 2010 (filing in 2011) maximum credit:

$5,666 with 3 or more qualifying children

$5,036 with 2 qualifying children

$3,050 with 1 qualifying child

$457 with no children

 

Income from investments must be $3,100 or less for the year.

The maximum of EIC advance that workers can receive from their employers is $1,830.  Workers can file a W-5 form with their employer, each year, to get some Earned Income Credit payment in their paychecks.

Qualifying children are sons or daughters, adopted children, step or foster children, brothers or sisters, half or step brothers or sisters, or descendants of any of them, a grandchild, a niece, or a nephew.  Children have to be under 19 years old, or under 24 and a full-time student, or any age and disabled.  In 2010 the child had to have lived with the worker for at least 6 months, or all year if a foster child.

The EIC eligibility rules for workers without children (single adults or married couples) specify that the worker must be at least 25 but under age 65 to qualify for the EIC.

Get on Board for J.E.T. Now

LSU AgCenter of Bienville Parish Announces JET 2011 Summer Youth Program

The J.E.T. (Jurors Empowering Teens) program is on the runway for the fourth year preparing for takeoff!  This three time award winning program is sponsored by the Bienville Parish Police Jury and implemented by the LSU AgCenter Extension agents, Elizabeth Lynn and Diane Uzzle.

The J.E.T. program provides the first job experience to many Bienville Parish youth.  It not only provides first time employment experience, but also focuses on the development of financial management skills, workforce preparedness, and ethics in the workplace.

All youth, 16-18 years of age, in Bienville Parish are eligible to apply and interview for the program.  Applications are available through school principals, counselors, 4-H leaders, LSU AgCenter Extension Office, or Bienville Parish Police Jury Office.  Applications are due no later than April 15 and interviews will be held on April 25 at the Bienville Extension Office, 2710 Maple Street, Arcadia.

Three youth will be hired from each policy jury district with no more than 21 youth being eligible for the 2011 J.E.T. program.   The program begins on July 1, 2011 and will end with a reception honoring our youth on July 29, 2011.

Youth employees will be working at a variety of public and private businesses throughout the parish.   Opportunities for skills/interests assessments, exploring careers, and tours of Louisiana Technical College and local universities will assist youth in setting goals for the future.

A variety of guest speakers will also address the youth employees to provide education on the range of career choices available, banking information, insurance, and tax information.  The Jurors Empowering Teens program provides youth the tools they need to have a smooth career flight and a secure landing.

Local businesses interested in partnering with this program may contact the Bienville Parish Police Jury Office at 318-263-2019 or the LSU AgCenter Extension Office at 318-263-7400.

Membership and participation in activities are open to all citizens without regard to race, colors or national origin, gender, religion, age, veteran status, or disability.  If you have a disability which requires special assistance for your participation in a meeting, please contact the Bienville Parish Extension Office at (318) 263-7400 three days prior to the meeting.

Crash Claims Life Of Athens Man

LOUISIANA           STATE              POLICE
COURTESY      LOYALTY       SERVICE


Colonel Michael D. Edmonson, Superintendent

News Release – March 2, 2011

Late Night Crash Claims Life of Athens Man

Claiborne Parish – On March 1, 2011, at 11:44 p.m., Louisiana State Police Troop G responded to a single vehicle crash on LA 518 just east of LA 9 in Claiborne Parish. The crash claimed the life of a 33-year-old man from Athens.

According to investigating troopers, David R. Sanders of Athens was traveling east on LA 518 in a 2004 GMC truck when for unknown reasons, the vehicle traveled off the right side of the roadway, struck a tree, and overturned.

Sanders was not wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash and was pronounced dead at the scene by the Claiborne Parish Coroner.

Routine toxicology tests results are pending and the crash remains under investigation.

Troop G troopers have investigated 5 fatal crashes for the year of 2011, which resulted in 5 fatalities.

Contact Information:
Tpr. Cordell Williams
Louisiana State Police
Public Affairs Unit
Office:  (318) 741-7411
cordell.williams@dps.la.gov

Locals Capitalize On Bonnie & Clyde

Welcome To Arcadia

The word "arcadia" signifies idyllic contementment.
The word “arcadia” signifies idyllic contementment.

Capitalizing On The Legend of Bonnie & Clyde

After seventy five years, there’s still a great fascination of the Bonnie & Clyde saga held by locals and tourists alike. While most of the media and tourist attention has shined on the tiny Bienville Parish town of Gibsland, LA where the Authentic Bonnie and Clyde Museum and the Bonnie and Clyde Ambush Museum are located, the Bienville Parish seat of Arcadia, LA has its own place of notoriety in the Bonnie & Clyde story.

Both Gibsland and Arcadia, LA are located eight miles apart along Interstate 20 in the northern part of the state, approximately midway between Shreveport and Monroe, LA. The fateful ambush occurred on May 23, 1934 several miles south of Gibsland along LA-Hiway 154 near the village of Sailes, LA.

Arcadia’s Historic Train Depot

The Arcadia Train Depot is now an historic meeting hall.
The Arcadia Train Depot is now an historic meeting hall.
The Arcadia/Bienville Parish Chamber of Commerce hosts the Train Depot Museum
The Arcadia/Bienville Parish Chamber of Commerce hosts the Train Depot Museum
Located behind the Train Depot is the Veteran's Memorial.
Located behind the Train Depot is the Veteran’s Memorial.

Who says “Crime Doesn’t Pay”?

Even though at times Gibsland seems to get more of the limelight for being the closest town to the ambush, when it comes to generating municipal tax revenue Gibsland is not the only local town capitalizing on Bonnie and Clyde’s fame.

Gibsland’s commemorative Bonnie & Clyde Festival is held annually this time every year, while the swap meet in Arcadia is a monthly event that makes the Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days RV Park a very integral part of Arcadia’s overall economy year round. Local business owners say, “So goes the Trade Days, so goes Arcadia.”

Covering 130 acres in the piney woods of Bienville Parish, the Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days and RV Park in Arcadia is the largest swap meet in Louisiana as vendors and bargain hunters travel from Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas and Mississippi to make great deals, enjoy beautiful scenery and fish.

Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days and RV Park

Trade Days is held 3 days per month.   RV Park is open year round.
Trade Days is held 3 days per month. RV Park is open year round.

One Local Man’s Story

Ray Worsham, owner of the Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days RV Park in Arcadia vividly recalled his mother’s account of how she was among the hundreds if not thousands of people who immediately lined up to see the dead bodies of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow after the bullet riddled “Death Car” had been towed to the Conger’s Funeral Home in Arcadia with their bodies still inside.

Worsham, also noted that the funeral home was located at the rear of a furniture store and to keep the furniture from fading, the lower half of all the windows were painted. This forced curious people on the outside to climb a ladder in order to get a gruesome view of the bodies.

Former Location of Conger’s Funeral Home

Arcadia rennovated this former 'death' site on N. Railroad St. into a nice looking park.
Arcadia rennovated this former ‘death’ site on N. Railroad St. into a nice looking park.

Rain, Rain, Go Away – Come Again Some Other Day!

The 3-day monthly Trade Days event brings in a whopping draw of customers for the area’s gas stations, restaurants, antique stores, grocery/retail stores, and hotels in Arcadia, thus increasing the town’s tax revenue and boosting local morale.

However, the Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days has a knack for getting partially or completely rained on nearly every month! According to the testimony of its vendors and owner this month of May was the first profitable swap meet in all of 2009 so far, as the weather was finally favorable enough for people to shop during the day. The rain only fell during non-peak hours.

Some locals have gone so far to say that the bad weather (which seems to come like clock-work nearly every Trade Days weekend) is due to a curse on the area for continuously glorifying the Barrow Gang who was known to have killed at least a dozen people during their crime spree. Others believe it just rains a lot.

Worsham, park owner since 2006 dispells the myth by saying he has never heard of any criticisms about glorifying the criminals or for not giving proper condolences or acknowledgement to the families of the Barrow Gang’s victims.

Arcadia’s commercial districts

Exit 69 off I-20 between Shreveport & Monroe, LA
Exit 69 off I-20 between Shreveport & Monroe, LA
N. Railroad St. Downtown Arcadia
N. Railroad St. Downtown Arcadia
Arcadia's Historic Legion Building
Arcadia’s Historic Legion Building
Arcadia Town Hall
Arcadia Town Hall

Arcadia’s Turn To Capitalize On Bonnie & Clyde

When the Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days and RV Park first opened on a very hot sunny day in September of 1990, current Arcadia Mayor Eugene Smith stated that the streets of Arcadia were so jam packed, cars were lined up along I-20 to get off at the Arcadia exit.

The main thoroughfare leading from the interstate through town to the Trade Days Park moved at such a snail’s pace, that some people who didn’t know how long the 6 mile trek was began to walk on foot because it seemed faster than trying to drive.

Unfortunately for some who managed to overcome such obstacles, if they didn’t get to the park early that day, it was a tough day indeed because by late afternoon, the Trade Days vendors sold out and the concessions stands and park staff ran out of ice, food, toilet paper, everything!

Ever since that first weekend, the Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days RV Park in Arcadia opens Friday, Saturday and Sunday on the weekend before the 3rd Monday of each month. A few people in this area still occasionally have a hard time figuring out exactly what the Trade Days dates will fall on from month to month.

However, the weekend before the 3rd Monday schedule was set up in order not to conflict with another hugely popular swap meet in Canton, TX.

Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days and RV Park

Park Office
Park Office
Fishing anyone?
Fishing anyone?

On The Mend

Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days and RV Park’s huge initial success has waned in recent years, but the new owner is hopeful for a recovery as the nation’s economy recovers. The Trade Days owner believes that the economy has had a direct affect on the market’s success as well as a major shift in the types of items being sold, namely antiques.

Owner Ray Worsham says “The old style antiques that were very unique like the real ice boxes once used as refrigerators, porcelain figurines, dolls with porcelain heads and hands were a major draw to the park. Those items got snatched up during the 90′s and will stay in people’s houses until the Gen-Xer’s have a chance to clean out Mom & Dad’s stuff.”

He also says that the older generation of vendors is dying out: “Even the old-school Baby Boom vendors who have been rock steady at Bonnie & Clyde Trade Days over the years have begun to scale down, and in some cases not show up at all for several months due to the terrible economy.”

Louisiana’s overall economy in general is not as bad as the nation’s economy, but BCTD’s out-of-state vendors were drastically affected by $4/gal gasoline last year, and many lost the incentive to travel such long distances, especially with so much unfavorable weather this year. But overall, the Trade Days is still a major draw, and appears to be making a comeback.

The very names themselves “Bonnie & Clyde” have a particular appeal to people both locally and abroad. The BCTD Park has an original 1934 Ford similar to the Death Car on the grounds, as well as some other B&C memorabilia, including some original photos of the notorious couple.

The Arcadia/Bienville Parish Chamber of Commerce located at the rear of the Train Depot also has some fascinating Bonnie & Clyde memorabilia.

Pond And Vendor Area

Another Great Place To Escape
Another Great Place To Escape

The Bonnie & Clyde Phenomena

During those days the legend of Bonnie & Clyde was a great mystery that seemed to have gotten many people’s minds off the Great Depression, at least momentarily. Bonnie Parker’s romantic involvement with the likes of Clyde Barrow, and her association with a gang of notorious killers seemed so unlikely and brought great intrigue.

For a long time only a few people knew exactly what the couple looked like. There were no fax machines, computers or internet, GPS systems, electronic credit card purchase trails, or photo-capable cell phones available to broadcast the Barrow Gang’s profile or track their sporadic movements.

By the time their deeds were publicized on the front page of local newspapers, they’d be well on their way to who-knew-where for the next job. Bonnie & Clyde were known to drive long distances in the back wood areas and to criss-cross from state to state in order to avoid capture.

But one day towards the end of their crime spree and in their haste to escape an ambush, this elusive couple unintentionally left behind some rolls of undeveloped photo film in a stolen car which they abandoned for the police to find.

Shortly thereafter the infamous photos that we see today began to appear across the country. And when the photos came out, some were surprised to find that Bonnie & Clyde looked a bit older than being in their early to mid twenties.

Picture of an original photo: Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow

So THAT'S What They Look Like...
So THAT’S What They Look Like…

Like Another World

Aside from general admiration of their boldness and the love story element, it is this writer’s opinion that part of the nostalgia of Bonnie & Clyde even today has to do with how it keeps us connected to that day in time in America: void of air conditioning, super highways, hospital emergency rooms and television.

Even today, the place marking where Bonnie & Clyde were gunned down is remote; deep in the piney woods of Louisiana where cell phones are still known to fail.

LA Hiway 154 near Sailes, LA

Northbound view of Hiway 154 from site of the B&C Ambush Marker
Northbound view of Hiway 154 from site of the B&C Ambush Marker
Southbound view of Hiway 154 from site of the B&C Ambush Marker
Southbound view of Hiway 154 from site of the B&C Ambush Marker

Running On Empty? (Please, Not Out Here!)

While attending the 75th anniversary of the Bonnie & Clyde ambush reenactment deep in the piney woods along LA-Hiway 154, I briefly spoke with a friendly gentleman who asked for directions to the nearest gas station.

He had led his family in a 2-car caravan from Houston, TX, some 300 miles away, and I knew just how he felt because both of us had approached the ambush marker from the same backwoods area without a gas station in sight.

I was a bit low on gas too because since Gibsland was blocked off from the interstate side that day, I had to approach the ambush marker from the opposite direction. Not realizing how much farther it was by taking the long way around, I admit being a bit nerve wracked as the needle on my gas gauge seemed to dip past the 1/4 mark like a sweeping second hand on a clock!

Site of the Bonnie & Clyde Ambush Marker

The marker was a bit defaced, but still intact with commemorative flowers.
The marker was a bit defaced, but still intact with commemorative flowers.

An Eye Witness Account

Another friendly local gentleman by the name of Bill Holmes, now in his early eighties lives a few miles from the ambush marker just outside Sailes, LA. He said that as a young boy, after walking 7 miles from a nearby community that he too lined up to see the bloody bodies of Bonnie & Clyde at the funeral home.

Mr. Holmes also recounted that the people of Sailes often talked about how the current location of the now famous ambush marker on LA Hiway 154 is not the actual location of the ambush.

They claim the ambush actually took place about 1 mile south at a certain bend on the same road. If that is true, I can see why this might be the case because as the photos above indicate, the topography of the road is very conducive to accommodating a large group of tourists seeking to view the ambush marker at it’s current location.

Ready For Reeanctment

Reeanctment Vehicle
Reeanctment Vehicle

In Conclusion

On May 23, 2009, there were many people from all around to celebrate this 75th anniversary of the Bonnie & Clyde ambush. They anxiously awaited to view the scheduled reenactment at the site of the ambush marker.

Even though the local municipalities of Arcadia, LA and Gibsland, LA benefit financially from the notoriety of Bonnie & Clyde, despite what some may think, I believe there is nothing sinister about it. This is a normal and expected trend for any town that hosts an indigenous tourist attraction.

Picture of Original Photo: Clyde Barrow 1934

Toting a Brown Automatic Rifle
Toting a Brown Automatic Rifle

Crime Just Doesn’t Pay

It is believed by some that Bonnie Parker never actually killed anybody, but of course was guilty by association and participated in the crimes by loading the gang members’ weapons.

Whether she pulled any triggers or not, during previous encounters with the law Clyde Barrow proved himself to be a cold-blooded killer if given even the slightest advantage, and the heroic ambush posse of Bienville Parish would take no chances with either of them.

Although the reenactment Ford was different than the actual Death Car (notice how the doors open from the front), it was an awesome and sobering experience to imagine what it must have been like when 6 law enforcement officials shot first and asked no questions that fateful day.


Picture of Original Photo

The bullet-riddled Death Car
The bullet-riddled Death Car
The above article is a re-print of the original posted for the Local 75th Anniversary Celebration of The Bonnie & Clyde Ambush, May 23, 2009
Copyright 2011 –The Fount
All Rights Reserved

2012 Presidential Candidate Visits Arcadia

Arcadia Mayor Meets With 2012 Presidential Candidate John Davis

Arcadia Mayor Eugene Smith & 2012 Presidential Candidate John Davis

The 2012 campaign season has begun, and on January 12, 2011 Arcadia, LA was on the list of stops for Republican candidate and Tea Party supporter John Davis.

Mr. Davis is a small business owner of over 30 years from Grand Junction, Colorado where his family has been for 6 generations.  He is the owner of Blue Star Industries,  a family man and proud patriot seeking to raise funds for his presidential campaign.

Mr. Davis’s theme is “Let’s Fix America” and he carries a very large red, white & blue star spangled pipe wrench to break the ice as he discusses his pledge to balance the budget, uphold the U.S. Constitution, enhance border control, implement work visa programs and provide  citizenship for law abiding aliens.

“We need to have common sense practical approaches to solve problems” said Davis.

Arcadia Mayor Eugene Smith told Mr. Davis that even though he is a Democrat he shares the same conservative approach to solve problems as the Republicans.

Davis expressed his views in the Arcadia Town Hall meeting room while he and his family enjoyed some venison chili prepared by Mayor Smith’s staff.

2012 Presidential Candidate John Davis & Family

Pedestrian Killed I-20 Bienville Parish

2011: Second Pedestrian Killed On I-20 In Just 6 Days – Beloved, Please Be CAREFUL Out There ♥

LOUISIANA           STATE              POLICE
COURTESY      LOYALTY       SERVICE


Colonel Michael D. Edmonson, Superintendent

News Release – January 7, 2011

Fatal Crash on Interstate 20 Claims the Life of a Pedestrian

Bienville Parish – On January 6, 2011, at 11:47 p.m., Louisiana State Police Troop G responded to a single vehicle crash involving a pedestrian on Interstate 20, at milepost 63, in Bienville Parish. The crash claimed the life of a man from Jamestown, CA.

According to investigating troopers, a 65-year-old man from Jamestown, CA was traveling west on Interstate 20 in a 2005 Chevrolet pickup when, for unknown reasons, he pulled over to the shoulder and stopped the vehicle. Upon exiting the vehicle from the driver’s side, he stepped into the right westbound lane of travel and was struck by a 2007 Peterbilt tractor trailer operated by 44-year-old Jeremiah Gesco of Clarksville, TN.

The pedestrian suffered fatal injuries and was pronounced dead at the scene by the Bienville Parish Coroner.

The name of the deceased person is being withheld until his family can be notified.

Gesco was wearing a seat belt at the time of the crash and was not injured.

Although Gesco has not been cited with any violations, routine toxicology test results are pending and the crash remains under investigation.

Contact Information:
Tpr. Cordell Williams
Louisiana State Police
Public Affairs Unit
Office:  (318) 741-7411
cordell.williams@dps.la.gov
www.lsp.org

Deer Accident Claims Life In Bienville Parish

LOUISIANA           STATE              POLICE
COURTESY      LOYALTY       SERVICE


Colonel Michael D. Edmonson, Superintendent

News Release – December 29, 2010

Unrestrained Teenager Killed in Single Vehicle Crash

Bienville Parish – On December 29, 2010, at 3:20 a.m., Louisiana State Police Troop G responded to a single vehicle crash on LA 155 just south of LA 4 in Bienville Parish. The crash claimed the life of a 17-year-old teenager from Bienville, LA.

According to investigating troopers, 17-year-old Nicki N. Bolyer of Bienville and passenger, 18-year-old Dlarious J. Venzant of Saline, were both traveling north on LA 155 in a 2000 Pontiac Firebird when a deer entered the roadway. Bolyer swerved to avoid striking the deer and lost control of the vehicle. The vehicle traveled off the left side of the roadway and overturned, and Bolyer was ejected.

Bolyer was unrestrained at the time of the crash and was pronounced deceased at the scene by the Bienville Parish Coroner.

Venzant was also unrestrained at the time of the crash but was not injured.

Routine toxicology test results are pending and the crash remains under investigation.

Troop G Troopers have investigated 41 fatal crashes for the year of 2010, which resulted in 47 fatalities.

Contact Information:
Tpr. Cordell Williams
Louisiana State Police
Public Affairs Unit
Office:  (318) 741-7411
cordell.williams@dps.la.gov
www.lsp.org