

FAA reducing air traffic by 10%
Move aimed at maintaining safety during shutdown
BY MATTHEW DALY, JOSH FUNK and RIO YAMAT Associated Press
WASHINGTON The Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday that it would reduce air traffic by 10% across 40 “high-volume” markets beginning Friday morning to maintain safety during the ongoing government shutdown. The reduction stands to impact
thousands of flights nationwide because the FAA directs more than 44,000 flights daily, including commercial passenger flights, cargo planes and private aircraft. Air traffic controllers have been working unpaid since the shutdown began Oct. 1. With some calling out of work, staffing shortages during some shifts have led to flight delays at a number of U.S. airports.
ä Trump lashes out at GOP senators to end shutdown. Page 3A
ä Money removed from some Louisiana SNAP accounts. Page 1B
Citing growing staffing pressures, FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said the agency would not wait for a crisis to act.
Showdown looms over controversial pogy boats

Proposal could ease restrictions on industry
BY MIKE SMITH Staff writer
A new showdown is brewing over Louisiana’s controversial menhaden fishing, with another round set to play out in Baton Rouge on Thursday when state commissioners consider a proposal to again alter industry regulations.
Recreational fishermen and conservation groups are girding for what they expect will be a proposal to partially ease the half-mile buffer zone off the coast where menhaden fishing is banned, the result of a painstakingly negotiated compromise last year They say easing the buffer in those locations will damage Louisiana’s fragile coast and ecosystem, while the industry argues that the current rules have eaten
BY MEGHAN FRIEDMANN Staff writer

too deeply into their bottom lines, putting jobs and livelihoods at risk.
Both sides will arrive at Thursday’s meeting of the state’s Wildlife and Fisheries Commission with scientific data in hand to back their positions.
The details of what will be proposed are not yet clear, though clues have emerged.
The state Department of Wildlife and Fisheries said it could not pro-
federal government says it received a judge’s order blocking ICE from deporting a man with claims to U.S. citizenship — but it had already put him on a plane to Laos four hours earlier Now it’s not clear whether U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement knows where Chant-

“We can’t ignore it,” he said. Bedford and Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said they would meet with airline executives later Wednesday to determine how to safely implement the reduction in flights. Until then, both declined to name the affected markets. Bedford said a list would be released sometime Thursday
vide advance information on what will be proposed because the request for potential changes had come from commission Chair Kevin Sagrera. The agency also did not respond to a public records request for the details. Sagrera did not respond to requests for comment.
Sagrera, speaking at the conclusion of the commission’s October meeting, surprised some by calling on the department’s staff to come up with a proposal to alter the buffer zone for menhaden, commonly known as pogy His request followed a recently completed study of the industry’s bycatch, or fish killed besides pogies, that both sides held up as proof of their positions.
“I’d like to charge the department on working with the menhaden industry and the rec(reational) industry on modifications to the menhaden buffer zone, leaving in place the enhanced buffer zones that we have right now
ä See BOATS, page 6A

“If the pressures continue to build even after we take these measures,” Bedford said, “we’ll come back and take additional measures.”
The Associated Press on Wednesday sent requests for comment on the FAA’s decision to major U.S. airlines, including Delta, United and American Airlines.
Southwest Airlines said it was evaluating potential impacts to its schedule and would reach out
Downtown residential project faces opposition
DDA will seek legal action over zoning board decision
BY ANGELINE MATHEWS Contributing
writer
Members of Lafayette’s Downtown Development Authority will seek legal action regarding a residential project planned at 444 Jefferson St. Its board voted unanimously Wednesday morning to pursue legal proceedings and hire counsel regarding a decision from the Lafayette Consolidated Government’s Board of Zoning Adjustment’s approval of the project. At issue is the lack of habitable space required for buildings along Jefferson Street as required by the Lafayette Development Code. The project, led by local developer Cliff Guidry, was approved by the zoning board in September without addressing the issue.

Guidry is planning to demolish the current building that most recently housed The Handy Stop Market & Café and build a 21-unit, three-level building of mostly condominiums with 23 parking spaces on the ground level.
Guidry amended his project to include screens and artwork along the bottom floor wall but says he can’t trade parking spots for the space required by the development code, which requires spaces for businesses or offices to entice foot traffic in the

RENDERING The project at 444 Jefferson St. would be a 21-unit, three-level building of mostly condominiums.
Despite judge’s order, ICE detainee held at Angola deported to Laos ä See DEPORTED, page 5A
hila Souvannarath is, and the government says Louisiana’s federal Middle District Court cannot order him returned because it has no jurisdiction over Laos, according to a Nov 3 court filing by an assistant
U.S. attorney The government says it was acting on a 2006 removal order indicating Souvannarath became deportable to Thailand or Laos following a criminal conviction. In immigration records, the U.S. government alleged he

STAFF FILE PHOTOS By CHRIS GRANGER
Westbank Fishing employees pull in their giant nets as they catch menhaden, commonly known as pogy, in the Gulf off the coast of south Louisiana in July
Menhaden fill the hold of a boat as it returns to the dock at Westbank Fishing in Empire.
Miss. Democrats appear to break supermajority
JACKSON, Miss. Mississippi Democrats appear to have broken a Republican supermajority in the state Senate, claiming victories in two Republican-held districts that were redrawn after a court ruled they should have greater representation for Black voters.
Unofficial county election results show Democrats leading, but vote totals may change as absentee ballots can still be received up to five days after the election Republicans will still have at least a three-fifths majority in the chamber
In Mississippi, a three-fifths majority of the House and Senate is needed to pass tax bills or issue bonds to borrow money A two-thirds majority in both chambers is needed to approve proposed amendments to the state constitution and override a veto from the governor
The Democrats’ gains come after a panel of three federal judges ordered the state to redraw some of its legislative districts, saying the state’s 2022 legislative map diluted the power of Black voters. The judges ordered legislators to draw majority Black Senate districts around DeSoto County in the northwestern corner of the state and around Hattiesburg in the south, and a new majority Black House district in Chickasaw and Monroe counties in the northeastern part of the state.
The court-ordered reshaping of voting districts played a significant role in Democrats’ victories, said Heather Williams, president of the national Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee.
“When there are representative maps — and there is a process that actually gives voters a choice of who their elected officials are — we can connect with voters and win,” said Williams, adding: “Mississippi was a prime example of that.”
The Mississippi Republican Party Chairman Mike Hurst called the results “disappointing.”
“Republicans were the underdogs in these gerrymandered districts drawn by an unelected court,” Hurst wrote in a statement.
Meta told to stop using ‘PG-13’ as description
The Motion Picture Association is asking Meta to stop referring to content shown to teen accounts on Instagram as “guided by PG-13 ratings,” saying it is misleading and could erode trust in its movie ratings system. A lawyer on behalf of the MPA sent Meta Platforms a ceaseand-desist letter asking the tech giant to “immediately and permanently disassociate its Teen Accounts and AI tools from the MPA’s rating system.”
Instagram had announced last month that its teen accounts will be will be restricted to seeing PG-13 content by default
The Motion Picture Association, which runs the film rating system that was established nearly 60 years ago, said at the time that it was not contacted by Meta prior to its announcement
The MPA says Meta’s claims claims that its Teen Accounts will be “guided by” PG-13 ratings and that its Teen Account content settings are “generally aligned with movie ratings for ages 13+” are “false and highly misleading.” The association’s movie ratings, which range from G to NC-17, are done by parents who watch entire movies and evaluate them to come up with a rating.
“Meta’s attempts to restrict teen content literally cannot be ‘guided by’ or ‘aligned with’ the MPA’s PG-13 movie rating because Meta does not follow this curated process,” the association’s letter says “Instead, Meta’s content restrictions appear to rely heavily on artificial intelligence or other automated technology measures.”
A story in Wednesday’s edition misspelled the name of LSU Board of Supervisors member Laurie Aronson. The Advocate | The Times-Picayune regrets the error
Engine fell off plane in Ky. crash
Death toll rises to 12
BY BRUCE SCHREINER, HALLIE GOLDEN and DYLAN LOVAN Associated Press
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A UPS cargo plane’s left wing caught fire and an engine fell off just before it crashed and exploded after takeoff in Kentucky a federal official said Wednesday, offering the first investigative details a disaster that killed at least 12 people, including a child.
First responders, meanwhile, searched for more victims, a day after the crash at UPS Worldport, the company’s global aviation hub in Louisville, though Gov. Andy Beshear said finding survivors seemed unlikely. The inferno consumed the enormous aircraft and spread to nearby businesses.
After being cleared for takeoff, a large fire developed in the left wing, said Todd Inman, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is leading the investigation.
The plane gained enough altitude to clear the fence at the end of the runway before crashing just outside Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport, Inman told reporters. Airport security video “shows the left engine detaching from the wing during the takeoff roll,” he said.
The cockpit voice recorder and data recorder were recovered and the engine was discovered on the airfield, Inman said.
“There are a lot of different parts of this airplane in a lot of different places,” he said, describing a debris field that stretched for half a mile.
The plane with three people aboard crashed about 5:15 p.m. Tuesday as it was departing for Honolulu from UPS Worldport at the Louisville airport.
The crash had a ripple effect, striking and causing smaller explosions at Kentucky Petroleum Recycling and hitting an auto salvage yard, Grade A Auto Parts. Beshear said the child who died was with a parent at the parts business.
University of Louisville Hospital said two people were in critical condition in the burn unit. Eighteen people were treated and discharged at that hospital or other health care centers.
The airport resumed operations on Wednesday, with at least one runway open.
Beshear said he did not know the status of the three UPS crew members aboard the McDonnell Douglas MD-11 made in 1991. It was not clear if they were being counted among the dead.
UPS said it was “terribly saddened.” The Louisville package handling facility is the company’s largest. The hub employs more than 20,000 people in the region, handles 300 flights daily and sorts more than 400,000 packages an hour
“We all know somebody who works at UPS,” Louisville Metro Council member Betsy Ruhe said.
Eric Richardson stood outside a police training academy, where people gathered waiting for word of their missing loved ones Tues-

Israel says Hamas hands over additional remains
BY WAFAA SHURAFA and SAM METZ
Associated Press
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip The Israeli military said Wednesday that Hamas has handed over remains believed to be of a deceased hostage to the Red Cross in Gaza, the latest step forward under the U.S.-brokered ceasefire.
The military said in a statement that the remains were being brought back into Israel. Ahead of the announcement, Hamas had returned the remains of 21 hostages to Israel under the terms of the ceasefire that began Oct. 10. If the latest remains are confirmed during forensic testing, that would leave the remains of six others in Gaza.
The announcement came after search operations in Gaza City’s Shijaiya neighborhood uncovered the remains. A bulldozer with an Egyptian flag flying on it was seen digging in a heavily destroyed area in Shijaiyah as masked members of Hamas’ military wing, the Qassam Brigades, guarded the area. ICRC vehicles were also present.
Hamas militants were seen later leaving the area with several bags seen in the back of a pickup truck. In late October, Egypt deployed a team of experts and heavy equipment to help search for hostages’ bodies.
Hamas has said recovering bodies is
complicated by the widespread devastation in the coastal enclave and has returned one to three bodies every few days. Israel has pushed to speed up the returns and in certain cases has said the remains were not those of hostages.
Earlier in the day Israel handed over the bodies of 15 more Palestinians, a day after militants in Gaza returned the body of Itay Chen, an Israeli soldier killed in the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that triggered Israel’s 2-year-old campaign in Gaza. So far, Israel has handed over 285 bodies, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross, which handles the exchanges.
Under the ceasefire deal, Hamas returned 20 living hostages to Israel on Oct. 13. The further exchanges of the dead are the central component of the initial phase of the U.S.-brokered agreement which requires Hamas return all hostage remains as quickly as possible
The exchanges have gone ahead even as Israel and Hamas have accused each other of breaching other terms of the deal.
Israeli officials have decried parts of the process as a violation of the agreement, accusing Hamas of handing over partial remains in some instances and staging the discovery of bodies in others.
Hamas has accused Israel of opening fire at civilians and restricting the flow of humanitarian aid into the territory
California Republicans sue over new U.S. House map approved by voters
BY TRÂN NGUYEN Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. California Republicans filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday to block a new U.S House map that California voters decisively approved at the ballot.
Proposition 50, backed by Democratic Gov Gavin Newsom, is designed to help Democrats flip as many as five congressional House seats in the midterm elections next year The lawsuit claims the map-makers improperly used race as a factor to favor Hispanic voters “without cause or evidence to justify it,” and asks the court to block the new boundaries ahead of the 2026 elections. The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, is funded by the National Republican Congressional Committee. The Supreme Court has ruled that
“states may not, without a compelling reason backed by evidence that was in fact considered, separate citizens into different voting districts on the basis of race,” the lawsuit says.
The complaint was filed by The Dhillon Law Group, the California-based firm started by Harmeet Dhillon, who is now an assistant attorney general for civil rights at the U.S. Department of Justice.
“The map is designed to favor one race of California voters over others,” Mike Columbo, whose plaintiffs include a state Republican lawmaker and 18 other voters, said Wednesday “This violates the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law and the right under the 15th Amendment.”
Newsom’s office said on a social media post that the state hasn’t reviewed the lawsuit but is confident the challenge will fail.
“Good luck, losers,” the post reads
day night. He said his girlfriend, who had been at a metal recycling business near the explosion, wasn’t answering her phone Her phone’s live location said she was still there. Bobby Whelan, Richardson’s friend, had been in front of her in line, but left minutes before the explosion. “We don’t even want to think about anything but the best,” Whelan said. “All our friends were there.” Jeff Guzzetti, a former federal crash investigator, said a number of things could have caused the fire as the UPS plane was rolling down the runway He said the crash bears a lot of similarities to one in 1979 when the left engine fell off an American Airlines jet as it was departing Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, killing 273 people. Guzzetti said this UPS plane and the American plane were equipped with the same General Electric engines. The 1979 crash involved a DC-10, but the MD-11
Judge in Comey case scolds prosecutors
BY ERIC TUCKER Associated Press
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — A federal judge on Wednesday ordered prosecutors in the criminal case of former FBI Director James Comey to produce to defense lawyers a trove of materials from the investigation, saying he was concerned the Justice Department’s position had been to “indict first” and investigate second.
Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick instructed prosecutors to produce by the end of the day on Thursday grand jury materials and other evidence that investigators seized during the investigation.
The order followed arguments in which Comey’s attorneys said they were at a disadvantage because they had not been able to yet review information that was collected years ago as part of an investigation into FBI media leaks.
Comey who attended the hearing but did not speak, is charged with lying to Congress in 2020 in a case
filed days after President Donald Trump appeared to urge his attorney general to prosecute the former FBI director and other perceived political enemies. Comey has pleaded not guilty, and his lawyers have argued that it’s a vindictive prosecution brought at the direction of the Republican president and must be dismissed. Fitzpatrick raised his own concerns, telling lawyers on Wednesday “The procedural posture of this case is highly unusual.” Comey’s defense lawyers had already asked for a transcript of grand jury proceedings, citing irregularities in the process and potential legal and factual errors that they said could result in the dismissal of the case. The judge granted that request and ordered prosecutors to produce to defense lawyers evidence seized through search warrants in 2019 and 2020 from Daniel Richman, a Columbia University law professor and close friend of Comey
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ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO By JEHAD ALSHRAFI Hamas militants and Egyptian workers search for the bodies of Israeli hostages Wednesday in the Shijaiyah neighborhood of Gaza City
Justices appear skeptical of unilateral tariffs
BY LINDSAY WHITEHURST Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A majority of Supreme Court justices seemed skeptical Wednesday about President Donald Trump ’s ability to unilaterally impose far-reaching tariffs, putting at risk a cornerstone of his agenda in the biggest legal test yet of his boundary-pushing presidency
Three conservative justices raised questions about whether an emergency law gives Trump nearlimitless power to set and change duties on imports, with potentially trillion-dollar implications for the global economy
The court’s three liberal justices also appeared dubious, so at least two conservative votes could limit Trump’s tariff power under the law It likely would not end it altogether, however.
The case is the first major piece of Trump’s agenda to come squarely before the nation’s highest court, which he helped shape by naming three of the nine justices in his first term The conservative majority has so far been reluctant to check his extraordinary flex of executive power in short-term orders in cases ranging from high-profile firings to major federal funding cuts. That could change with a more detailed ruling in the tariff case, though it will likely take weeks or months to come down.
The Constitution says Congress has the power to levy tariffs. But, in a first, the Trump administration argues that an emergency law allowing the president to regulate importation also includes imposing tariffs.
Justice Neil Gorsuch appeared concerned that could shift too much congressional power to the president on an issue that helped
BY LISA MASCARO and MARY CLARE JALONICK
Associated Press
WASHINGTON President Donald Trump lashed out Wednesday at Senate Republicans to end the government shutdown, now the longest ever at 36 days, blaming the impasse for the party’s defeat in closelywatched elections while Democrats, emboldened by their off-year victories, dug in for a fight.
Trump, whose first term at the White House set the previous government shutdown record, said this one was a “big factor, negative” in Tuesday’s races. He revived his demands for Republicans to end the Senate filibuster as a way to reopen government — something senators have refused to do.
Democrats hardened their resolve after sweeping governor’s races in Virginia and New Jersey and the mayor’s race in New York. The Democratic leaders said Trump needs to get serious about negotiating an end to the stalemate and resolve the problem of expiring health care subsidies that are central to the debate
“The election results ought to send a much needed bolt of lightning to Donald Trump that he should meet with us to end this crisis,” said Senate Minority Leader





spark the American Revolution.
“It’s a one-way ratchet toward the gradual but continual accretion of power in the executive branch and away from the people’s elected representatives,” he said, later suggesting the “power to reach into the pockets of the American people” must be “done locally, through our elected representatives.”
Chief Justice John Roberts raised questions about whether the emergency-power law allowed for tariffs on “any product, from any country in any amount for any length of time.”
Justice Amy Coney Barrett also pressed the government on the broad range of Trump’s action.
“Spain? France? I mean, I could see it with some countries but ex-
plain to me why as many countries needed to be subject to the reciprocal tariff policy.”
Solicitor General D. John Sauer said lopsided trade deals are a “global problem,” and Trump’s tariffs are primarily about regulating foreign commerce to be fairer, rather than raising money that would encroach on Congress’s taxation power. “The fact that they raise revenue is only incidental,” he said.
Within hours, though, Trump said his tariffs would help slash the deficit. “My tariffs are bringing in hundreds of billions of dollars,” he said in a speech to business leaders in Miami.
Trump has called the case one of the most important in the country’s history and said a ruling against
him would be catastrophic for the economy The arguments were about two sets of tariffs. The first came in February on imports from Canada, China and Mexico after Trump declared a national emergency over drug trafficking. The second involves the sweeping “reciprocal” tariffs on most countries that Trump announced in April. Multiple lawsuits have been filed over those tariffs, including a case from a dozen largely Democraticleaning states and another from small businesses focused on everything from plumbing supplies to women’s cycling apparel. They argue the 1977 emergency powers law Trump used doesn’t even mention tariffs, and no president
before has used it to impose them.
Lower courts have agreed that the tariffs were an illegal use of the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, though some appeals court judges did side with the Trump administration and found the law gives the president broad power
At the Supreme Court, much of the argument centered around the legal principle known as the major questions doctrine. It doomed some signature policies of former President Joe Biden, including his $500 billion student loan forgiveness program.
The challengers say Trump’s tariffs should get the same treatment, since they’ll have a much greater economic effect, raising some $3 trillion over the next decade.
The government said the tariffs are different because they’re a major part of Trump’s approach to foreign affairs, an area where the courts should not be secondguessing the president.
Attorney Neal Katyal, representing a group of small business challenging the tariffs, argued that Congress would cede control of tariffs for good if the court sided with Trump.
“We will never get this power back if the government wins this case. What president wouldn’t veto legislation to rein this power in and pull out the tariff power?” he said.
If Trump eventually loses at the high court, the aftermath could be complicated, if the government must issue refunds. So far, the Treasury has collected almost $90 billion from the import taxes the president has imposed under the emergency powers law Trump could still impose tariffs under other laws, though they have more limitations on the speed and severity with which he could act.
Chuck Schumer D-N.Y
Now into a sixth week, the shutdown and its impacts have deepened nationwide. The federal closures are disrupting the lives of millions of Americans with program cuts, flight delays and workers scrambling to make do without paychecks.
Expectations were high that the logjam would break once results were tallied in elections that were widely watched as a gauge of voter sentiment over Trump’s second term.
But Trump’s demands on Wednesday that Republican senators get rid of the filibuster as a way to end the shutdown complicated an already difficult situation. And Democrats facing divisions within their progressive and moderate ranks said the results showed that voters will reward them for the fight.
“It’s time for Republicans to do what they have to do, and that’s terminate the filibuster,” Trump said during a breakfast meeting Wednesday with GOP senators at the White House.
Trump told the GOP senators they could bring the shutdown to a close by ending the Senate rule, which requires a 60-vote threshold for advancing most legislation, and steamroll the Democratic minority Republicans now hold a 5347 majority in the Senate,


and Democrats have been able to block legislation that would fund the government, having voted more than a dozen times against.
That push from Trump is likely to go unheeded by Republican senators — Senate Majority Leader John Thune said later changing the filibuster does not have support and is “not happening” — but it could spur them to deal with the Democrats.
Trump’s approach to the shutdown stands in marked contrast to his first term, when the government was partially closed for 35 days over his demands for money to build the U.S.-Mexico border wall. At that time, he met publicly and negotiated with congressional leaders. Unable to secure the money, he relented in 2019.
This time, Trump stayed out of the shutdown debate, instead keeping a robust schedule of global travel and events, including at his private Mar-a-Lago club in Florida And it’s not just Trump declining to engage in talks. The congressional leaders are at a standoff, and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-Benton, sent lawmakers home in September after they approved their own funding bill, refusing further negotiations.
A “sad landmark,” Johnson said at a news conference Wednesday about the









record shutdown.
The speaker dismissed his party’s election losses and said Democrats need to drop their demands on health care until after the government reopens.
While talks have intensified among a loose coalition
of centrist senators trying to negotiate an end to the shutdown, Democrats are also doubtful that any deal struck with the Republicans will be upheld unless Trump also agrees. The Democrats said Trump’s postelection unease with the shutdown should spark talks. But they also question whether the Republican president will keep his word, particularly after the administration restricted SNAP food aid despite court orders to ensure funds are available to prevent hunger





ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO By MARK SCHIEFELBEIN Protesters stand outside the Supreme Court in Washington on Wednesday.
FAA
Continued from page 1A
as soon as possible to customers whose travel plans may be impacted.
“We continue to urge Congress to immediately resolve its impasse and restore the National Airspace System to its full capacity,” the carrier said.
The FAA sometimes slows down or stops flights from taking off
DEPORTED
Continued from page 1A
Souvannarath has never been to the country
The ACLU, one of the organizations representing Souvannarath, says he is now being kept in a jail in Laos, and that he was only able to tell his wife by borrowing a guard’s phone.
But the government “cannot confirm” that Souvannarath is in a Laos jail, Assistant U.S. Attorney Davis Rhorer wrote in the Nov 3 court filing.
Court records show that, while he was being held in the “Louisiana Lockup” on the grounds of the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, Souvannarath raised his U.S. citizenship claim in multiple filings on Oct. 16 and 17 several days before ICE took him to Alexandria on Oct. 20 for his deportation flight.
Then, on Oct. 23, Judge Shelly Dick found Souvannarath had a “substantial” citizenship claim and granted a temporary restraining order blocking the government from transferring him out of her jurisdiction or the country
PROJECT
Continued from page 1A
downtown area. The space must be at least 18 feet deep along Jefferson Street and 12 feet along Congress Street.
“I’m not going to sacrifice a parking space,” he said.
“The last thing I want is to try to sell a unit with no parking and somebody has to park two blocks away and in the rain carry groceries to their unit. It doesn’t fit.”
The zoning board’s decision, said DDA CEO Kevin Blanchard, was incorrect in allowing the project without adhering to rules of the code and may have been under the impression that DDA OK’d the plans.
The DDA must petition the courts regarding the issue since zoning board decisions do not get appealed to the Lafayette City Council The board had 30 days to file an appeal.
“If you’ve got a wall and you’ve got parking behind it, then that’s a parking garage and the code has rules about that,” Blanchard said “What (the zoning board) did was they just ignored all that because they, I think, were under the impression that drawing the developer brought to the meeting was
toward an airport due to weather conditions or when there aren’t enough controllers and other personnel or facilities are unable to pick up the slack. Last weekend saw some of the worst staffing shortages of the shutdown, which became the longest on record early Wednesday
From Friday to Sunday evening, at least 39 different air traffic control facilities announced there was some potential for limited staffing, according to an Associated Press analysis of operations
The U.S. Attorney’s Office learned of the order just before 3 p.m. the next day, it said in court documents. That was about 12 hours after he was flown out of Alexandria to Baltimore, and about 4 hours after his flight left Baltimore for Laos, according to the records.
Even then, the U.S should have turned the plane around or taken Souvannarath back to the U.S once he landed in Laos, lawyers for the ACLU wrote in a brief.
They also argued the government should have been expecting a possible temporary restraining order after Souvannarath requested one on Oct. 17, but that ICE deported him anyway
“Willful blindness does not qualify as an excuse to ignore a court order which, in any event, Respondents were apprised of when they still maintained custody of the petitioner (albeit when he was in the air),” the ACLU’s filing states.
Meanwhile, the government contended that if Souvannarath is in a foreign jail, “on a fundamental level, the Court lacks jurisdiction over the Government of Laos, a foreign sovereign, to order his return,” according to
“If you’ve got a wall and you’ve got parking behind it, then that’s a parking garage and the code has rules about that. What (the zoning board) did was they just ignored all that because they, I think, were under the impression that drawing the developer brought to the meeting was the result of a compromise between downtown and the developer.”
PATRICK BLANCHARD, Lafayette Downtown Development Authority CEO
the result of a compromise between downtown and the developer.”
Guidry, who said he was unaware of the DDA meeting until contacted by a friend late Monday admitted he may have misspoke during that zoning board meeting when asked if the project got DDA approval.
Zoning board officials instead discussed parking, dismissing Guidry’s request to waive traffic impact analysis requirements for developments that generate more than 100 vehicle trips hourly
Guidry accompanied by





plans sent through the Air Traffic Control System Command Center system. The figure, which is likely an undercount, is well above the average for weekends before the shutdown
During weekend periods from Jan. 1 to Sept. 30, the average number of airport towers and regional centers that oversee multiple airports and facilities that monitor traffic at higher altitudes announced the potential for staffing issues was 8.3, according to the AP analysis. But during the five week-
Rhorer’s brief. “Similarly, the United States cannot compel the Government of Laos to take a specified action.”
Rhorer also argued Dick lacked jurisdiction over Souvannarath because ICE transferred him out of her district to Alexandria before she issued the restraining order The transfer came after Souvannarath opened the case.
Souvannarath was born in a refugee camp in Thailand and came to the United States in 1982 as a baby he said in court filings. Souvannarath’s father was a citizen of Laos before immigrating to Hawaii but became a United States citizen in 1988, according to the filings.
Souvannarath argues that, per immigration law at the time, he automatically obtained citizenship as a child once his father was naturalized.
The government is disputing that claim, according to court filings.
In his Nov 3 brief, Rhorer contends Souvannarath stayed in the United States for 19 years after his removal order without challenging it or seeking proof of citizenship. He notes that Souvannarath said ICE detained
his attorney, did not speak during Wednesday’s meeting.
“They (the zoning board) asked me if I meet with DDA, and I said, ‘Yeah, I have their approval,’ which was probably the wrong word to use at the time,” Guidry said. “I was making the changes, and the changes were a good step in the right direction. I did not know I had to get DDA board approval for my project.”
DDA’s move will likely push back construction, which Guidry hoped to start early next year The building dates back until at least 1912 when it was a fine men’s clothing and dry goods store operated by Lafayette businessman Maurice Heymann, according to Preserving Alliance of Lafayette research.
It was later used by multiple banks in the 1970s and ‘80s but has sat empty for nearly four years. Guidry initially planned to house a hair salon in the current building with condos on the adjacent parking area.
“We’re hoping we can still resolve this,” Blanchard said. “This is not about the developer, but we feel like the decision (the zoning board) made really does threaten the integrity of the Lafayette development code.”
end periods since the shutdown began on Oct. 1, the average more than tripled to 26.2 facilities. Most controllers have continued to work mandatory overtime six days a week during the shutdown. That leaves little time for a side job to help cover bills, mortgage payments and other expenses unless controllers call out.
Major airlines, aviation unions and the wider travel industry have urged Congress to end the shutdown. Wednesday’s announcement
him at a regularly scheduled ICE meeting, questioning “why he was ‘regularly’ reporting to ICE if he believed he was a citizen.”
In 2004, Souvannarath was convicted of unlawful possession of a firearm and domestic violence-related second-degree assault in Washington state.
The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, did not respond to questions about whether it knew where Souvannarath
came on the heels of Duffy warning a day earlier that there could be chaos in the skies next week if the shutdown drags on long enough for air traffic controllers to miss their second full paychecks next Tuesday Duffy said the FAA wanted to take a proactive approach instead of reacting after a disaster He pointed to the deadly midair collision in January between a commercial jet and a military helicopter near Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
was being held or would be able to repatriate him.
Instead, the agency issued the same statement from Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin that it released last week, after Souvannarath’s case came to light.
“Chanthila Souvannarath, a criminal illegal alien, with a rap sheet that includes convictions for assault and unlawful possession of a firearm had no right to be in this country Following his heinous crimes, he lost his green


card, and an immigration judge ordered him removed in 2006,” McLaughlin said. “20 years later, he tried a Hail Mary attempt to remain in our country by claiming he was a U.S. citizen.” The Embassy of Laos in Washington, D.C., did not return an





































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andalsolooking at some of the historical fishing groundsthat the menhaden industry has fished before that are important to them, see if they could be adjusted,” he said.
Avote to change the rules will setinmotion aprocess that will include apubliccomment period andpotential approval from state legislators before it becomes final. There is speculation that the proposal could reduce the buffertoa quarter-mile in certain locations off the coast, such as east of Grand Isle to the mouth of the Mississippi River,aswell as areas westof Port Fourchon, whilepotentially increasing it in particularly sensitive locations. The current threemile buffer off Grand Isle and one mile off Holly Beach —two popular beach escapes —look likelyto remain in place, saidChris Macaluso, of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.
There may also be some additional protections proposedfor aroundthe Chandeleur Islands,he said.
Macaluso’sorganizationand others, including the Louisiana chapter of the Coastal Conservation Association, have spent the past few weeks mobilizing for Thursday’s meeting, encouraging those concerned to show up.Heand others argue that again allowingindustrial-scale menhaden fishing closer to the coast will lead to more damage to the marine environment.
“Our concern about aquartermile buffer has always been that it wasn’tenough,” he said. FrancoisKuttel, president of the Westbank Fishing menhadenoperation, based in Empire, said hehas been consistently making the case to theDepartment of Wildlife and Fisheries that the half-mile buffer was too harmful to the industry He argues there is no datatoshow that reducing it in certain areas will cause real damage.
“It has affected us materially in our volumes, and has hurt not only our employees in their remuneration, but it’schallenged theprofitability of the companies,”hesaid. “Ithas hadmore of an economic impact than Ithought it was going to have.”
The vast majority of the Gulf menhaden industry occurs off Louisiana. Thesmall, oily fishis not eaten here,but instead ground up at processing facilities and used
to make products such as pet food, supplementsand fish meal for aquaculture.
It is the Gulf’s biggest commercial fishery, involving the use of motherships, purse seinesstretchinghundreds of yards and spotter planes. Aseries of spills involving millionsoffish ledtoanoutcrya few years ago, helping prompt the startofa quarter-mile buffer zone. Recreational groups pushed for aone-mile buffer,but acompromisewas reached at the behest of Gov.Jeff Landry in early 2024 that led to thecurrent half-mile for most of the coastline.
Other Gulf states, more dependent uponbeach tourism, have stricter regulations. Louisiana’s river-fed marine environment also
provides ideal habitat for pogies.
The bycatch study was part of the compromise. It was funded by the state but carried out by an independent firm, LGLEcological Research Associates, and broadly praised for its rigor —though all sides involved in the debate highlighted different aspectsofthe findings.
On theone hand, it showed that the industry’sbycatch for certain popular species,such as redfish, was not as bad as some had assumed.The survivabilityofredfishreleased from industry nets was also high, helped by excluder devices that keep larger fish from being sucked up in hoses.
As one example, theindustry pointed outthatredfish bycatch —about 30,000 in 2024 —was far









belowwhat was killed by recreational anglers, which wasaround 850,000. Thestudy also notedthat theindustry’s total bycatch forall species remained significantly below the 5% threshold in state law
But the bycatch numberswere still deeplyconcerning forrecreational organizations on various levels,includingthe redfish numbers. They alsopointed outthe tensofmillions of smallerfish, suchascroaker,importanttothe food chain killed by the industry
Rad Trascher,CCA Louisiana’s executive director,said too much is at stakealong Louisiana’seroding coast. “Weweren’t happy withahalfmile,but we took the compromise,” he said. “It was astepforward, andwe’re notpreparedto take astep back.”
Kuttel says the industry has worked to improve excluder devices andspent significantmoney upgrading to stronger nets that have greatly reduced spills. Recreational groups argue that the larger buffer zone hascut down on spills by reducing snags. The industry says it includes some800 jobs, contributing $25 million in state and local tax revenue,and warnsthatcould be at risk. Recreational groups, though, don’tbuy the argument that the bufferzone is threatening their business.
Email Mike Smith at msmith@ theadvocate.com.
SNAP benefits confusion sorted out
Health Department: Beneficiaries will see some funds return
BY MARK BALLARD Staff writer
WASHINGTON
— Some Louisiana SNAP recipients had money removed from their cards this week, but the Louisiana Department of Health announced Wednesday that all beneficiaries would receive at least some food stamps, furloughed staffers would return to work and offices would be re-

Lafayette police are investigating the death of Acadiana High senior Gabriella Sharp.
Two arrested in probe of teen’s death
Acadiana High student found unresponsive
BY CLAIRE TAYLOR and JAKORI MADISON Staff writers
Two men have been arrested as part of an investigation into the death of Acadiana High School senior Gabriella Sharp.
The young men have not been charged with murder Lafayette police, in a news release Wednesday said they arrested and booked Kaden Richard, 18, of Lafayette, with sexual battery, and Jaiquan Pierre, 19, of Crowley, with video voyeurism. Both Richard and Pierre have bail amounts of $15,000
Both surrendered Tuesday at the Lafayette Parish Correctional Center after warrants were issued for their arrests. Sharp, 18, was found unresponsive around 3:40 a.m. Saturday at a Congress Street gas station convenience store. Law enforcement officers and first responders were unable to revive her Authorities said the incident did not appear to have any connection to a school-related function, noting that the individuals were initially downtown before later moving to a private residence
Preliminary autopsy results released Tuesday show Sharp’s death was medical related, but some tests, including full toxicology and cardiopath, are pending.
Sharp’s death has not been ruled a homicide, police said.
Family members said they know little about the circumstances surrounding Sharp’s death. According to a family friend, Sharp’s mother received a call early Saturday morning from one of Sharp’s friends, saying Sharp wasn’t feeling well.
“She was going to meet them at the gas station to pick Gabriella up,” Hailey Matthews said. “When she got there, Gabriella was already gone.”
The Lafayette Police Department is asking anyone with information to call Lafayette Crime Stoppers to report a tip anonymously at (337) 232-8477
Email Claire Taylor at ctaylor@theadvocate.com.
opened immediately
The hiccup shows the chaos caused by the federal government shutdown and shifting Trump administration guidance on what to do about the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
“I’m relieved that Louisiana families will begin receiving SNAP benefits again and that our SNAP offices are reopening,” said U.S Rep. Troy Carter, D-New Orleans.
“Food security shouldn’t be threatened by political gridlock in Washington — every family deserves stability and dignity.”
The federal government on Saturday stopped sending money to the states as the shutdown forbids appropriating new funds. SNAP provides groceries for 42 million low-income Americans, including about 792,769 people in 396,157 households in Louisiana. The pro-
gram is funded by the federal government but administered by the states.
Two federal district judges found Friday that President Donald Trump had both the authority and the money to fund SNAP during the federal government shutdown, which has entered its 36th day They ordered him to do so.
The Trump administration agreed Monday to use money set
aside for food aid during disasters, which would cover about half the roughly $9 billion monthly cost of food stamps.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, which provides the funding for SNAP, issued guidance Tuesday on how the partial payments would be handled since the states would have to calculate who got paid, when and how much. SNAP payments are staggered through the month.

TAKE NOTE
ABOVE: Grammy-winning zydeco musician Chubby Carrier, right, and rubboard player Neal Wiliams visit Green T. Lindon Elementary on Wednesday to teach students about zydeco music, its instruments and to perform a few songs in Youngsville. RIGHT: Students applaud the performance.
STAFF PHOTOS By
LESLIE WESTBROOK
Councilmen seek to delay parade changes
Proposed route set to take effect in 2026
BY CLAIRE TAYLOR Staff writer
Two Lafayette City Council members want to delay changing the city’s Mardi Gras parade route for a year to have more discussion.
The administration of Lafayette Parish Mayor-President Monique Boulet announced on Oct. 27 plans to change the parade route in 2026, shifting the processions to Jefferson Street in the heart of downtown.
The change will eliminate from the route Congress Street, Lafayette Street by the public library, Parc Putnam and the federal courthouse and Parc Sans Souci by the main fire station on Vermilion Street.
The new route would turn off Second Street onto Cypress Street, then turn right onto Jefferson Street before turning right onto Johnston. Reaction to the change has been mixed. Council member Kenneth Boudreaux, who represents the entire affected area, said he wasn’t
informed or included in the discussions, and said he received over 200 calls from constituents complaining about the change.
Boudreaux took his concerns Tuesday to the City Council meeting where he and council member Andy Naquin agreed the route change should be delayed.

The council took no action and CityParish Attorney Pat Ottinger said his review of the Home Rule Charter and past ordinances leads him to believe the administration, not the council, has the authority to set parade routes.
Boudreaux instructed the council clerk to send a letter to Boulet asking her to delay the proposed route for a year, to explain the reason for the change and to consider a straight-shot Johnston Street route that would start at Holy Rosary Institute on Louisiana Avenue and end at Blackham Coliseum on Johnston at Cajundome Boulevard.

Hearing attendees push back on Lake Maurepas project
BY DAVID J MITCHELL Staff writer
A wide-ranging mix of residents, environmental advocates and local elected officials spent nearly four hours airing their concerns this week over plans to build a blue hydrogen and ammonia plant in Ascension Parish that will use carbon-capture technology to store CO2 deep under Lake Maurepas.
The public hearing in LaPlace was the latest opportunity for opponents of the project to make their voices heard. The company behind the plan, Air Products, again defended it as an important economic development project that will safely remove climate-warming carbon dioxide from the atmosphere with little disruption to the lake.
The unlikely coalition of opponents at the hearing included a veteran with two-century-old roots in Livingston Parish who cherishes
the tranquility of Lake Maurepas and its swamps, crabbers worried about the potential for damaged marine life and environmental justice advocates who see residents again bearing the brunt of the impacts in the name of economic development and tax revenue. With as much as 138 million tons of CO2 expected to be pumped underground over 25 years, Air Products’ storage site under Lake Maurepas would be the largest in the world, according to the company The permanent storage will allow Air Products to make low-carbon hydrogen and ammonia Discussed since late 2021, the $4.5 billion project has spawned public displays of concern, unsuccessful attempts by legislators to block it and nonbinding expressions of opposition from councils in Livingston and St John the Baptist parishes. More than 250 people showed up at a church in LaPlace on Tuesday to speak to officials from the U.S Army Corps of Engineers and the Louisiana Department of Conservation and Energy
PROVIDED PHOTO
For those who might havemissed it,the world hasquietly reached aremarkable milestone In the first six months of theyear,renewable energy,including as windand solar, surpassed coal for the first time in history as asource of electricity generation globally,the energy think tank Ember said last month. Some have called it atipping point, but there are headwinds brewing. While developingcountriesand China are increasing their push toward renewables, the United States and the European Union are pulling back, due to avariety of factors —but the overarching reason is the lesseningofpolitical will.
How do these global trends impact us in Louisiana? We have noted in the past that as the state embraced astrategy to diversifyits energy industry,renewable energyhas gained a foothold in cities and towns around our state
That includes companies like Arizona-based First Solar,whose 2.4 million-square-foot solar panelmanufacturing facilityinNew Iberia employs hundreds of workers, andFlorida-based NextEra Energy Resources, whose Amite Solar Energy Center began operations in June. Five years ago, there were no utility-scale solar developments in Louisiana. Today, there are around adozen and growing
On the wind power front, Gulf Wind Technology haspartnered with Shell to create aresearch andtechnologyhub at theAvondale Global Gateway.Two companies, Virginia-basedAES Corporation and Toronto-based Cordelio Power, have leased land in St. Landry Parish to develop wind farms.
These enterprises representnew jobs and opportunities for Louisianaresidents. They position our state to take alead in the economy of thefuture. That’swhy it’s concerningtohear that hundreds of millions in federaldollars aimed at supporting these projectsare in jeopardy The University of LouisianaatLafayette recently learned that the DepartmentofEnergy maycut agrant to fund itsLouisiana Solar Corpsinitiative to train workers to build solar microgrids that could help thestatebecome more resilientafter storms. TheCenterfor Energy Studies at LSU could lose$8million for aproject with Shell and the University of Houston to study the feasibility of a direct air capture project in southwest Louisiana. Theprojects are on alist of potentialcutscirculating in Washington. We don’tknowifthey will come to fruition, but theTrump administration has voiced skepticism of the feasibility of clean energy
We acknowledge there are growingquestions about carbon capture that must beaddressed, but it’sclear that other nations are racing forward with wind and solar
The Trump administration has scaledback investmentinrenewables at just thepoint when it’s becoming evident they are more thanviable. If the United States doesn’t investinthese energy options, it willbeleft behind And tragically,Louisiana, whose economy is not often on the leading edge, standstolose what it has gained thus far
LETTERSTOTHE EDITOR ARE
WELCOME. HERE AREOUR
GUIDELINES: Letters are published identifying name, occupation and/or title and the writer’scity of residence
TheAdvocate |The Times-Picayune require astreet address andphone number for verification purposes, but that information is not published. Letters are not to exceed 300 words. Letters to the Editor,The Advocate, P.O. Box 588, Baton Rouge, LA 70821-0588, or email letters@ theadvocate.com.

TO SEND US A LETTER, SCANHERE

President Donald Trump famously said in his 2016 presidential campaign thathecould stand in the middle of FifthAvenue in New York City and shoot somebody and wouldn’tloseany votes. Between attempted insurrections, felony convictions, sexual assault cases and corruption, it now doesn’t seem so far-fetched that even shooting someoneinthe middle of abusy New York Citystreet would affect his support very much In fact, his supporters seemingly embraced his crimes, with some proclaiming “I’m voting for the felon” during his 2020 campaign. “Teflon” Don is an apt nickname, as nothing seemstostick to him Yet, if it’strue that absolutely noth-
Reps. Mike Johnson and Steve Scalise have abandoned the responsibility of the office to which they were elected.They may choosenot to negotiate with Democrats over the continuing resolution, but they do not have the right to deprive theUnited States of a representative government There is work to be done, even if the
My first semester studying engineering taught me thefundamental principle of material balance. i.e. OUT = IN +or—accumulation.
It’sclear to me that this so-called government shutdown has only affected half of this equation.
Much of the“OUT” has been stopped. Butthe “IN” has kept going
On Tuesday,Sept. 30, Ibegan to glance over the newspaper’sopinion section while enjoying my firstcup of coffee. Here arethe titlesofall four: “Don’tlet government bully networks into submission,” “What government does to others is awarning,” “No apology to Canadians likely from Trump,” and “Teachings of Jesus areclear,so areTrump’sactions.”
All arebashing President Donald Trump and his administration. Iasked myself, “Why do Isubject myself to this one-sidedness every morning?” I mustbeaglutton for punishment.You

ing sticks to Trump, then it really begs thequestion: Just what is House Speaker Mike Johnson so afraid of? More specifically,why is he so intent on preventing therelease of the Epstein files? He seemshell-bent on doing whatever he can to obstruct and prevent thetruthfrom coming out. At best,the release of these files will absolve Trumpofany wrongdoing. At worst, well, how bad can it possibly be? He’s“Teflon” Don,after all. Based on Johnson’sbehavior,itmust be quitebad. AndwhileTrump’ssupporters may overlook thehypothetical murder on Fifth Avenue, Johnson must believe that whatever is in those files is far worse.
JONATHAN VARNADO Madisonville
government is shut down.The members of Congress arenot subject to layoffs, and their support staffare not subject tolayoffs. There is oversight to be performed, long-term financial legislation to be debated, andmuch morework to be done. Let’sget to it!
WALTER LEVY
Metairie
strong without abreak Oh yes, theIRS has not shut down. Payroll deductions andquarterly estimated tax collectionsnever stopped. Neither has thehidden federal sales tax called tariffs. Next time, shut down the IRS, too.
KEN MUSICK Baton Rouge
areguaranteed publication if you send in letters of this nature. If you want to enjoy your firstcup of coffee, Isuggest you pick and choose the articles you read carefully.Otherthan that, have a good day Imight bet my house that this doesn’t get published. Ifeel betterafter writing it though, and there’salways achance, like one in amillion.
CYNTHIA LITZ Baton Rouge
Editor’snote: Thanks for youroffer,but you can keep your house. We publish all letters that meet ourcriteria.

Most Americans are descendants of courageous immigrants who hadthe couragetoleavetheir homes andcome to awilderness to start over.Theywere attracted by thefreedoms andopportunitiesguaranteed by ourremarkable Constitution.Theycame legally witha sponsor whovouched forthem Over thelast two decades, federal politicians have intentionally ignored laws requiring closed borders. This hasflooded ourcountry withmillions of immigrants here illegally,including criminals andthe mentally ill, increasing violence againstour citizens. Dangerousdrugs have been smuggled, killing over 100,000 peopleannually Polls show that over 70% of Americanswantour borders closed andillegals removed. Presently, we are sending illegal immigrants back to their country of origin. Shouldn’twemake someeffort to find those who would make good citizens? If an illegal immigranthas been here forthree years, has no criminal record, is notonwelfare, is employed and paying taxes, shouldn’tsome discretion be appropriate? If forseven years they continued to followthe law, learn Englishand pass an exam that proves they understand ourConstitution,why notgive them apath to citizenship? It would takesome time andeffort, but it should be good forour country Sinceour birth rate is low, it would help keep ourpopulation growing. History hasshownthatnew immigrant citizens are usually morepatrioticand passionate about U.S. freedoms and opportunities than many multi-generational Americans.
Let’sstop blindly rejecting allillegal immigrants andstart using somediscretion
SIDNEYPULITZER NewOrleans
Areour representatives listening to ourpleas?
Avery short letter and simple request to Sens. Bill Cassidy and John Kennedy,Reps. Mike Johnson, Steve Scalise, Clay Higgins and others: Please let the people of Louisiana know if and how you were impacted by the No Kings march. Didyou hear us? Didyou hear the country? Did you hear the message, or did you reinterpret it? Athoughtful answer is much appreciated.
ANNE ASPRODITES NewOrleans

Cheney wasagreat American
In real life, despite the media’s portrayal, Dick Cheney was no Darth Vader Cheney,the former vicepresident, White House chief of staff,Defense Secretary,and House Minority Whip whodied Monday at age 84, was not only one of the greatest American statesmen since World WarII, but alsoa good and decent man.
about Libby not as apawn but as aperson.
Of local interest, Cheney through the years workedwithLouisiana’slongtime congressman BobLivingston both on thecommittee that cleaned up the ABSCAM bribery messinthe late 1970s andonthe Intelligence Committee.
“Hewas honestand straightforward, andverythoughtful,” Livingston said upon hearing news of Cheney’sdeath.


Let’sstart with Cheney’s decency.In my years in Washington, D.C., journalism, Iheard repeatedly fromthose who workedbothfor and with Cheney that he was likable and reasonable, and that he cared deeply about his staff andtreated them well. Igot two glimpses of the somewhat more private Cheney at small, invitation-onlyjournalist lunches at the vice president’smansion in January 2008 and 2009,the first off the record but the secondlargelyonthe record.
Apart from the substance of those discussions (available if youGoogle my name and Cheney’satthe Washington Examiner), what struckmeabout Cheney’sstyle was the light and easy relationship he had with daughter Liz whowas at both lunches, years before launching her own political career andthe respect with whichhetreated his chiefofstaff David Addington.
Yes, Cheney was direct and businesslike, but frequently with awry,attractive half-smile.
His demeanor changed, though, when asked about his former chief ofstaff Scooter Libby,who later was found to have been wrongfullyconvictedof perjury in afamousspy-relatedcase.
Cheney showed afierce andadmirable loyalty to his former staffer.Hemade absolutely clear not justthatLibby was “hisman” but that he believedentirely in Libby’sinnocence. He clearly cared
NEW LOOK NEEDED!
Thosetiesplayed an important role years later when Livingston was running alobbying group. After the destructionofdictator Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq, theLibyan government approached Livingston to represent it in matters before Congress. As Libya hadlong been apariah, Livingston was wary,sohecalled Vice President Cheney.
Cheney’steam strongly encouraged Livingstontotake the work, for very good national-securityreasons.What resulted, as part of thewhole interaction, was that Libyaturned over huge stores of weaponry, dismantled itssurprisingly advanced and dangerous nuclear program, and finally paid generously to compensate families of victims of the 1988 PanAm103 terrorist bombing. And therewas more.
When Libyandictator Moammar Gadhafieliminated his own nuclear program, he also provided extensive documentationand intelligence about the entire,international, clandestine nuclearproliferation regime of Pakistani physicist A.Q. Khan. The Bush administration dismantled Khan’snetwork, and Khan wasput underhouse arrest by thePakistanigovernment led by President PervezMusharraf, whom Cheney personally enlisted to crack down on al-Qaida Thereisnotelling how many tens of thousandsoflives might have been destroyedifKhan’sblack marketinnukes hadnot been stopped. Thatwas par for the course for
Thanksgiving is coming up soon, andeveryone’s getting excited forthe big feast. But it appears this bird’strying for awhole newlook to avoid the cook! So,what’sgoingoninthis cartoon? youtellme. Be witty, funny, crazy,absurd or snarky —just tryto keep it clean.There’snolimit on the number of entries. The winning punchline will be lettered into the word balloonand runon Mondayin our print editions andonline.Inaddition, the winnerwill receive asigned print of the cartoon along with acool winner’s T-shirt! Some honorable mentions will alsobelisted Emailentries to cartooncontest@ theadvocate.com.All entries mustinclude your name,homeaddress and phone number.Cell numbers are best.Thedeadline for all entries is midnight on Thursday. Good luck! —Walt
When Martha Ellen Truman, the new president’smother,was told she could sleep in the White House’sLincoln Bedroom, she, “her Confederate blood rising, said if that was the choiceshe would prefer the floor.” (This from David McCullough’s“Truman.”) The building’sfloors, however,were sagging. Upstairs, afloor caved beneath daughter Margaret’spiano.The president, who at one point was stranded in the rickety elevator Theodore Roosevelt had installed, was told his bathroom was about to collapse. An engineer told Harry Trumanthe State Dining Room’sceiling stayed in place largely“from force of habit.”
Cheney,who spent an entire career defending the American people and American interests. When President Gerald Fordsteadied the nation’sship of state after the nightmareofWatergate, Chief of Staff Cheney was his chief navigator. When President Ronald Reagan was winning the Cold War, Representative Cheney was (as Reagan’sdiaries show) one of his mosttrusted congressional allies on national security. When Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990, DefenseSecretaryCheney performed brilliantly as his reorganized military evicted Saddam’s army and crushed Iraq’ssupposedly eliteRepublican Guard.
Meanwhile, Cheney himself insisted to all who would listen that he was far less adirector of action in G.W.Bush’s presidency than he was Bush’sloyal deputy; but,tothe extent that Cheney was adding heft to the implementation of Bush’sdecisions,which clearly he was,heand the administration deserve far more credit for the bombs that didn’texplode, the terrorism thatnever occurred, the thousands of Americans who weren’tmurdered.
In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001, almostevery American alive would have said it would be crazy to predict thatnomoremajor attacks on ourhomeland would occur in the following seven years. Instead, apart from 10 people killed by two homegrown snipersonthe Washington, D.C. Beltway, agrand total of only threeAmericans werekilled domestically by terrorists during the remainder of the BushCheney administration.
Volumes could be written to refute allegations saying Cheney did things that he didn’tactually do. Much more should be written about all the wiseand effective thingshereally did, to keep this nation safe.
Email QuinHillyer at quin.hillyer@ theadvocate.com

donJr. notes that when Eleanor Rooseveltwantedtoattach aswing to atree for her grandchildren, UlyssesS.Grant III, apresident’s grandson, and director of theNational Capital Parkand Planning Commission, forbade this “lest it damage the bark” of the tree. Eleanor’s husband firedGrant.
decades-long siesta, has empowered presidentstounilaterally tax (see: tariffs) and wage war (hello, Venezuela)as theyplease. Congress is now composed almostentirely of two cohorts: those who do nothing but genuflect to their party’spresident,and thosewho do nothing but caterwaul about him.
As the government shutdownapproaches the longest in history —35days during Donald Trump’sfirst term —one word explains the dynamic and duration of the paralysis: trust. Washington today suffers from aTrust Deficit. Democrats see that Trumpand his budget director,Russell Vought, are ruthlessly reversing previous decisions madebyCongress closing departments, firing federal workers, and impounding billions of dollars already appropriated by the legislature. So, they have good reason to believe that any deal forged with congressional Republicans to reopen the government could be summarily ignored by the White House.


Even Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska admits that Democrats are right to be wary: “Ifyou’re aDemocrat you’re saying, ‘Why am Igoing to try to be helpful, if Mr.Vought and OMB is just going to do abackdoor move and rescind what we’ve been working on?’”she told reporters. “So, yeah, there’salack of trust. Does it makeitharder to come to terms on hard things like agovernment shutdown? Absolutely,itmakes it harder.”
Republicans have offered proposals to reopen the government and simply fund it at current levels, which would cause manyAmericans’ health insurance costs to skyrocket. Democrats have used the only lever of power they possess —the Senate filibuster —tokeep the governmentclosed until Republicans agree to extend expiring subsidies, passed during the COVID-19 pandemic, that help families buy health insurance on the public marketplace.
The 17 million Americans whorely on those policies face, on average, a30% boost in their premiumsnext year.Ifthe subsidies are allowed to end, reports the Washington Post, “millions of people will see their health insurance payments double or even triple in 2026.”
The real problem is not money,however.Budget battles can usually be resolved by finding acompromise figure. But informal negotiating groups that “have tried to brainstorm ways out of the standoff” have so farfailed miserably, reports the Associated Press. “Lawmakers have found themselves running up against the reality that the relationship between the two parties is badly broken.”
“The shutdownisthe mostacute symptom of ageneral lack of goodwill on Capitol Hill, where bipartisan deal-making has increasingly gone out of vogue,” adds Bloomberg.
“Tohave good-faith conversations, you have to have trust. There’sareal challenge of trust,” Rep. Brad Schneider of Illinois told the AP “Wecannot trust that they will abide by any deal that’sdone by ahandshake,” Rep. Sarah McBride of Delaware said on CNN.
There have been manystandoffs like this in the past. And eventually,ofcourse, somesort of deal is always reached to reopen the government. But now it feels like we are witnessing asignificant shiftinthe way that Washington works.
Trumphas poisoned the climate and culture of the capital. His approach to politics prizes division over unity,anger over accommodation. He sees himself as the president of MAGANation, not the American Nation, and he’swaging aholy war of Us against They/Them,Good versus Evil.


When told that the building’sonly secure place was the new balcony,Truman said in perfect Midwestern idiom, “Doesn’tthat beat all!” He hadbeen excoriated by the great and the good for the architectural crime of building what today is fondly knownasthe Truman Balcony Donald Trump, who oftenmakes even defensible actionsgrating, actedonthe White House with unapologetic unilateralism. Part of his politicalstrength is that apologies are not in his repertoire. He said the new ballroomwould not impact the East Wing. By now, however, the number of his “Oh, nevermind” presidential statements contains two commas. Like alocomotive encountering acobweb, he blew through whateverregulatory rules or norms pertain to White House alterations. ButmanyAmericans think our democracy has become a vetocracy, coagulated by blocking procedures that stop things. Presidential highhandedness in dealingwith such procedures is not new The National Journal’sGeorgeE.Con-
Trump’sballroom has already served the public good. It has triggered some people who need triggering. They have been blasé about his presidential grandiosity when he spends money for purposesCongresshas explicitly refused to authorize(theBig Beautiful Wall),orwhen he insults local police forces by sending troops to pacify U.S. cities, or when he vaporizes perhaps criminal Venezuelans.Now,however,because of theballroom, and the East Wing, the blasé aresuddenly aghast. During the fierce late-1970s oppositiontoconferring on Panama controlof thecanal there, aU.S. senatorsaid: My state consists of millions of people of diverse political, social, religious, racial, and ethnicbeliefs and backgrounds, but they are united by fervent devotion to a canal that they have not thought about since learningofitinhigh school. Todaythere is asimilar eruption of devotiontothe East Wing, the destructionofwhich is being called a“desecration.” Well. To desecrateistodisrespect a sacredplace. Somethingissacred when it is venerated because it is associated with worship andreligious purposes. Republicsdonot have sacerdotal offices. Fordecades, theconstitutional, political, social(and, lately,aesthetic) damages done by the ever-more-swollen modern presidency have become increasinglyevident.Congress, in its
It is especially amusing to hear progressives, the principal creatorsof the wateryCaesarismoftoday’spresidency,sorrowfully describing Trump’s ballroom as discordant with the White House’spropermodesty. They should worry less about the president’sresidential immodesty and moreabout his anti-constitutional immodesty
Some skeptics about the ballroom are understandably distraught that it might mimic the aesthetic of Trump’sredecoratedOval Office —gold here, there and everywhere.But asubsequent president can cleanse that space. Indeed, sensible citizens will make their votes contingent on apromiseto do that. Nuclear weapons should notbe entrustedtoanyone pleased by Trump’s Gilded Age Brothel school of interior design.
Apresidentialspokesperson says, “In large part,hewas reelected back to this People’sHousebecauseheisgood at building things.” “Reelected back.” Perfect. Good grammar should not taint this episode. The leakage of dignity from public life accelerates. Next July 4, for America’ssemiquincentennial celebration, the White House will hostanUltimate Fighting Championship match. AWorld Wrestling Entertainment “fight” would be better —choreographed fakery for people who want even more of this than American politics provides.
Email George Will at georgewill@washpost.com.
At Charlie Kirk’smemorial service, Trump said: “I hate my opponent, and Idon’twant the best forthem.” He didn’tsay he disliked or disagreed with his foes —perfectly reasonable attitudes. He said he hated them
That hatred is at the core of Trumpism.He doesn’twant to defeat his opponents; he wants to conquer them. Obliterate them.And Trumpism is the single biggest reason whyrelations between the parties on Capitol Hill are so badly broken.
Democrats are hardly blameless forthat collapse. They didn’tstart this war, but forevery action in politics, there is areaction. The ferocity of Trump’scrusade has triggered an equally virulent backlash. Trumphates his opponents, and now his opponents hate him back. Icovered Congress during the ‘80s, when Ronald Reagan waspresident and TipO’Neill was the Democratic speaker of the House. They differed sharply on manyissues, and that’sthe way it should be in ahealthy two-party democracy.Voters deserve choices. But even as they disagreed, the twoleaders, and manyoftheir allies, had acertain respect foreach other,anunderstanding that they represented clashing but credible interests and ideologies. On abasic level, they trusted each other to bargain in good faith, to recognize the need forcompromise, to keep their word. That trust is absolutely essential forthe smooth functioning of any legislature, but especially one that tries to govern acountry as vast and diverse as this one. And that trust has virtually disappeared in Trump’sWashington.
Email Steven Roberts at stevecokie@gmail. com.

George Will
Steve Roberts
Quin Hillyer
At about the same time on Tuesday,Trump wroteon his Truth Social account that SNAP benefits wouldn’t go out. The White House later clarified that partial SNAP benefits would be funded.
On Wednesday, theadministration announced that payments would start being processed Thursday Gov.Jeff Landry and the Louisiana Legislature had set aside money to cover when the federal government would not. The statespent about $11 million to fund food stamps for the elderly and disabled,about 200,000 recipients. After the federal govern-
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AJohnston Street route, Boudreaux said, would eliminate sharp turns, be shorter than the current and proposed routes and increase standing room along the route.
The parade route, it appears, was shifted offJefferson Street in the 1990s during the Streetscapeproject to the current route. Landscaping, cypress trees and brick sidewalks were added. All could be aproblem if parades
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Theagencies are considering permits to allow Air Products to run a38-mile carbon dioxide pipeline and other lines from its proposed Mississippi River complex to Maurepas. The company would build anetwork of carbon injection andmonitoring wells along with control platforms visible across the lake’ssurface Opposition centered around anumber of issues: potential leaks of highly concentrated CO2 from pipelines at risk of corrosion, federal taxpayersupport for the project,the impact of dredging of potentially contaminated sediments, questions about whether the storage willprevent as many emissions as predicted, damage to wetlands, and,perhaps at the center of it all, anearuniversal appreciation for Lake Maurepas.
Albert KenDavidson, 71, a38-yearveteran of the U.S. Army and Springfield native,said he grew up on land ahalf-mile from the lake that his family settled in 1805. It’s where he lives with other generations of his family.
“I’ve been all over the world. Seen some ugly places, seen beautiful places, none more beautiful than that lake,” he said. “And it would be ashame if my children, their children, and their children couldn’tsee it the way our ancestors did years ago.”
Facing concernslike that, ahandful of RepublicanLivingston and Tangipahoaparishlegislators andlocalofficialsjoined with left-leaning environmental advocates to call for the Corps to conduct afull environmental impact statement.
Afew called for an even deeper look, known as aprogrammatic environmental impact statement, to consider not just Air Products’ plans but also the cumulative impact of carbon-capture proposals popping up in the
ment announced the November benefitswould soon be issued, state officials paused the state-funded benefits while the federal benefits situation was sorted out. The federal money was for theentire SNAP population, including able-bodied adults without children, whowere left out of the state’stemporary appropriation. States had to recalculate benefits that accounted for USDA determinationsand Louisiana began retracting some of the benefits thathad been issued. That caused questions and criticisms to swirl on social media, as some recipients posted screenshotsshowing themoney leaving theiraccounts.
The Louisiana Department of Health on Wednesday afternoon released astatement
rolled there, he said. Standing space will be reduced by 50% or more, Boudreauxsaid. Floats weredriven down the proposed route,administrators said, and they were able to safelypass. ButBoudreaux questioned whether officials evaluated thesafety of placing more people in thelimited space available to watch the paradesonJefferson Street.
New landscaping is beingplanted now at acost of $250,000, which couldbe damaged by parade viewers, he said.
Boulet said the cypress
state and their oftendispersed pieces takentogether, from production plant to CO2 transport pipelinetounderground storage site.
‘Failedasacommunity’
State Sen.BillWheat, RPonchatoula, told theofficials near theend of thelengthy hearingwith54speakers that the federalagencywas the last hopeofhis constituents whohaveconsistently andbroadly opposed Air Products’ plans.
“Folks, thepeople that I represent are not here asking foralot.They’re just asking for afuture to be like thepast of Lake Maurepas. Theywant to see that legacy of the livelihoods of their familiesprotected,” Wheat said. “We’ve been failed as a community,tohavethe state listento our concerns,upto this point.”
Corps officials couldn’t comment on the request Wednesdaywith thepermit process just starting.
Under Corps rules, the review starts out as aless detailed, typically one-yearlong environmental assessment unless the agency findings bump it up to alonger and more detailed EIS.
If the Corps did proceed with the EIS, it would mean two yearsofreview andpotentially anotherdelay for a projectthat has alreadybeen pushed back to a2028 or 2029 start, at the earliest, due to financial concerns, according to reports.
In late April, AirProducts’ newCEO said that thecompany was trying to “de-risk” by selling offthe ammonia and carbon-capture portions of the project now seeking stateand federal blessing and to continue finding buyers for its products.
Andrew Connolly,anAir Products vice president, told Corpsofficials that the LouisianaClean Energy Complex will make the state aglobal leader in clean hydrogen, akey industrial feedstock, while the storage operation will capture 95% of its CO2 emissions.
“This will dramaticallyre-
explaining that allSNAP recipientswill receive approximately50% of their usual food stamp benefits, depending on household size, which will be sent on their usual distribution day
“Those who received statefunded emergency SNAP assistance on Nov.1-4, specifically the elderly and individuals with disabilities, will also receive federal benefits on Nov.7,” theHealthDepartment statement said.
Also, anyunusedfederal SNAP benefits would remain on the Electronic Benefits Transfer cardsand could be used.
Eligible SNAP recipients do notneed to takeaction to receive SNAPbenefits, accordingtothe stateHealth Department. However, SNAP recipientsmust con-
trees will be trimmedbefore theparades so they don’tinterfere with double-decker floats.
Shesaidshe hasbeen thinking of changing back to thehistoricJefferson Street parade routesince shetook office in January 2024. Conversations began about the safety of Jefferson Street for those in the parades.
Several floats of different heights, lengths andwidths tested the newdowntown route, including the turn from Cypress Street onto Jefferson Street by Reve and passed the test, she said. As forwhy,Bouletsaidat-
duce our work’spotential impact on the environment and the surrounding community, while creating markets for our clean Louisiana products and creating and supporting local jobs,” he said.
The project would create 2,000 constructionjobs, up to 200 permanent jobs and $1.3 billioninlocaltax revenue over its life span, Connolly said, citing arecent economic analysis.
‘Safelyoperate’ In addition to salesand property tax revenue going primarily toAscension Parish and the state,Louisiana andLivingston, St. Johnand Tangipahoa parishes would also share in up to $160 million in injection payments over the project’slife because CO2 is being sentunder state water bottoms.
But, the line to deliver that CO2toMaurepas would run pastapublic elementary school andneighborhood in Sorrento, near the tip of a hurricane protection levee still underconstruction, near aplannedsedimentdiversionfor wetland restoration andthrough the Maurepas Wildlife Management Area. The company would also run a19-mile naturalgas line, mostly in the last legofthe CO2 line route, to power lake operations and alsoa2-mile hydrogen line onshore.
Construction will require extensive digging, underwater dredging andthe destructionof362 acres of wetlands, according to Corps papers. Nearly 90%will be high-value, coastalcypressand tupelo swampsthatadvocates noted the wildlife managementarea and broader state effortshave fought for years to protect and restoreinthe face of degradation due to rising sea levels and salinity Connolly said Air Products has taken steps tominimize theimpactby, forexample, using existingutility routes and co-locating its various pipelines.The company also plans to rehabilitate more than 800 acres of wetlands north of thelake near the Joyce WildlifeManagement
tinue to meet allprogram requirements on time to continue their federal SNAP eligibility.
The USDA also announced it would provide funding to cover state administrative expenses. As aresult, the department ended furloughs forall SNAP employees and reopened all SNAPoffices, effective Wednesday
TheHealth Department and the Louisiana Workforce Commission, which administerthe food stamps the federal government pays, had furloughed about 1,100 state employees whoworkon SNAP andreceive half their pay from the federal government.
Email Mark Ballard at mballard@theadvocate. com.
tendance at parades is down. Lafayette, with 10 parades over twoweeks, has lotsof competition.
“Weneed an energy boost,” she said.
Jefferson Street is where Lafayette welcomes hundreds of thousands of people each year for Festival International.
“It is our signature street,” Boulet said,where thecity invests lots of money.“It is avery special part of town, much like St. Charles Avenue is to New Orleans.”
Email Claire Taylor at ctaylor@theadvocate.com.
Areaand has planted 6,000 cypresstrees and plans to plant more.
He added thatthe company has an unsurpassed safety record with industrialgases andisworking with Ascension emergency officials andothers to set up detailed safety proceduresfor workers and the public.
Connolly said the company was confident“in ourability to safelyoperate under thesepermits,” though environmentaladvocates pointed outAir Products is seeking to sell off the carbon-capture piece of the project.
Untila statemoratorium announced last month, the concept of carbon capture has had strong support from thestate’s business community,LSU scientists and most statewide elected leadership. It’s seen as an attainable and safebridge technology perfectly suited for Louisiana’s sedimentary geology that can create alower carbonemitting industrial base.
The technology pumps carbondioxide that’sbeen pressurizedtoanear-liquid state underground into natural formationsthat Air Products, other companies and LSU geologists say have confining layers thatwould prevent leaks into aquifers.
Amidgrowing public backlash over the proposals being reviewed across thestate, though, Gov.Jeff Landrycalled for the moratorium last month on new permits and for aprioritization processfor proposals that weren’t among sixstate regulators keyedfor fast tracking.
LOTTERY
TUESDAY,NOV.4,2025
PICK 3: 4-1-5
PICK 4: 2-2-9-0
PICK 5: 2-6-8-0-8
MEGA MILLIONS: 11-14-17-50-57
MEGA BALL: 6 Unof
Manning, Kathryn FountainMemorialFuneralHome, 1010 PandoraStreetinLafayette,at11 a.m.
Obituaries
White, George Hubert

Memorial Serviceswill be held on Saturday, November 8, 2025, at 1:00 PM in La Chapellede Martin& Castille in Lafayette for George Hubert White, age 74, who passedaway peacefullyon November 1, 2025, at Hospice of AcadianaCalcutta Housein Lafayette.
Reverend Howard Blessingwillofficiatethe services. The familyrequeststhat visitation be observedon Saturday, November 8, 2025, at Martin& Castille's Downtown Location from 9:00 AM until time of services.
ingtimewith friends and familyand being in the great outdoors.Heloved dancing andtraveling-especially by motorcycle-as well as gardening andbeekeeping UrnBearer will be CortneyWhite. In lieu of flowers, donationscan be made in George Hubert White's name to Hospice of Acadiana, 2600 Johnston St.Lafayette, LA 70503. Hisfamilyextendstheir deepestappreciation to OurLady of Lourdes Regional Medical Center, Lourdes Oncology Center Dr.JeffThibodeaux, and Dr.Brierre andhis staff for exceptional care for the past several years and to Hospice of AcadianaCalcutta House for the comfortand dignity they providedinGeorge's final days. View theobituaryand guestbook online at www.mourning.com Martin& Castille Funeral HomeDOWNTOWN, 330 St LandryStreet, Lafayette, Louisiana 70506, 337-2342311

ARosarywill be prayed at 10:30 AM Survivors include his belovedwife Celia Marie Thibodeaux; hischildren, George CortneyWhite (Amber), Lesley Anne White(PartnerGary); grandchildren, George Brennan White(Madeline), RileyClare White, and Taylor Paige White; greatgrandson, George Waylon White; nephews, Don Swearingen(Nancy), William L.WhiteIII,Darwin PaulWhite; andgreat nieceand nephews, Cara Swearingen, Kevin Swearingen, Ryan Swearingen(Leticia), and Garret S. White. He wasprecededin death by hisparents, Camille Marie Planche Whiteand William Leo White,Sr.; sisters, June "Tugy" Swearingen Holiday andConnieM White; brother, William Leo White, Jr.; andnephews, CarlSwearingenand Mike Swearingen. Born in Bogalusa on September 22, 1951, to Camille andLeo White, George wasthe youngest of four.Hegraduatedfrom LSUwith abachelor'sdegree in accounting. He spent along anddedicated career with the Department of Corrections, serving many years as Deputy AssistantSecretary for theDepartment of Corrections, Juvenile Services. Friends andcolleagues will remember George for hiskindheart, quickwit, andquiet SUBSCRIBE TODAY

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SPORTS
SAINTS AT PANTHERS •

ART OF DEALS
Loomis says Saints had their young QBs in mind at trade deadline
BY MATTHEW PARAS Staff writer
As the New Orleans Saints navigated this year’s trade deadline, general manager Mickey Loomis said the main discussion inside team headquarters centered on the development of their young quarterbacks.
The Saints, after all, recently had turned to rookie Tyler Shough after starting second-year signal-caller Spencer Rattler the first eight games.
Although the Saints are 1-8, a record that warrants a sell-off for future assets, Loomis indicated the franchise had to
BY WILSON ALEXANDER
Staff writer
As LSU searches for its next football coach, there is a question looming over the process. What kind of contract will the school offer, and if it wants to avoid another large buyout, will that affect the candidate pool?
be conscious of making deals that would “hinder” their quarterbacks’ growth — or the coaching staff’s chance to fully evaluate them.
“So our assessment at the end was, look, the value of what we’re doing is greater than any risk of hurting our chances to improve and develop,” Loomis told The Times-Picayune.
The Saints completed two trades Tuesday before the deadline. They sent wide receiver Rashid Shaheed to the Seattle Seahawks in exchange for fourth- and fifth-round picks in 2026. And New Orleans also received a 2027 sixth-round pick from the Los Angeles Chargers for
ä LSU at Alabama, 6:30 P.M.SATURDAy,ABC
guard Trevor Penning.
In doing so, the Saints lost two starters on the offense but gained draft capital that could help in the long term. Loomis said the Saints still “absolutely” have enough of a supporting cast to see what they have in Shough, though he noted they’re more focused on Shough’s overall development rather than evaluation.
Notably, the Saints did not trade wide receiver Chris Olave, running back Alvin Kamara or any members of their defense.
finds Kelly’s replacement Multiple people with experience in the college sports industry doubted the idea, especially if LSU wants an established head coach.
BY KEVIN FOOTE Staff writer
He’s a mountain of a man Bryant Williams stands 6-foot-7 and weighs about 335 pounds.
Yet, there were times earlier this season when the UL redshirt junior left tackle battled confidence issues. It lasted until the second home game against McNeese State.
“The first two games weren’t my best games,” said Williams, whose Cajuns host Texas State at 4 p.m. Saturday at Our Lady of Lourdes Stadium. “I felt like I wasn’t living up to my standard of how I was as a football player.”
As the Lake Charles native reflects on the time, he said his mindset was holding him back. It took an old-fashioned tongue lashing from offensive line coach Steve Farmer to set him straight.
ä Texas State at UL, 4 P.M.SATURDAy,ESPN+
“Coach Farmer chewed me out on the sideline during the McNeese game because he felt like I was just in my own head and just not taking this serious,” Williams said. “So when he chewed me out, I obviously woke up.”
So much so that it was a huge source of celebration among the Cajuns faithful when Williams returned to the UL starting lineup for last week’s game against South Alabama.
Williams went down in the Oct. 14 game against Southern Miss with a knee injury In that moment, Williams thought his season was over
“I thought it was a torn ACL,” he said. “When they were carting me off, I was crying because I felt like it was over But when the results came back, it was just a little sprain. The doctor said it was just a scare and all my ligaments were still intact.”
Williams missed the 35-23 loss at Troy but returned for the 31-22 win at South Alabama.
The Cajuns actually rushed for more yards at Troy with 187 because quarterback Lunch Winfield ran for 139 yards, but the running backs fared much better after Williams’ return.
Zylan Perry and Bill Davis combined for 112 yards against the Jaguars after gaining just 48 yards the week before.
“I felt like I picked up right where I left off,” Williams said. “The Southern Miss game was obviously scary for me. The emotions were high for that, because we still had hope of returning to the championship game if we had won that game.”
Williams’ returns was huge because UL has dealt with injuries along the offensive line all season.
Last week, Gov Jeff Landry made it clear he wants a deal structured more on performance-based incentives than guaranteed money He called the 10-year, $95 million agreement with former coach Brian Kelly “irresponsible” and criticized former athletic director Scott Woodward for his contracts.
BY REED DARCEY Staff writer
Coach Kim Mulkey doesn’t like the term “spark plug.” She never has, at least not since it was used to describe her early during her playing career at Louisiana Tech.
So the fifth-year LSU women’s basketball coach is reluctant to assign the label to MiLaysia Fulwiley, as she explained Tuesday after the No 5 Tigers (1-0) began their 2025-26 season. The term certainly suits the 5-foot-10 junior a transfer guard from South Carolina who plays with speed, aggression and energy but Mulkey doesn’t think it conveys a sense of her full capabilities.
“OK, I’m a spark plug,” Mulkey said, “but when am I gonna be the engine?
“And so I’m very careful about
Landry is not the only influential person around LSU who wants the next coach to have a deal with heavier incentives and a lower buyout, but it is unclear whether LSU will do that when it
“Our job, I was told, is to get the best football coach there is and don’t worry about that at all,” LSU athletic director Verge Ausberry said Friday “Whatever it takes to get that person here, we will do.” New LSU president Wade Rousse supported the idea of incentive-based contracts at an
introductory news conference Tuesday He said the deals for himself and James Dalton, the new executive vice president and chancellor of the Baton Rouge campus, “are going to be based on incentives,” the details of which are unknown.
“I would like to think that we could do that in our athletics contracts,” Rousse said, “but we all know that the market is the market.”
“It’s been tough,” he said. “Injuries can happen at any time obviously, but that was something we weren’t expecting going into the season.
“Coach Farmer just emphasizes that we just don’t look back and just keep going next man up, take pride in your job and make sure you do it at a high level when you step in.”
Despite the offense’s difficulties
ä Southeastern at LSU, 7 P.M.THURSDAy,SECN+
how I use that with MiLaysia because her skill level and her talent is better than just a spark plug, and it’s our job as she goes into her third year of college to help her become a complete player not one that does it in spurts or coming off the bench.”
It’s early LSU won’t play its second regular-season game with Fulwiley until 7 p.m. Thursday when Southeastern Louisiana visits the Pete Maravich Assembly Center (SEC Network+). But Fulwiley is already showing signs of progress.
On Tuesday, when LSU defeated Houston Christian 108-55, she came off the bench and played only 21 minutes. Yet she still post-
ed a game-high 21 points and a career-high seven steals, which she paired with four rebounds, two assists and two blocks. She also shot an efficient 8 of 14 from the field and 2 of 5 from beyond the 3-point line. Fulwiley scored more than 20 points in only seven of the 77 games she played with the Gamecocks. She rarely logged starter’s minutes Transferring to LSU was supposed to give her more run, responsibility and chances to jolt games the way she did throughout the first two years of her career LSU gave Fulwiley those chances Tuesday and she took advantage of them. Only Mikaylah Williams, the star junior guard from Bossier City, played more minutes than she did against the Huskies

STAFF FILE PHOTO By DAVID GRUNFELD
Mickey Loomis, Saints general manager, talks during a news conference at Saints headquarters in Metairie on July 22. On Tuesday, Loomis agreed to two separate trades that sent receiver Rashid Shaheed and offensive lineman Trevor Penning to other teams.
BROADCAST HIGHLIGHTS
3
Game-changer and more
Lafayette Christian QB Walker
scoring TDs on field and keeping his teammates loose off of it
BY ERIC NARCISSE Staff writer
Regardless of classification, Lafayette
Christian is one of the best football teams in the state.
And a major reason the Knights are 8-1 and and No. 1 in the Division III select power ratings is senior quarterback Braylon Walker Walker in his second season as the starter is one of the most electrifying players in the state and possibly the most explosive offensive player in the Acadiana area.
“He’s a kid that can do both,” coach Matt Standiford said of the dual-threat quarterback. “He can run it and he can throw it. He really puts pressure on the defense because he’s not a kid that is looking to run with the football all of the time. But when he creates things in the pocket. He can hit guys downfield and that really opens up our playbook.”
Committed to UL as a defensive back, Walker has matured since last season
“Last year, his first time starting and facing the quality of competition that we play, I think it opened up his eyes to a lot,” Standiford said of the 6-foot, 170-pounder “Really after the Notre Dame game last year, you really began to see his growth and development and that has really carried over into this year.”
His leadership ability has also been on display in the locker room. It’s not uncommon for Walker to turn a mirror on himself and acknowledge the fact that “he’s not playing well” during halftime of games.
“It’s a great quality of mine,” Walker said. “I’m not my biggest critic, but I’m most honest with myself and I’m always going to be honest with my teammates. So if I’m going to get on them when they mess up, the only way they are going to respect me is if I acknowledge when I mess up and communicate to them ‘Hey, I need y’all right now.’ ” Walker has completed 97 of 163 passes for 1,300 yards, 20 touchdowns and seven interceptions, while rushing 107 times for 813 yards and nine TDs.
Walker has also grown in overcoming the feeling he has to do it all all the time
“Now I don’t try as much to be Superman,” Walker said. “I don’t try to carry the team or will the team unless I have to in crunch-time situations. I don’t try to do too much and instead just use the abilities God gave me and rely on my brothers, my teammates to pull us through.”

Lafayette Christian quarterback Braylon Walker prepares to score a touchdown against Evangel Christian last Thursday at Lafayette Christian. Walker’s game-breaking ability is a major reason the 8-1 Knights are No. 1 in the LHSAA’s Division III select power ratings.
FOOTBALL REPORT
Week 10 schedule
Thursday’s games
Comeaux (5-4) at Westgate (5-4)
Notre Dame (7-2) at Welsh (4-5)
St. Edmund (8-1) at Westminster (9-0) Catholic-PC (7-2) at Opelousas Catholic (6-3)
Friday’s games
Carencro (6-3) at Acadiana (6-3) Lafayette Renaissance (7-2) at Ascension Episcopal (9-0)
Teurlings (9-0) at Northside (5-4)
Lake Arthur (5-5) at LCA (9-1), forfeit
Erath (9-0) at Abbeville (3-6)
Vermilion Catholic (4-5) at Westminster-Lafayette (5-4) Lafayette (5-4) at Sulphur (2-7)
Iberia (0-9) at Southside (7-2)
Vermilion (0-9) at St. Thomas More (6-3)
Opelousas (2-6) at Beau Chene (1-8)
Livonia (4-5) at Breaux Bridge (2-7)
Ville Platte (4-5) at Church Point (7-2)
Rayne (3-6) at Crowley (2-7)
(5-4) at Iota (4-5)
(3-6) at Eunice (3-6)
(7-2) at Houma Chr (1-9)
(3-5) at Delcambre (5-3)
(6-3) at West St. Mary (7-2)
(0-9) at Highland Baptist (0-9)
Standiford said Walker while serious about his craft, keeps everyone loose.
“He’s a kid that does all of the right things all of the time,” Standiford said. “He’s also really funny He has a game-day outfit every Friday He has a funny way of just making the game enjoyable for everyone.”
On game day, Walker has dressed up as characters from “Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,” “Men in Black,” “SpongeBob SquarePants,” a firefighter and a cowboy
“When I dressed up, we won the game,” Walker said. “So my teammates were like it was good
luck. So I have been dressing up every week.”
The one time Walker didn’t dress up, the Knights lost to Shaw 31-13.
“I’m not really superstitious or anything like that, but we had a bad game against Shaw, and I didn’t dress up,” Walker said. “So now I try my best to dress up every week.”
When his career ends, Walker wants to be remembered “as more than a football player.”
“I want to be remembered as a great leader, teammate and a great person,” he said. “I want to be remembered for caring about the person next to me.”
Jets focus on big picture after huge trades
BY DENNIS WASZAK JR.
AP pro football writer
FLORHAM PARK, N.J Darren Mougey insisted this wasn’t “a teardown.” Aaron Glenn reiterated that the New York Jets will be a team that makes the fans proud. But a day after trading two of the biggest stars in Sauce Gardner and Quinnen Williams it was clear the Jets are in a major rebuild during which patience will need to precede pride.
“It was a pretty intense day,” Glenn acknowledged Wednesday And for many of the players, coaches and fans, a stunning and sad one.
Gardner was traded to Indianapolis on Tuesday for a first-round draft pick in 2026 and another in 2027, along with wide receiver Adonai Mitchell. A few hours later, Williams was dealt to Dallas for a second-round pick in 2026, a first-round selection in 2027 and defensive tackle Mazi Smith Gardner and Williams were thought to be key parts of the foundation that both Glenn and Mougey are trying to set for the Jets’ future while attempting to return the franchise to respectability
“When an opportunity presents itself for us to be able to build this team, it’s hard to pass it up,” Glenn said. “Listen, those two guys are great players, we all know that. All-Pro players. The one constant in this league is change.
“And I’ve said that to all our players, not just today but throughout this season, that this is a fluid game. Players come and go. Coaches come and go. But the one thing I do know is with change,

there comes opportunity.”
While both Gardner and Williams are now on teams trying to reach the playoffs, the 1-7 Jets are likely going to miss the postseason for the 15th straight year And that was clear even before the franchise-altering moves.
“I wouldn’t call it a teardown,”
Mougey said Tuesday, a few hours after the trades.
When Glenn was hired, he preached patience and the process. That has been a tough sell to the fanbase, though. And now they have to watch their team play out the string of the last nine games without two of their best players, first-round picks who were once symbols of hope.
“Nothing different than I’ve been saying,” Glenn said of what he’d say to frustrated fans. “Listen, I want this to be a team that the fans are proud of, but again,
I never said that we’re gonna be proud of them right now At some point, I want this to be a team that the fans are proud of and I still stick with that.”
The big picture view for the Jets is clear: They have two first-round draft picks in 2026, along with two second-rounders, and three first-rounders in 2027. That’s the glimmer of hope in a season that quickly went awry In theory, Mougey will have the flexibility in the next two drafts to remake the roster and, most importantly, find a quarterback who can be the foundational-type piece New York has been craving for decades. But the Jets will need to hit on most, if not all, of those decisions to make the two stunning moves Tuesday look good.
“The goal is always to win,” Mougey said. “Look, these coaches and players work too hard ev-
Cardinals QB Murray heads to injured reserve
TEMPE, Ariz Arizona Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray is going on injured reserve because of a nagging foot injury that’s caused him to miss the past three games. Coach Jonathan Gannon made the announcement Wednesday, one day after confirming that veteran backup Jacoby Brissett would make his fourth straight start against the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday Brissett has played well over the past three games — throwing for 860 yards, six touchdowns and one interception — raising the question if Murray would start even if he was healthy The Cardinals (3-5) snapped a five-game losing streak on Monday against the Dallas Cowboys. The 32-year-old Brissett completed 21 of 31 passes for 261 yards and two touchdowns in the victory
Anisimova beats Swiatek, advances in WTA Finals
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Amanda Anisimova reached the last four of the WTA Finals by beating secondranked Iga Swiatek 6-7 (3), 6-4, 6-2 on Wednesday The 24-year-old American earned her second consecutive victory over Swiatek since losing to the Polish player 6-0, 6-0 in the Wimbledon final.
Anisimova, ranked No. 4, had also eliminated Swiatek in the U.S Open quarterfinals.
Anisimova got the first break of serve in the contest to take the second set to force a decider She faced only four break points and saved each one. Elena Rybakina, who had already advanced to the semifinals, completed her roundrobin phase with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over Ekaterina Alexandrova.
Texans QB Stroud out vs. Jaguars with concussion
HOUSTON — Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud won’t play Sunday against the Jacksonville Jaguars after suffering a concussion last week.
Coach DeMeco Ryans said Wednesday that Stroud would not be available this week and Davis Mills will start.
Stroud was injured early in the second quarter of a loss to the Broncos on Sunday He scrambled for 6 yards and was hit on the shoulder near the end of his slide by Kris Abrams-Draine and the back of his head violently bounced off the ground. Abrams-Draine was initially flagged for unnecessary roughness. But the play was reviewed and the call was overturned.
World Series Game 7 most-watched since 1991
ery day, all day, with the goal of winning on Sunday And that never changes because that’s what the fans deserve. That’s what the players deserve and that’s what the coaches deserve and that never changes.
“I understand the trade deadline and different moving parts, but the goal is to always win on Sunday.”
But that will be tougher to do now, starting Sunday at home against Cleveland, without Gardner and Williams, and even nickel cornerback Michael Carter II, who was sent to Philadelphia last week.
“I’d be lying if I said I was happy my brothers are gone because I’m not, I’m sick,” edge rusher Jermaine Johnson posted on X on Tuesday “But, I believe strongly in the organization, staff and my other brothers in the locker room. I said when I got drafted I wanted to be the reason or part of the reason this thing gets changed for the better and that’s going to continue to be my outlook. I love this team and this fan base and y’all will continue to get my all, my absolute best on and off the field.
“Let’s look onward and upward because better things are coming and I give my word on that. Go Jets always.” Glenn said he spoke to the players Wednesday morning when the team gathered for meetings, but said he didn’t “wanna make too much of a deal” about the trades.
“Man, we are moving forward,” Glenn said. “We have a good amount of draft capital that we’re looking forward to. And when that time comes, we’ll handle that. But right now, we’re focused on Cleveland.”
NEW YORK — The Los Angeles Dodgers 5-4 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays in 11 innings in Game 7 of the World Series averaged 51 million viewers combined across the United States, Canada and Japan. Major League Baseball said it is the most-watched game since Game 7 of the 1991 World Series between the Minnesota Twins and Atlanta Braves. Saturday’s game averaged 27.33 million on Fox Sports, Fox Deportes and Fox’s streaming platforms. According to Nielsen, it was the second most-watched broadcast of last week.
It also was the most-watched Fall Classic game since 2017’s Game 7 between the Dodgers and Houston Astros averaged 29.07 million.
Ex-Grizzlies guard Allen arrested on drug charges MEMPHIS,Tenn. — Former Memphis Grizzlies defensive stalwart Tony Allen, a mainstay from the team’s Core Four success era, was arrested on drug charges in Poinsett County Arkansas, on Wednesday Allen, 43, faces two charges of drug possession. A car, driven by William Hatton, 33, of Memphis, was stopped on Interstate 555 about 50 miles northwest of Memphis. A report from the Poinsett County Sheriff’s Office said a package of leafy substance, later identified as marijuana, was found on Allen. A search of the car found a cigarette box with a powdery substance, later identified as cocaine, according to the report. Allen played for Memphis from 2011 to 2017. He was drafted by the Boston Celtics in 2004 after playing at Oklahoma State He finished his career with the New Orleans Pelicans.
PHOTO By ROBIN MAy
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO By JEFF DEAN
New york Jets coach Aaron Glenn saw the team trade star cornerback Sauce Gardner and defensive tackle Quinnen Williams on Tuesday.
Wilson labels Whit Weeks as ‘doubtful’ vs. Alabama
BY WILSON ALEXANDER Staff writer
LSU linebacker Whit
Weeks is doubtful to play Saturday night against No. 4 Alabama, interim coach Frank Wilson said Wednesday morning.
Weeks did not practice Tuesday and continued to wear a walking boot on his lower right leg. He has missed the past two games, a pair of losses in which LSU gave up a combined 80 points.
“I think he’s probably more doubtful at this time,” Wilson said on the SEC coaches teleconference.
“We’ll see at today’s practice how he looks. We’re hopeful, but I’m not quite sure with Whit.”

LSU linebacker Whit Weeks stands outside the tunnel after a loss to Ole Miss on Sept 27 at Vaught Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Miss.
Former LSU coach Brian Kelly previously said Weeks has a bone bruise in his ankle. It’s the same ankle that required surgery after Weeks suffered an injury in
LSU FOOTBALL
Continued from page 1C
The primary goal appears to be avoiding the situation that LSU found itself in with Kelly, who was the eighthhighest paid coach in the country this season, according to USA Today The Tigers owe him $54 million over six years, although buyout negotiations are ongoing and the total could be offset if he gets another job. Landry called the price tag a “liability.”
“We are not doing that again,” he said.
One member of the LSU Board of Supervisors, vice chairman Lee Mallett, called large buyouts “financially terrible to us” at a September board meeting. Kelly’s buyout would be the secondlargest in college football history if paid in full, and LSU paid former coach Ed Orgeron $17.1 million after firing him in 2021.
Two other board members, James Williams and Remy Starns, argued during the September meeting that large buyouts are dictated by the market. LSU deputy athletic director of leader-
SAINTS
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“If you go back and look at all these quarterbacks, it just takes time,” Loomis said.
“And nobody wants to hear that, right? All we have to do is look around our league and see Baker Mayfield, Daniel Jones, Sam Darnold And there’s a bunch of examples of guys that, ‘Hey, if they would have stuck with the development plan, where would those franchises be with those players?’
“Very rarely do (quarterbacks) have instant success.”
Loomis’ answer prompted a follow-up question: How does the general manager weigh that patience with the fact the Saints are on track to have the first overall pick — a selection typically used on quarterbacks?
He said that while it was “way premature” to have that discussion, the Saints will have to evaluate the incoming quarterback class against the quarterbacks they already have.
“We’ve got two young quarterback prospects we like a lot,” Loomis said. “We haven’t really discussed the quarterbacks in this class. And look, we’ve got to build a better team around them.
The draft picks they acquired Tuesday could help the Saints build a better team, as long as they hit on their selections — something that hasn’t always gone well for the franchise in recent years. With Shaheed and Penning, the Saints dealt players who were on expiring contracts. Loomis indicated that status factored into the team’s decision.
Shaheed told reporters after Sunday’s loss to the Rams that he and the Saints hadn’t discussed extending his con-
the Texas Bowl at the end of the 2024 season.
Wilson said Weeks can put weight on his ankle and run in a straight line. But he needs to be able to do all the movements required of a football player, including changing directions and accelerating.
“That’s the true test,” Wilson said. “If you walk out today and you just ask him to run, he can do that. We have to put him in situations to gauge his pain tolerance to see if he could. He has a high threshold for pain tolerance, but you just don’t know because it’s not just muscles that are in there.”
Wilson also said freshman offensive lineman Carius Curne is “trending in the right direction” after getting hurt in the fourth quarter of LSU’s loss Oct. 25 to Texas A&M.

UL
Continued from page 1C
ship and strategy Lori Williams claimed that day LSU is “better than the industry in many respects” because most of its coaches are owed 80% to 90% of their total compensation instead of the full amount if they are fired without cause.
“We can be idealistic all we want, and then we wouldn’t be able to field a competitive team,” James Williams said. “I don’t disagree with you on how distasteful a buyout can be under certain circumstances, but if that’s the marketplace — and if it affects our ability to attract and retain top-notch talent then we can’t be the first out there.”
Mallett responded: “I don’t agree with it. We can be the first to break the mold.”
Landry and Mallett have argued for loading the contract with performancebased incentives Landry said in an interview with WNXX, 104.5-FM last week that he would not have a problem with a contract that equals $100 million over time if the coach reaches certain benchmarks, such as winning an SEC championship or the national title Standard contracts already include
tract since the season began. And New Orleans previously had a chance to retain Penning for at least one more season, but it turned down the former first-rounder’s fifth-year option in the offseason.
“It’s always an assessment of what’s the likelihood we can get them re-signed based upon the conversations that we’ve had, information that the agent tells us and what the compensatory option might be,” Loomis said.
Loomis said Seattle had been asking about Shaheed “for a while,” adding there were several other teams that reached out about the 27-year-old. Despite reports the Saints were seeking at least a third-round pick for him, they accepted fourthand fifth-round picks.
Asked about the compensation, Loomis pointed to the Jaguars-Raiders trade that took place just about an hour beforehand. Jacksonville sent a fourth- and a sixth-round pick to Las Vegas for wide receiver Jakobi Meyers, creating a framework for New Orleans.
“You just have to evaluate what’s the market, what’s happened in the past with receiver,” Loomis said In August, the Saints sent their own fourth-rounder out, along with a 2027 seventh-round pick, to the Denver Broncos for wide receiver Devaughn Vele But Loomis said that deal did not affect what they sought for Shaheed because of the differences in their contract, with Vele under team control through 2027 He said the Saints did not make the trade for Vele or wideout Ja’Lynn Polk from the Patriots in anticipation that they would lose Shaheed by the end of the year Elsewhere, Loomis declined to discuss whether there were any other deals he felt the Saints were close
postseason incentives, but his idea would increase the value of them.
Texas A&M may have provided a blueprint After paying a record $76 million buyout when it fired Jimbo Fisher two years ago, it signed Duke coach Mike Elko to a six-year deal that has a base annual salary of $7 million. On top of that, Elko can earn multimillion incentives, including $3.5 million for winning the national championship. By comparison, Kelly would have earned $500,000 for winning the national title at LSU.
One industry source who has run a football coaching search at another powerconference school pointed out that Elko could end up with a much larger deal now that No. 3 Texas A&M is 8-0 in the country in his second season because the athletic director and other university leaders won’t want to lose him. But the source believed LSU’s ability to hire coaches would be limited by looking for a similar contract
“I’m not saying the market can’t be reset,” he said. “It just can’t happen overnight, and it can’t happen with one school.”
to executing. ESPN reported that the Indianapolis Colts inquired about cornerback Alontae Taylor though they instead traded for star Sauce Gardner in a blockbuster deal with the New York Jets. Teams also checked in on Olave. By keeping him, was that a sign the Saints are optimistic they can reach a long-term extension with the receiver? Olave said last month that the team approached his camp about a new contract.
“He’s under contract for this year and next year already, and then we’ll have rights,” Loomis said, referring to options such as the franchise tag. “So he’s a really good player, and we want to keep our really good players.”
As for Penning, Loomis did not specify whether the trade with the Chargers came together late in the day it was reported minutes before the deadline. Either way, it meant parting ways with the 2022 firstrounder whom the Saints invested so much in, from a pre-draft trade that gave them the No 19 overall pick to trying him at three different positions.
Loomis was asked what lessons he took from the saga. He said he’d save those conclusions for after the season.
“Sometimes you take a player and you have a vision for them and it doesn’t work out,” Loomis said. “And you definitely have to go back and say, ‘OK, what we did miss? Why did we think one thing and it didn’t happen?’
“So we’ve done that. We’ll do that some more. When we get into the draft season and free agency, we can reflect back on that with Trevor.”
Email Matthew Paras at matt.paras@theadvocate. com
this season, Williams has learned to enjoy his college experience more through a season of personal growth.
“I feel like the confidence boost has gone up significantly higher every game,” he said. “It’s to the point now where I’m just going out there and I’m having fun. I wasn’t having fun at first, because I was so worried about messing up on this or that or giving up a sack.”
Williams said he’s mental approach has been helped by Winfield’s emergence as the on-field leader of the team.
“He’s always bringing that energy into the huddle with his leadership,” Williams said. “Just with how he talks, that’s a guy you want to root for in this
LSU WOMEN
Continued from page 1C
“I think you can feel it,” Williams said, “as soon as the crowd goes wild every single time she steps on the floor and then I feel that energy She just is exciting. She’s exciting to play with, exciting to be around, and I’m just extremely excited to see what the season holds for us.”
Fulwiley complemented Williams and Flau’jae Johnson. In the first quarter, she took over for Williams on a stalled possession and created her own open look — a step-back 3-pointer from the right wing. In the fourth, she stepped into a catchand-shoot 3 that Johnson set up for her with a quick pass to the perimeter Mulkey slotted Fulwiley in with the starters at the beginning of the second half, then watched her string together a series of highlight plays.
Williams teed her up for two three-point plays, one of which Fulwiley converted through a half-court set and another one that she scored on a transition chance.


program. That’s a guy who is showing a bright future for this program. I mean, the dude’s got a bright future. There’s no doubt in my mind that he’s going
to be an amazing player by the end of his college career.”
Email Kevin Foote at kfoote@theadvocate.com.

Fulwiley also involved her teammates. She dropped a no-look pass between two defenders on a fast break in the second quarter, giving Williams an easy layup Then, in the third, she unfurled a long, one-handed outlet pass to point guard Jada Richard, who collected the feed in stride to finish a layup through contact.
“The good thing is (Fulwiley’s) very unselfish,”
Mulkey said. That’s only one of the reasons why LSU thinks she’s more than just a spark plug. In the opener, Fulwiley looked like the complete player Mulkey envisions.
Email Reed Darcey at reed.darcey@theadvocate. com. For more LSU sports updates, sign up for our newsletter at theadvocate. com/lsunewsletter














STAFF PHOTO By MICHAEL JOHNSON
STAFF PHOTO By BRAD KEMP
UL offensive tackle Bryant Williams is playing with more confidence and having more fun this season for the Cajuns.
PHOTO By BENJAMIN R. MASSEy
UL quarterback Lunch Winfield is lifted high in the air by left tackle Bryant Williams during the Cajuns’ 31-22 road win over South Alabama on Saturday
STAFF PHOTO By HILARy SCHEINUK
LSU guard MiLaysia Fulwiley sets up the shot against Mississippi College in an exhibition game on Oct. 23 at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center
Pasta saucefrom thestore simplifies recipe
BY LINDAGASSENHEIMER

Garlic Meatballs
Yields
1½
1. Addbeef, egg, breadcrumbs, Parmesan cheese, salt and pepper to asmall bowl. Mix all ingredients together and form into 8meatballs.
2. Heat oil in alarge skilletover medium-high heatand add themeatballs. Brown on all sides for 3to4 minutes Remove meatballs to aplate.
3. Add the green beans, sweet potatoes, pasta sauce and garlic to the skillet. Mix to combine all ingredients. Return the meatballs to the skillet.
4. Bring sauce to asimmer,cover with alid and cook 9to10minutes, stirring occasionally.The green beans should be tender,and meatballs cooked through. Ameat thermometer should read 130-135 F.
5. Divide in half and serve on two dinner plates.
NUTRITION INFO PER SERVING: 620 calories (31 percent from fat), 21.7 gfat (7.2 gsaturated, 8.0g monounsaturated), 213 mg cholesterol, 50.2 g protein, 55.4 gcarbohydrates, 10.6 g fiber,800 mg sodium.


someone extraordinaryfor
Louisiana Inspired is allabout shining alight on people and organizations who are working toward solutions in Louisiananeighborhoods,communities, towns, cities and throughout the state —it’swork that takes extra effort by special people, demonstrating the good stuff of the human spirit. Nominate someone youknowwho is making apositive differenceinthe livesofothers at nola.com/site/forms/ the_inspirit_award by Nov.17.
We encourage nominationsofpeople of allages —those who systematically go aboutdoing their best to make the world abetter place. The nomination processfocuses on people who are working toward solutions in their workplaces, schools, neighborhoods, communities and state. Be sure to include stories of impact and details of personal stories that inspire change. Award recipients will be announced in December in Louisiana

This week, Iturned thecalendar to November.Mythoughts on cooking pivoted from everyday meals to holiday feasts.
BeforeIlet Turkey Day stress settle in, Iremembered that a simple one-dish meal can bringpeople around the table for an enjoyable evening. It doesn’ttake much efforttobreak bread together In thecooler air of fall, Ithink we are all morewilling to turn on the oven. Big potsof beans,soups and stews are easy to makeand share withfamily and friends. Ilike how asimple one-dish meal like apot of white beans seasoned withsmoked turkey wings and served with sweet potatobiscuitscan make aMonday night dinner areason to give thanks. Eating with the people in our lives creates time to share stories and laughter My husband, Tim, has told



adinnertime story about his Maw-Maw,Marie Pitre, and how she worked as aschool cook in Lawtell. He has shared avivid memoryofameal where his Maw-Maw madehim hot homemadebread and butter mixed with Steen’ssyrup. With this family lore in mind, it was extra special when we went to eat at a New Orleansrestaurant, MosquitoSupper Club, and our meal began with sweet potatobiscuits served with Steen’s butter.Wewere all able to taste this sweet, buttery memory, and it did not disappoint!
The taste of chef Melissa Martin’s Steen’s butter at Mosquito Supper Club inspired me to recreate sweet potato biscuits and Steen’sbutter at home. Biscuits are afun addition tomost any meal. Iread several recipes and watched videos madebyhome
BY NICOLE HVIDSTEN




Liz Faul
Sweet Potato Biscuits, Recipe 6C
PHOTOSByLIZ FAUL White Beans with Smoked Turkey and Greens,
TNS PHOTO By LINDAGASSENHEIMER Staff report

By LIZ FAUL
SweetPotato Biscuits
Serves 14. Useful tools: alargecast-iron skillet and around biscuit cutterabout 2inches in diameter
2cups all-purpose flour,plus morefor dusting
1tablespoon baking powder
1teaspoon baking soda
1teaspoon salt
8tablespoons of butter,frozen andcut into small pieces
1largebaked sweet potato, discard thepeel and mash and chill
1⁄3 cup buttermilk
1. Preheat the ovento400 F.
2. In alarge bowl, sift together the flour,baking powder,baking soda and salt. Whisk together until combined.
3. Add the cold cut-up butter and cut it into the flour until the mixtureis crumbly.Iuse my hands to flatten each butter piece into the flour to the desired consistency and crumble. Usingyour hands canmake the butter warm, so many recipes suggest adding the dough back to the refrigera-
Steen’sCane
Syrup Butter
Recipe is inspired by the delicious version by New Orleans Mosquito Supper Club chef Melissa Martin
Servethis butter in a small ramekin to spread on sweet potato biscuits or bread. This recipe can be doubled for acrowd.
8tablespoons (1 stick of unsalted butter), at room temperature
3tablespoons of Steen’scane syrup
1. In the bowl of afood processor,place the room temperature butter and cane syrup, blend together until it forms acaramel-colored butter
2. Spoon the butter into aramekin or small serving bowl. Use aknife to smooth the topflat. Refrigerate the compound butter until it is time to serveitwith the sweet potato biscuits or dinner rolls.
Continued from page5C
chefs to gain confidence.
After experimenting with different flours and techniques, Iwas able to bake biscuits that were good and simple enough to share. The best results were made by using all-purpose flour,baking powder,baking soda and cold butter In order to make the sweet
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday,Nov.6, the 310th day of 2025. There are 55 days left in the year
Todayinhistory: On Nov.6,1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham Lincoln of the Republican Party was elected president of the United States as he defeated John Breckinridge, JohnBell and Stephen Douglas.
Also on this date: In 1947, “Meet the Press,” the longest-running television show in America, made its debut on NBC; the host
tor for afew minutes.
4. Meanwhile, inabowl, mash the sweet potato puree together with thebuttermilk. Iused afood processor to combine the sweet potato and buttermilk into apureed mash.
5. Take the flour mixture out of therefrigerator and make awell in thecenter, add thepureed sweet potato mixture and fold it into the flour.Mix togetheruntil the dough forms.
6. Spread asmall amount of flour on aclean surface, and placethe ball of dough ontop of the flourtoprevent the dough from sticking when youform thebiscuits.Once the dough is on thefloured surface, use your hands to gentlypat outthe dough to asquare shapethat is about half-inch thick, then fold it in half and pat it out. Use flour to prevent your hands from
getting sticky.Pat out the dough again and fold over Do this threetimes, and then pat out the dough to be about three-quartersinch thick.
7. Use around biscuit cuttertocut the biscuits. Arrange the biscuitsclose together,but nottouching, in the cast-ironskillet. You mayneedtobakethe biscuits in two batches depending on the size of theskillet 8. Place thebiscuits in the preheated oven until they are agolden-orange color This may takeabout 25 minutes. Take them outofthe oven and let cool for at least 5minutes before serving. Note: Sweet potatoes vary in size. If using smaller potatoes, you may need up to 3sweet potatoes to have a cupofpuree. Iliketomake sweet potatoeswith dinner anduse the leftovers forthis biscuit recipe.
White Beans with Smoked Turkey and Greens
Serves6-8. Thisrecipe is inspired by LeahChase’sWhite Bean with Collardsfrom “The Dooky Chase Cookbook.”
1pound bag of white navy beans, soakedand rinsedwith water
1tablespoon olive oil
½pound smoked turkey wings (for seasoning)
1large onion,chopped
2celeryribs, chopped 1green bell pepper, chopped
1tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
2cloves of garlic finely chopped
1bay leaf
6cups of water
1tablespoon of salt(addmore salt depending on taste)
Cracked black peppertotaste
2cups chopped collardgreens (stems removed)
1. In alarge bowl, add the driedbeans andcover with water,thendrain.
2. In alarge Dutch oven or Magnalite pot over medium heat, add the olive oil and the smoked turkey wings. Let the turkey seasoning meat heat in the oil for about 2minutes to add smoky flavor to the pot.
potato puree,simply bake sweet potatoes in the oven until they arefork-tender, anduse afoodprocessorto combinethe potato withbuttermilk. This tasty orange puree workswell to provide color, flavor andmoisture to the biscuit dough. Afterafew practicetrials, Iinvited my children’scollege friends over forMonday night beans and biscuits. One of my dinner guests saidthat she would pay $18.50 for one of thebiscuits
TODAYINHISTORY
was theshow’s co-creator, MarthaRountree. In 1977, 39 people, mostly students, werekilled when theKelly Barnes Dam in Georgia burst, sendinga wall of water through Toccoa Falls College. In 1984, PresidentRonald Reagan won reelection bya landslideover formerVice President Walter Mondale. TheDemocratic challenger won just one state, his native Minnesota. In 2012, President Barack Obama won reelection, vanquishing Republican former Massachusetts
Host atea partywithall
the Villages, Florida
Dear Heloise: After reading the suggestionabout gifting achild’stea set to agrandmother with a new granddaughter,Ijust had to say that any grandchild would love tea parties! I started tea parties with my granddaughter,but the boys felt very excluded (which they were at first). Now Idotea parties with all the kids and have finger foods (cut fruits, veggies, tinycookies and tea sandwiches). Manners are exaggerated. For example: “Sister, would you care for tea?” There are lots of “please’s” and “thank you’s.” They taketurns pouring and serving. We use water in theteapot, and Ihave a special tea quilt that soaks up spills so that there’s never any worries about accidents. Ilove your hints! —Gladys, via email Giving flower bulbs
3. Add the choppedonion, celery,bellpepperand parsley.Stir the vegetables until the onions release moisture and turn transparent. Then add the garlic and bay leaf andstir them into the vegetables and herbs. Stir the vegetables and herbs together
4. Add therinsed and drained beans and stir.Add thewater andstirthe beans andvegetables together in the water.Add the salt and pepper. Bringthe beans to a simmer,then turn themdown to low and cover the pot.
6. Letsimmerfor about an hour,and thenstir in the choppedgreens. Return the lid to the beansand simmer for another 30 minutes, occasionally stirring thepot over low heat. Once the beans are soft and the gravy thickens, taste for seasoning and add salt if needed. Serve thebeans hot over rice.
in New York City!Itook that as agreatcompliment. These biscuits would be afun addition toaThanksgiving table or any night of the week. For an extra decadent treat, spread the Steen’sbutter on ahot biscuit or bread and enjoy
Liz Sullivan Faul is a registered dietitian nutritionist whoenjoys cooking and sharing mealswith her friends and family
Gov.MittRomney with 332 electoral votes to Romney’s 206.
Today’sbirthdays: Actor Sally Field is 79. Jazz musician Arturo Sandoval is 76. Author Michael Cunningham is 73. Journalist-author Maria Shriver is 70. Author Colson Whitehead is 56. Actor Ethan Hawke is 55. Actor Thandiwe Newton is 53. Model-actor Rebecca Romijn is 53. Actor Taryn Manning is 47. Actor Emma Stone is 37. Comedian-actor Bowen Yang is 35. Olympic swimminggold medalist Bobby Finke is 26.

Hints from Heloise

among family members or planted in multiple locations. Flower bulbs are available year-round in amazing varieties and will grow as alovely reminder of the loved one whopassed. When someone young passes away, Iusually give white flower bulbs. One family sent me a lovely note and a picture of the King Daffodils that bloomed the following spring on the widow’s wedding anniversary.They wereamazed and so grateful forhow nature delivered; it wassuch perfect timing. And as bulbs naturalize, the flower bed becomes fuller and can again be divided with family and friends. Thank you for gathering and sharing all the wisdom that people have. —Susan Newman, in Marthasville, Missouri
Rubber band alternative
Dear Heloise: Instead of sending flowers when someonepasses, Iprefer to give abasket of flower bulbs. They can be divided
Dear Heloise: When Ineed arubber band to secure a small bundle of papers, I often use an elastic ponytail band. They are strong and inexpensive. —Pam, in
FALL COCKTAIL RECIPES
Spinach trick
Dear Heloise: Ifound the cleanest and easiest wayto use drained and squeezed frozen spinach in arecipe: The night before you need the spinach, take the bag from the freezer and set it in abowl in the refrigerator.Take the bag out of the refrigerator,cut the bag open, gather the open part of the bag, and twist. Take small scissors that are open and makeseveral puncture holes in the bag. Youcan then squeeze the moisture out without losing alot of the spinach and without making ahuge mess. —Cindi Weiss, in Lincoln, Nebraska Cookingveggies
Dear Heloise: This is ahint on how to cook vegetables: If they are grownunderground, put them in cold water and then cook them. If they are grownabove ground, put them in boiling water and then cook. —V.J., in North Carolina
Sendahinttoheloise@ heloise.com.
Brown Sugar Bourbon Mule
Serves 4. Brown sugar complements the smooth, sweet undertones of bourbon whiskey.Lime juice and ginger beer add arefreshing one-twopunch. Recipe is from “AutumnSpirits: Cozy Fall Cocktails &Drink Recipes” by AdamsMedia.
¼cup lightbrown sugar
¼cup water
4ounces (½ cup) bourbon whiskey
4tablespoons lime juice
2(12-ounce) bottles ginger beer 4lime wedges
1. In asmall saucepan
over medium-highheat, bring brown sugar and water to aboil to makesimple syrup. Stir constantly until brown sugar is dissolved, about 3minutes. Set aside to cool for20minutes.
2. Fill four rocks glasses or copper mugs with ice.
Add to each glass 1ounce (2 tablespoons) whiskey, 1ounce (2 tablespoons) brownsugar simple syrup, 1tablespoon limejuice and 6ounces ginger beer 3. Stir gently.Garnish with limewedges before serving.
White Chocolate Negroni
Serves 2. Another drink that’sbeen experiencing arenaissance lately,the negroni is a combination of gin, vermouth and bitter liqueur.Formulating achocolate version was an especially fun challenge. How do you preserve the cocktail’squintessentially bitter nature while adding alayer of thesweetstuff? It took someexperimentation, but the results—using awhitechocolate–washed gin —are undeniablydelicious. Youwill need to startthis aday or two in advance to give the gin time to soak. Recipe is from “For the Love of Chocolate” by Phillip Ashley Rix (Harper Celebrate, 2025).
FOR THE WHITE CHOCOLATEWASHED GIN: 1cup gin 1cup white chocolate chips, chopped FOR THE NEGRONI: 2ounces (4 tablespoons) white chocolate–washed gin 2ounces (4 tablespoons) sweet vermouth 2ounces (4 tablespoons) Campari 2largeking ice cubes or ice spheres Orangetwist, for garnish
1. Prepare the white chocolate-washed gin: Combine the gin and chocolate in apint mason jar.Screw the lid on tightlyand shakevigorouslytocombine. Store in the refrigerator for24to48hours, shaking often, to let the flavors meld.
2. Strain themixture,reserving the gin anddiscarding the chocolate.
3. Preparethe cocktails: In ashakerfilledwithice, combine the gin, vermouth and Campari. Shake vigorously for15to20seconds until chilled.
4. Strain into two rocks glasses with large ice cubes. Garnish with orange and serve immediately
Apple Cider Margarita
Serves 1. Here’saclassic margarita with aseasonal twist. Adding apple cider and cinnamon to the traditional limeflavor creates an autumn-in-a-glass treat. Recipe is from “Autumn Spirits: Cozy Fall Cocktails &Drink Recipes” by Adams Media.
1tablespoon cinnamon sugar
1lime wedge
1½ ounces (3 tablespoons) blanco tequila
½ounce (1 tablespoon) triple sec
3ounces (6 tablespoons) apple
1. Spread cinnamon sugar in ashallow dish. Use the limewedge to dampen the rim of arocksglass and dipthe rim in cinnamon sugar.Fill the glass with ice.
2. Fill acocktail shaker with ice. Add tequila, triple sec, cider and limejuice.
3. Shake and strain into the prepared glass. Garnish with apple slice, cinnamon stick and rosemarysprig.


PHOTO
Whipping up Steen’sCane Syrup Butter










SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.22) You'll hold your own and do your bestifyou trust andbelieve in yourself. Opportunities will flourish if you are straightforward and engageinopen communicationwith people who need your services.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.21) Focus on home improvements, comfort andconvenience. Channeling your energyinto something constructive will be uplifting and, over time, lucrative.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) Harness your powerbynetworking, socializing and gaining insight into the latest trendsinyourfield of expertise. Choose your destinationcarefully, andprotect yourself against illness or injury.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.19) Don't rush; accountfor everymove, transaction anddetail to ensure no one takes advantageofyou. You can't buy love, butyou canearn it through your actions.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Listen, and, when in doubt, don't be afraid to sayno. Youhave plenty to gain if you are cognizant of thefacts andwhat's unfolding. Question offers that aretoo good to be true.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Negotiating contracts and dealingwith authority figures, government agencies and institutions areall favored. Investments and financial gains are prevalent, but so is excessive behavior and taking on toomuch.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Negotiations look promising. Don't be afraid to ask
forwhat you want. Trust your instincts, stick to the facts and give your best performance. Don't makeunrealistic promises; the truth will pay off.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Change is bound to excite you. Don't give away too much when you can easily get what you want if you play to win. Challenge the unknown, but be readytoadapt when necessary.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be creative, think outsidethe boxand look for highvolume outlets for what you can offer. Don'tfold under pressure. Know your worth, and accept nothing less. Proceed with confidence.
LEO(July23-Aug. 22) Participation is key today.Whatyou see, experience and learnwill point you in an inviting direction. It's time to shed what'snolonger propelling you forward and replace it with something new and exciting.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be careful not to share too much personal information. Time is on your side, and the wisdom yougain will enhanceyourabilityto make wisechoices.Haste makes waste, while patience paves the way.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.23) Leave your cards at home. Temptation to spend on things you don't need will lead to regret. Focus on communicating, learning and updating your skills. Offer perfection.
The horoscope, an entertainment feature,isnot based on scientific fact. ©2025 by NEA, Inc., dist.
By Andrews McMeel Syndication

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.
beetLe bAILeY
Mother GooSe And GrIMM SherMAn’S LAGoon
bIG





Sudoku
InstructIons: Sudoku is anumber-placing puzzle based on a9x9 grid with several given numbers The object is to place thenumbers1to9 in the empty squares so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box containsthe same number only once. The difficulty level of theSudoku increases from Monday to Sunday.
Yesterday’sPuzzle Answer
THe wiZard oF id
BLondie
BaBY BLueS
Hi and LoiS
CurTiS








BY PHILLIP ALDER Bridge
Jane Goodall said, “Every individual matters. Every individual hasaroleto play. Every individual makes adifference.”
Abridge playermight add the word “card”aftereach“individual.”However, sometimes therole of aparticular card maybedifficulttodiscern.
In this deal,Southisinfourspades. West leads the club king. Howshould declarer plan the play? What is therole of South’s heart king?
South openstwo clubs, strong, artificial and forcing. Hishand is aminimum because, when unbalanced, opener will usually have at least nine winners Thishandhas only eight and ahalf: five spades, twodiamonds, one club and half aheart. But it is asensible openingbid. However, when North raises spades, promising some points, South hasto settle for four spades to announce his minimum. If Northhas agood hand, he can bidhigher.
When dummy tables with the spade ace, declarer has nine tricks. Probably his first thought is that he needs East to have the heartace. Then,after getting to dummy with atrump,aheart lead through East wouldgenerate atrick for South’s king.
Here, though, youwill notice that West hasthe heart ace. What can South do?
Declarer must realize thatthe heart king is ared herring. He should play to ruff aheart on the board, whichgenerates a seventh trump trick.Hetakes the first trick (otherwise, Westmight shift to a trump) andplaysaheart.WhenSouth winsthe next trick, he leads another heart. And in amoment, declarer gains that key ruff.
©2025 by NEA, Inc dist.
By Andrews McMeel Syndication
wuzzles
Each Wuzzleisa word riddle whichcreates adisguised word,phrase, name, place, saying, etc. For example: NOON GOOD =GOOD AFTERNOON
Previous answers:
word game
InsTRucTIons: 1. Words must be of four or more letters. 2. Words that acquire four letters by the addition of “s,” such as “bats” or “dies,” are not allowed. 3. Additional words made by adding a“d” or an “s” may not be used. 4. Proper nouns, slang words, or vulgar or sexually explicit words are not allowed.
ToDAY’s WoRD JuBILAnT: JOO-bih-lent: Feeling or expressing great joy.
Averagemark19words
Time limit 35 minutes
Can you find27ormore words in JUBILANT?
YEsTERDAY’s WoRD —oRnATE
oaten orate

loCKhorNs
Man looksatthe outward part of man. God looksatthe heart. G.E. Dean
marmaduKe
Bizarro
hagar the horriBle
Pearls Before swiNe
garfield
B.C.
PiCKles hidato


BRIEFS
FROM WIRE REPORTS
Upbeat economic reports boost stocks
NEW YORK Stocks gained ground on Wall Street Wednesday following several upbeat economic updates and a steady
flow of quarterly reports from U.S. companies.
The gains were broad and marked a reversal from the prior day’s dip. Much of the market’s push and pull came from the technology sector, where several companies with huge values have an outsized influence over the market.
Google’s parent, Alphabet, jumped 2.4%, Broadcom rose 2%, and Facebook parent Meta Platforms rose 1.4%. They helped counter losses from a few technology behemoths, including Nvidia and Microsoft. Taser maker Axon Enterprise slumped 9.4% after forecasting weaker profits than analysts were expecting. Live Nation Entertainment fell 10.6% after its latest results fell short of analysts’ forecasts.
The latest round of earnings offers Wall Street a source of information on consumers, businesses and the economy that is otherwise lacking amid the government shutdown. Important monthly updates on inflation and employment have ceased, leaving investors, economists and the Federal Reserve without a fuller picture of the economy.
A monthly report from ADP showed that private payrolls rose more than expected in October The report offers a partial glimpse into the job market, which has been generally weakening and raising broader concerns about economic growth Epic, Google to settle Android store dispute
SAN FRANCISCO Video game maker Epic Games has reached a “comprehensive settlement” with Google that could end its 5-year-old legal crusade targeting Google’s Play Store for Android apps. Epic and Google revealed the settlement agreement in a joint legal document they filed in a San Francisco federal court Tuesday Epic, which makes the hit online game Fortnite won a victory over the summer when a federal appeals court upheld a jury verdict condemning Google’s Android app store as an illegal monopoly The unanimous ruling cleared the way for a federal judge to enforce a potentially disruptive shakeup that’s designed to give consumers more choices. Google took another hit in October when the U.S. Supreme Court refused to protect it from the judge’s required app store makeover
The two companies said the settlement closely follows U.S. District Judge James Donato’s October 2024 ruling ordering Google to tear down the digital walls shielding its Android app store from competition. FDA warns about unapproved Botox sales
U.S. health regulators on Wednesday sent warning letters to 18 websites selling counterfeit or unapproved versions of Botox and similar injectable drugs commonly used to smooth wrinkles.
The Food and Drug Administration said it was taking action after receiving reports of injuries in connection with the products, including toxic side effects.
Botox is a diluted, purified form of botulinum, one of the most toxic substances in the world. The ingredient works by temporarily blocking nerve signals and causing muscles to relax. While most famously approved for cosmetic use, Botox is also approved in the U.S. for a number of medical conditions, including muscle spasms, eye disorders and migraines. The FDA warning letters mostly went to cosmetic websites. In each case, the FDA said the companies were offering unofficial or mislabeled versions of Botox-like drugs that haven’t been approved by the agency






Google Maps to debut smarter AI
Drivers can ask questions while using navigation app
BY QUEENIE WONG Los Angeles Times (TNS)
Drivers navigating traffic on their morning commutes will be able to do much more than just find directions and the nearest gas station on Google Maps.
In the coming weeks, Google will add its artificial intelligencepowered assistant Gemini into Google Maps, making it possible
for drivers to get answers to more complex questions while they’re on the road.
Users will be able to chat with the AI assistant by saying “Hey Google” or tapping on the Gemini icon in Google Maps. Google Maps currently has an AI assistant within the app but the questions it can answer are limited.
In a demonstration of how Gemini works in Google Maps, the assistant answered questions about budget-friendly vegan restaurants along a driver’s route and parking options. It even added a calendar event for soccer practice.
“It really is like having a friend
who’s a local expert sitting right next to you in the passenger seat,” said Vishal Dutta, group product manager for Google Maps at a virtual press event.
Google Maps users will be able to use their voice to report a crash. The AI assistant will also summarize information such as sports results, emails and the news as people are commuting to and from the office.
Google said it also built a new feature, called Lens built with Gemini, where people can use the AI assistant by clicking on the camera icon when they stumble across an unfamiliar place on a
map. They can ask the assistant why a restaurant is so popular or what the ambiance is like inside before deciding whether to spend time there. That feature will roll out later in the month.
The product updates are examples of how the Mountain View, California, company is integrating new AI-powered features as it competes with tech companies such as OpenAI, Meta and Apple that also have AI assistants.
OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT has been going up against Google with new products, such as a new web browser, to rival Google Chrome.

BIG EXPANSION
BY IANNE SALVOSA Staff writer
Pipe & Steel Industrial Fabricators will add a new steel processing facility and expand its Denham Springs facilities, creating 56 direct and indirect jobs.
Pipe & Steel will add 20 direct jobs at an average salary of $62,400 and Louisiana Economic Development projects that the expansion will lead to 36 indirect jobs. The company will keep 70 employees.
Pipe & Steel President and CEO Kylie Sparks said the company expanded in response to a “tremendous” amount of demand from new businesses in the state Pipe & Steel works on small- to medium-sized projects with capital of $30 million or less, which Sparks said is a profitable niche he intends to stay in after the expansion is complete.
The $5.1 million project will create a 63,000-square-foot steel processing center and add equipment for the fabrication facility to increase productivity and safety
It’s the company’s second expansion in two years, after adding a permanent covered blasting and painting facility and expanding its structural steel shop and pipe fabrication facility starting in 2023. The project will start construction in Janu-
ary and finish in June and will ultimately expand their beam cutting operation and meet demand from the state’s manufacturing industry The company can currently process 100 tons of steel, and the expansion will increase its processing capacity by three to four times.
Pipe & Steel will use $200,000 from the LED’s Economic Development Award Program and LED FastStart, the department’s workforce recruitment and training team, for the expansion The company will also use the state’s industrial tax exemption, an 80% property tax abatement on new investments, and the High-Impact Jobs Programs, a state grant for companies that create jobs paying higher than the parish average wage.
LED Secretary Susan Bourgeois met with Pipe & Steel leaders Wednesday afternoon as part of her Driving Louisiana Opportunity Tour, to garner feedback on the state industries’ challenges and needs She kicked off her tour in September, visiting Shreveport and Monroe and visited the northshore last month. She said Pipe & Steel’s expansion exhibits innovative technology that people may not expect out of Louisiana, especially from smaller businesses. The LED has reformed incentives to ensure small- to medium-sized
businesses can benefit, when historically eligibility for incentives was based on job count. For example, the FastStart program was designed to provide recruitment and training support for large businesses, but Bourgeois said the LED has pivoted to make the resources accessible to small businesses in the last six to nine months.
Her visit to Pipe & Steel’s Denham Springs headquarters makes good on the promise that the state will grow existing businesses, in addition to attracting new companies, she said. Growing and attracting businesses has been the focus of the Landry administration, rolling out a plan to streamline communication between state agencies and integrate Louisiana businesses with large projects in the state in September. The LED set a goal to visit 800 “driver companies” by the end of the fiscal year as part of their Nine by Ninety plan.
“Truth be told, the existing Louisiana businesses that are doing the work, day in and day out and have built the Louisiana economy, are getting attention from LED for the first time in a very intentional and obvious way,” she said.
Email Ianne Salvosa at ianne.salvosa@ theadvocate.com.
Company warns customers remain under
BY DEE-ANN DURBIN Associated Press
McDonald’s sales got a lift from Snack Wraps and other value-oriented products in the third quarter But McDonald’s Chairman and CEO Chris Kempczinski warned Wednesday that consumers in the U.S. and other top international markets remain under economic pressure, a problem he thinks will persist well into 2026. Concern about SNAP food aid benefits and whether the U.S. government will
pay them during the shutdown is exacerbating those worries, he said.
Kempczinski said U.S. visits to fast food restaurants by lower-income consumers fell again in the July-September period, a trend that has persisted for nearly two years. And while higher-income customers are continuing to dine out, they’re also looking for deals.
“I think sometimes there’s this idea that value only matters to low-income (customers). But value matters to everybody,” Kempczinski said on a conference call with investors. “Feeling like you’re getting good value for your dollar is important.”
As a result, McDonald’s is leaning heavily into discounts. It launched Extra Value Meals in
the U.S. in early September, piling those on top of other deals, including its McValue menu, which was introduced in January
U.S. restaurant sales got a boost in July when Snack Wraps returned after a nine-year absence.
McDonald’s said Snack Wraps were the most popular new chicken product in recent U.S history, with 20% of customers buying one in the first month they were on sale. The $2.99 Snack Wraps also appealed to value-conscious consumers, Kempczinski said. McDonald’s global same-store sales, or sales at locations open at least a year, rose 3.6% for the July-September period. That was slightly ahead of Wall Street’s forecast of 3.5%, according to analysts
polled by FactSet. Same-store sales rose 2.4% in the U.S. in the third quarter
The deals are costly for McDonald’s. Chief Financial Officer
STAFF PHOTO By IANNE SALVOSA
DupreJohn, Po Box 52329, Lafayette
DupreKade M, 116 Reserve Dr Apt 311, Lafayette
DupreLauren, Po Box 52329, Lafayette
DupreManangement Services, Attn: Heather Billingsley 113 Beau PreRd, Lafayette
DupreMary K, 201 Settlers Trace Blvd Apt 3206, Lafayette
DupreMitzi, 405 Stonemont Rd, Lafayette
DupreMonica, 317 Cypress View Dr,Youngsville
DupreNeko, 204 Zoie Dr,Lafayette
DupreSharlene, 330 Settlers Trace Blvd #Suite B, Lafayette
DupuisDebra, 133 Gordon Crocket Dr,Lafayette
Dupuis Kenneth J, 145 Pic Dr,Scott
DupuisVictoria Anne, 102 Pear Tree Cir,Broussard
Dural Brittani, 106 Nyoka Cir,Lafayette
Dural Clifton Paul, 411 Alpha ATheo, Carencro Dural Music, COStanley Dural Jr Estate Benjamin Burns, Lafayette Durand Donna Elizabeth, 148 Mt Vernon Drive, Lafayette Durham Gerold A, 310 Prairie Ln, Lafayette
Durham Jeremy,111 Maurice St, Lafayette
Dwayne Brasseaux, 109 EspaiseRd. #204, Milton
Dwg Acquisitions Llc, 4400 Embassador Caffery Pkwy S, Lafayette
Dydoc Inc, Po Box 1076, Youngsville
Dyer Derek, 211 Liberty AveApt 321, Lafayette
Dykes Chad, 609Rolling Mill Ln, Youngsville
Dylan Jones, 550 Eraste Landry Rd Apt 306, Lafayette
Dynamic Drug Screening Llc, 221 Southpark Rd Ste A5, Lafayette Eagle Diesel Llc, 1025 Langlinais Rd Lot 25, Youngsville
Eaglin Latresh, 316 BradfordDr, Carencro
Eaglin Monique, 215 Harvest Pointe Cir,Lafayette
East Texas Gas Producers Assoc, 400 EKaliste Saloom Rd Ste 60, Lafayette
Eastin Reid, 1630 Rue De Belier Apt 1710, Lafayette
EasycareOfLouisiana Inc, 221 Teljean Rd, Lafayette Eaton David, 118 Grandview Terrace Dr,Youngsville
Ebeling Aaron,111 Edie Ann Dr Apt 135, Lafayette
Echosound Records Llc, 122 Charles Read Ave, Lafayette
Eddins Anthony,305 Se Evangeline Thruway,Lafayette
Edith GWellemeyer, Po Box 61021, Lafayette
Edmiston Erin, Apt 23 400 WBrentwood Blvd, Lafayette
Edmond Moses Leon, 213 Paul Breaux Ave, Lafayette
Eduardo Enrique, 2900 WWillow St Trlr 20, Scott
EdwardCharles A, 408 Rue Ciel, Carencro Edwards Barbara, 912 Webb Street Apt 13, Lafayette
Edwards Chasity,721 Edison Street, Lafayette
Eggleston Carrie, 412 Holden Ave, Lafayette
Ehman James, 135 Swoon Dr,Lafayette Eisler Jennifer,106 Flagstone Ct, Lafayette El Burrito Locl Llc, 120 Des Jacques Lot 11, Lafayette Elagamy Zakary,CoSouthside High School 312 Almonaster,Youngsville Eldarragi Ben, 110Mill Valley Run, Lafayette Eldridge Joyce C, 204 Westpointe Cir,Lafayette Electronic Protection Systems Llc, 1817 ABertrand Drive, Lafayette Elevated Third, 201 Rue Beauregard Ste 202, Lafayette Elgle MontyKevi, Apt D101 Basin St, Lafayette
Elizabeth DYoung Csw,228 MontroseAvenue, Lafayette
Elkhansa Abbie A, 201 Lo Saab Cove, Lafayette
Ellender Sheri Kay,108 Merchants BlvdApt 70, Lafayette
Elliott Darrell D, 405 Whitlock St, Lafayette
Elliott Donna F, 306 DArceneaux Rd, Scott Elliott Noelie F, 614 SLarriviereRd, Youngsville Ellis Sarah Diesi, 124 Mirada Lane, Lafayette Elsanousy Muhiad, 130 Township Ln Apt A101, Lafayette Elsie Solomon, 1600 East Simcoe St., Apt. 98, Lafayette
Emerald Correctional Management, 315 SCollege Rd Ste 205, Lafayette Emery Justin, 108 Grand Prairie Dr,Lafayette Emy John, Po Box 434, Youngsville En TeeShop, 103 Randy Cir #Lafayette, Lafayette England Michael, 302 Deer Meadow Blvd, Broussard
Engle Amelia, 1100 Robley Dr Apt 1207, Lafayette
Environmental Drilling Solutions Llc, 201 Energy Pkwy Ste 400, Lafayette
Ernst James, 5530 Ambassador Caffery,Youngsville
Erny Insurance Agency The, Po Box 434, Youngsville
Eschete Jr Md Dennis J, 112 Granite Creek Bend, Lafayette
Eschete Mary,101 Santa Marta Dr,Youngsville Escobar Jesus Alberto, North Bertrand, Lafayette
Esington Patricia A, 415 Guilbeau Rd Apt 34, Lafayette Eskano Samantha, 308 Odile St, Lafayette
Eskridge Brittany,101 River Oak Cir,Lafayette Espana Gomez Juan Alberto, 1731 Lagneaux Rd 2, Lafayette Esparza Dorochy,Lot 12 7727 Cameron St, Duson Espinosa Kevin Osmin, 621 Lafayette, Lafayette
Esprit Kennedy,117 Rue Aubin, Lafayette
Estilette Matthew,103 Georgetown Loop, Lafayette
Estrada Carlos L, 211 Republic Ave713, Lafayette
Estrada Vasques Pablo F, 324 Arnaudville Road, Carencro
Etienne Ladasha, 203 Noah St, Lafayette
Etier Lauren, 103 Bellevoir,Lafayette
Etzel Becky,220 Ardenwood Drive, Lafayette
Evans Beatrice, 100 Kingspointe Cir,Lafayette
Evans Edwin G, Po Box 53, Youngsville
Evans Jason, 108 Hershey Court, Broussard
Evans Joshua, 114 Downing St, Lafayette Evans Julie, 134 SSouthlawnDr, Lafayette Evans Tyson, 142 Ridge Run Lane, Carencro Everybody Rides, 2963 Johnston St, Lafayette
Evitt Bernadette M, 700BonaireDr, Lafayette
Evolution Home Development Limited Liabi, 17 Rollinson St, Duson
Exp Realty Llc, 3118 WPinhook Rd Ste 201B, Lafayette
Expeditors & Production, Services Company 206 Magnate Dr,Lafayette Extreme Energy Services, Po Box 1468, Broussard Ezell Renee T, 403 SBuchanan St Apt 4, Lafayette Fabacher Jr Peter,115 North Suwanee Rd, Lafayette Fabian Lugo Apmc, 1101 SCollege, Lafayette FabianPonce Badillo, 3750 Landry Rd Trlr 39, Scott
Facey Eugene, Po Box 51387, Lafayette
Faciane Nicholas L, 201 Mary St, Broussard Fadaol Amy,212 Candlelight Dr,Lafayette FairburnWilliam, 125 Onyx Street, Lafayette Fairley Janique, 301 Birch Dr Apt 222, Lafayette Faist Julia, 25334 Justice Dr S, Lafayette Falgout Elizabeth, 103 Exchange Place, Lafayette Falgout Katie Broussard, 107 Hermitage Ave, Lafayette Fambrough Susan, 101 Oakwood Dr,Lafayette Family Insurance Center Inc, Po Box 80158, Lafayette Farhana Amir Md, 501 WSaint Mary Blvd #320, Lafayette Farishta Abulhassan, 201 Prescott Blvd Apt 428, Youngsville FarrRaymond, 111 Metairiect, Lafayette Farrior Paula Lynn, 102 Summerfest Dr,Lafayette Fat Albert’S, 1322 Moss Street, Lafayette Faucheaux Chad, 3750 Landry Rd Lot 41, Scott Faucheaux Matthew J, 105 Hutton Ln, Youngsville Faucheaux Stephanie S, 105 Hutton Ln, Youngsville
Faul Bryan Lee, 129 BPark Ave, Lafayette Faul Chance J, 311 Des Jacques Rd, Lafayette Faul Joseph Cylde, 707 Wyman Dr,Scott Faul Phil, 6701 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Broussard Faulk Jr Ronald, 102 EPinhook Rd, Lafayette Faulk London, 319 Ardenwood Dr,Lafayette Faulk Rachael B, 107 Rue Du Jardin, Lafayette Faulk Stanton T, 504 Gerald Dr,Lafayette Faust Ashley M, 210 San Marcos Dr,Youngsville FavaloroAlaina, 511 Queensberry Dr,Lafayette FavaloroLucas, 150 Cypress Cv,Youngsville Favors Magraff, 329Lebesque Rd, Lafayette
Feehan Jennifer W, 125 Lucas Circle, Lafayette Felix Ladasha, 212 Hidden Ridge Dr,Lafayette
Felix Linton, 213 Lafayette St, Lafayette
Felix Martha H, 213 Lafayette St, Lafayette
Felix Wilfred, Apt 158 201 High Meadows Blvd, Lafayette Fell Kristy, 216 Landmark St, Lafayette
Fellabaum Audrey M, 418 Lauren Dr,Scott Fenstermaker James, 107 Villa Park Ln, Lafayette Ferrell Dcsd Thomas, 419 Woodvale Ave, Lafayette Fiber Lus, Po Box 4030C, Lafayette Fidias Cuarezma Corp, 102 Versailles Blvd, Lafayette Fields Mary,112 Leggett Drive, Lafayette FigaroFrancis, 109 Barnet Ct, Lafayette FigaroIvy Demona, 109 Barnet Ct, Lafayette Fike Anganette, 303 Martin Oaks Dr,Lafayette
Filer Ernie J, 221 Harton Rd, Youngsville
Fils Harold, 1108 Tenth Street, Lafayette
Fincher Martha Ann, 504 East 3Rd St, Broussard Find Alluring, Apt A113 Merchants Blvd, Lafayette Finley Barbara, 308 Shinnecock Hill Dr,Broussard Finley David, 3002 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette Finley Penny,3002 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette Finney Renada, 102 Hummingbird Ln No B, Lafayette FirnbergWilliam, 1305 Lafayette St, Lafayette Fisher Bryan R, 136 Minolta Rd Lot D, Youngsville Fisher Donna, 211 Crestview Cir,Lafayette
Early Childhood Dev,230 Ridge Rd, Lafayette
Laura, 3121 Johnston St, Lafayette
Fleenor John A, 339 Rue Scholastique, Lafayette
Fletcher Michael K, 1518 Duchamp Rd #E,Broussard
Flex Promotion, 116A Rue Royale, Lafayette
Florence Courquet Russell, 112 Sage Glenn Lane, Lafayette
Flores Jairo, 300 Spruce Dr,Lafayette
Flores Joshua, 302 WUniversity Ave, Lafayette
Flores Roberto, 203 Jackson St, Lafayette
Florez Marie E, 132 Oakbend Dr,Lafayette
Flot Randi M, 600 Mckinley St, Lafayette
Floyd Angelle, 114 Exchange Pl, Lafayette
Fluid Technologies, Po Box 1702, Scott
Flyguys Inc, 141 Ridgeway Dr Ste 203, Lafayette
Flynn Mary,105 Woodbridge Dr,Lafayette
Fogleman Holly,118 Dark Horse Cr,Youngsville
Foley Jeanne T, 211 Belle Homme Dr,Lafayette
Folse Gregory J, 510 Guilbeau Rd CSte, Lafayette
Folse Robert P, 315 Amesbury Dr Apt 301, Lafayette
Fontenot Bennett, 104 Fernridge Dr,Lafayette
Fontenot Carl J, 100 Burt Cir,Lafayette
Fontenot Connie, 415 NDominque AveApt 4, Lafayette
Fontenot David, 105 Isaiah Drive, Lafayette
Fontenot Dennis T, 211 Autumn Oak Bnd, Lafayette
Fontenot Dwayne R, 301 Devalcourt St Apt 5, Lafayette
Fontenot Elizabeth O, 200 Winding Way, Youngsville
Fontenot Jennifer S, 503 Comanche Dr,Lafayette
Fontenot Keith A, 211 Acomb Drive, Lafayette
Fontenot Lacey,213 Greenspoint Cmns, Lafayette
Fontenot Lisa, 405 S. Wakfield Dr,Lafayette
Fontenot Mary Ann B, 906 Gerald Dr,Lafayette
Fontenot Patricia Lynn, 112 Rue Du Jardin, Lafayette
Fontenot Sharon, 513 Marie Antoinette St, Lafayette
Fontenot Sr Ryan J, 216-B Herbert Rd, Lafayette
FontenotTimothy J, 2032 Ne Evangeline Thruway,Lafayette
Fontenot Tina, 4350 Hwy 90 ELot 14, Broussard
Fontenot Trey C, 655 Marie Antoinette Streett., Lafayette
ForOur Sake Llc, 2402 WCongress St, Lafayette
Forbes David, 402 Spanish Moss Ln, Broussard
Forbes Johanna, 1057 Mardi Gras Rd #B, Carencro
FordDenneen, 309 Saint Landry Street, Lafayette
FordJamaal, 112 Lincoln St, Lafayette
Foreman Danny R, 115 Colorado Rd, Duson
Foreman Derek, 436 Normandy Road, Lafayette
Foreman Linda, 436 Normandy Road, Lafayette
Foreman Lynette, 213 Brandy Syreet, Lafayette
Foreman Robert W, 309 Bluebonnet Dr,Lafayette
Forest Oil Corporation, Attn Jib Accounting Bad Address
Caffery,Lafayette
Foret Daniel M, 1720 Detente Rd, Youngsville
Foret Ronnie, 233 Princeton Woods Loop, Lafayette
Forever Young Enterprise Llc, 304 Hilltop Cir,Lafayette
Fortier Ashlyn, 221 Kidder Rd, Carencro
Foss Debra Rae, 201 Prescott Road Apt 427, Youngsville
Foster Derrick C, 223 Miramar Blvd, Lafayette
Foster Elisa, 2300 Highway 93, Carencro
Foster Jacob J, 315 Amesbury Dr Apt 206, Lafayette
Foster Stan, Ste 3100 4212 WCongress St, Lafayette
Foster Suzanne P, 110 EMartial AveApt 1112, Lafayette
FoulcardMichael, 134 Gateway Dr,Lafayette
Fournet &Adams Ltd, 1030 Lafayette Streeet, Lafayette
Fox Crystae, 215 Staten St, Lafayette
Fox Kathlene R, 701 SCollege Rd Apt 210, Lafayette
FoxKirsten Grills, 115 Grays Landing Ln, Lafayette
FoxTerrence J, 715 Madeline Ave, Lafayette
Frame David, 551 Tracey Cir,Lafayette
Frame David E, 346 Rena Dr,Lafayette
Frame Ruth M, 102 Derby Ln, Lafayette
Francesconi Brandon, 1050 The Lake Dr,Broussard
Francesconi Brandon L, 205 Churchill Dr,Lafayette
Francis Albert, 221 Dewey, Lafayette
Francis Amos J, 113 Northern Ave, Lafayette
Francis Andrea, 101 Young Dr,Lafayette
Francis Arthur R, 200 Randolph Dr,Lafayette
Francis Catherine, 100 Fairway Dr,Lafayette
Francis Clarence, 240 Roy Guidry Rd, Youngsville
Francis Daniel, 205 Valleyview Drive, Lafayette
Francis Darrel, 302 Jefferson St Apt 604, Lafayette
Francis Eula, 210 Sheila Dr,Lafayette
Francis Jackie, 218 Chester St, Lafayette
Francis Jared, 213 NPine St, Lafayette
Francis Jowana G,409 Ena Street, Lafayette
4023 Ambassador
Gary Tayler L, 102 Harvest Sugar Row,Carencro
Garza Hermila, 515 Sonnier Rd Trlr 3, Carencro
Garza Rogelio, 3125 Hwy 90 East, Broussard
Garzotto Ivan L, 104 Green Meadow Rd, Lafayette Garzotto Katy,104 Green Meadow Rd, Lafayette
Gaskins Stacey B, 6500 WCongress St, Duson
GaspardCharlotte E, 101 Breckenridge Loop, Lafayette
GaspardJoseph, 101 Breckenridge Loop, Lafayette
GaspardJoseph R, 101 Breckenridge Loop, Lafayette
GaspardKernell Martin, 700 Bonin Rd Apt D, Lafayette
GaspardMichael, 103 Nappy Circle, Lafayette
GaspardRonnie, 940 Young St, Broussard
GaspardTerry J, 349 Orangewood Dr,Lafayette
Gass Johnmichael, 213 Stags Leap Ln, Broussard
Gatewood Latasha Nicole, 221 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette
Gathers Jawon, 1100 Robley Dr Apt 7304, Lafayette
Gattey Didi, 710 SCollege Rd Apt91, Lafayette
Gaubert Marie L, 304 Marguerite Boulevard, Lafayette
Gauthier Hubert, 112 Shiloh Dr,Youngsville
Gautreaux Andrew,101 Mountainside Dr,Lafayette
Gautreaux David, 5003 Cameron St, Lafayette
Gautreaux Dorothy Faye, 215 Anna St Apt 46, Scott
Gautreaux James I, 2712 SFieldspan Rd, Duson
Gautreaux Stacy,216 Rue Basin Apt A, Carencro
Gavilan Osmel, 810 Scollege Rd Apte, Lafayette
Gay Cameron, 210 Polly Ln Apt 825, Lafayette
Geb Operating Llc, Po Box 53604, Lafayette
Gee Michael M, 815 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, Lafayette
Geiger Timothy,408 Lafayette St, Youngsville
Geiss Erica, 413 Lamar,Lafayette
Gempp Lori, 201 Connie Cir,Lafayette
Genesis Behavioral Hospital, 847 Stewart St, Lafayette
Gentle Brandy Elaine, 132 Angler Dr,Lafayette
George Corrine M, 804 MLKing Jr Dr Apt B22, Lafayette
George Craig D, 174 Holly St, Lafayette
George Iesha, 907 Louisiana Ave, Lafayette
George Joseph M, Po Box 903, Duson
George Sheila, 202 Lyons St, Lafayette
Geosafe Chemicals Inc, 206 Digby Ave, Lafayette Geovera Specialty Ins Company,409 Monarch Dr Lafayette Gerald, 102 Avenue B, Youngsville Gerald Nicholas, 330 Feu Follet Road, Lafayette GerardCrystal, 107 Supreme Court Dr,Lafayette Gerber Collision, 1555 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette Gerber Collision Glass, 1555 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette
Getman Matthias John, 304 RayburnStApt E, Lafayette
Gholson Estate Charles B, Box 51882, Lafayette Gholston Robert Matt, 142 Edie Ann Dr,Lafayette Giardina Susan, 100 Granite Creek Bnd, Lafayette Giardina Susan L, 100 Granite Creek Bnd, Lafayette Giavotella Joseph, 629 Wilson St, Lafayette Gibson David L, 204 Bell Downs Dr,Lafayette
Idelle M, 167 Arceneaux Rd, Carencro Gilbert Sunday,202 Dublin Cir Apt D, Lafayette Gill Dorothy T, 6000 Johnston St Apt 1412, Lafayette Gill Ernest, 1203 Carmel Dr,Lafayette Gilliam Georgine, 107 Supreme Court Dr,Lafayette
Gillis Keri, 394 Moulin Rd, Broussard
Gillis Paige, 218 SLarriviereRd, Youngsville
GilmoreBrooke I, 910 Robert Lee Cir, Lafayette Giraud Jacques L, 119 Shadyside Ave, Lafayette Girl Scouts Of Louisiana, 1720 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette
GirouardCleaners, 106 NMorgan Ave, Broussard
GirouardMadeline G, 2306 WGloria Switch Rd, Carencro
Gitz Alan, 203 Vivian St, Lafayette
Givens Megan, 446 Holden Ave, Lafayette
Glass Mary P, 101 Spring Lake Cir,Lafayette
Glasser Harlan, 416 Old Settlement Rd, Lafayette
Glaude Angeline, 230 Town Home Loop, Lafayette
Glaude Romeion, 412 Carver St, Lafayette
Glenn MHebert Inc, 1538 WPinhook Rd, Lafayette
Glenns Towing &Recovery Inc, 241 Des Jacques Rd, Lafayette
Global Data Fusion Llc, Po Box 53889, Lafayette
Glod Loretta Anne, 201 Thibodeaux Dr,Lafayette
GlodWalter Anthony,201 Thibodeaux Dr,Lafayette
Glorioso Brad, 202 Woodhaven Rd, Youngsville
Francis Kaneshia, 1082 PierreWashington Road, Broussard
Francis Kenneth, 600 Elizabeth Ave, Lafayette
Francis Makiya, 108 Elaine Dr,Lafayette
Francis Mary A, 1307 WWillow St Apt 110B, Lafayette
Francis Michelle, 709 Edison Street, Lafayette
Francis Rose N, 1512 Louisiana AveApt 111, Lafayette
Francis Tequila Mouton, 113 Nina Lane, Lafayette
Francis Tremell D, 1408 WWillow St Apt C17, Lafayette
Francis Vantashia D, 120 Aimee Dr,Carencro
Francis William, 102 Beranda St, Lafayette
Francis Yonae M, 1830 WUniversity Ave206, Lafayette
Francisco Gaspar Francisco Miguel, Fsgsfg, Lafayette
Francisco Rodriguez Velasquez,117 Gold Medal Dr,Lafayette
Franco Roldan Claudia J, 123 La Rue Blanc, Scott
Francois Nicholas, 1000 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette
Frank Ashantae, 1106 Moss St, Lafayette
Frank Deidre, 610 Pillette Road Apartment 189, Lafayette
Frank DeidreA,PoBox 80302, Lafayette
Frank Keyawanna, 300 Spruce Dr Apt 252, Lafayette
Frankel RichardEvan, 327 Lafittes Landing Pass, Lafayette
Franklin Lia Kendai, EUniversity Ave, Lafayette
Franques Mitchell, 103 Exchange Place, Lafayette
Frazier Alexia, 217 Arsenal Dr,Carencro
Frederick Blythe, 517 GentryCr, Lafayette
Frederick John, 508 Sunset Dr,Lafayette
Frederick Tyler,220 Prescott Blvd Apt 201, Youngsville
Freeman Keenan R, 210 DArceneaux Rd, Scott
Freeman Vermonica, 342 Queens Row Apt 318, Lafayette
Fremin Cameron, 2919 Captain Cade Rd, Broussard
Fremin Courtney,2919 Captain Cade Rd, Broussard
Fremin Heath, 7701 Curley St, Broussard
Fremin Jessie, 102 Avenue B, Youngsville
Fremin John, 142 Janvier Road, Scott
Fremin Kassy,8614 Ruth Dr,Youngsville
Fremin Zac, 203 Harbor Walk Drive, Lafayette
French Press, 214 E. Vermilion St., Lafayette
French Quinnisha, 3603 WCongress Street 42 B, Lafayette
Frey Daniel, 501 WSaint Mary Blvd Ste 420, Lafayette
Frickie Dallas J, Apt 10101 1200 Robley Drive, Lafayette
Friedchickenonsunday Music, 226 Dupuis Rd, Lafayette
Frilat Demetria, 711 Division Street, Lafayette
Fromenthal Nikki, 216 Ursuline St, Lafayette
Fruge Eric, 107 Kilbourne Cir,Carencro
Fruge James, 206 CrawfordSt, Lafayette
Fruge Mitzi, 106 Periwinkle Trce, Duson
Fruge Paul, 1005 Ersate Landry Rd, Lafayette
Frye Frank, 722 Pope Dr,Carencro
Fryer Zalaya Lerin, 125 Randolph Dr,Lafayette
Fu YueH,157 Kingspointe Cir,Lafayette
FugroChance Inc, 115 Delta Rd, Lafayette
FugroUsa Marine Inc., 226 Dulles Dr,Lafayette
Fugua William, 104 Capilano Ln, Broussard
Gabal Jake M, 119 Caladium Court, Lafayette
Gable Glenda, 412 SPierce St, Lafayette
Gabourel Dale, 208 Valley View Dr,Lafayette
Gabriel Glen, 315 C.O. Circle, Lafayette
Gaeta Danielle, 105 Marseilles Dr,Lafayette
Gaines John Louis, 105 Ash Lane, Lafayette
Galentine Charkesha P, 516 NPierce St, Lafayette
Gallardo Carlos Humberto, 100 Berlin St, Lafayette
Gallardo Oviedo Jorge, 748 Malapart, Lafayette
Gallien Dwane, 211 E2Nd St, Broussard
Gallien Travis, 711 Poplar St, Lafayette
Gallineau Dwayne David, 131 Boss Dr,Lafayette
Galloway Julie, 4Th Floor 700 Saint John St Fl, Lafayette
Galloway Thomas R, Po Box 61550, Lafayette
Galvez Chamaine, 103 Cricklade Ct, Youngsville
Gambel Christian J, 101 Oakwater, Lafayette
Gambel Karen H, 101 Oakwater,Lafayette
GandyLinda M, 201 Prescott Blvd Apt 1211, Youngsville
Gann Michael, 724 St Louis Street, Lafayette
GannardJessica L, 260 ARousseau Road, Youngsville
Garber Sacha, 140 Leola Ln, Lafayette
Garcia Linda B, 102 Sugar Dr,Broussard
Garcia Luis, 440 Heide Cir Lot 94, Scott
Garcia Sadie, 104 EWeeks Dr,Youngsville
Garden Plaza Hotel, 2032 Ne Evangeline Trwy,Lafayette
Gardiner Enterprises Llc, 109 Marcon Dr,Lafayette
Gardiner Marcus, 113 NManor Dr,Lafayette
Gardner Dylan, 3600 Kaliste Saloom Rd Apt 520, Lafayette
Gardner Jolie E, 116 Reserve Dr Apt 232, Lafayette
Garig Dustin, 741 Saint Louis St, Lafayette
Garlington Donia Ann, 701 SCollege #318, Lafayette
GaryBlake J, 106 Rue Angelique, Carencro
Gary Destiny M, 106 Regal Dr,Broussard
Gary EdwardJoseph, 3823 NUniversity Ave, Carencro
Gary Missy,325 Norcross Dr,Lafayette
Gobert Chalania, 3118 RomeroRoad Lot 4, Youngsville
Gobert Christopher,105 Dorothy Henderson Drive, Lafayette
Gobert Danaysha Lanae, 421 Harding St Apt D, Lafayette
Godchaux James B, 146 Heartwood Cr,Lafayette
Godeaux EdwardJ,101 Plank Cir,Lafayette
Godfrey Brittly J, 116 Bissonnet St, Lafayette
Godwin Meagan A, 401 Tuscany Vly,Lafayette
Goetzmann Wilma, 521 D. Arceneaux Road, Scott
Gold Jonathan, 2001 Ne Evangeline Trwy,Lafayette
Goldie Locks Realty,208 W. Gloria Switch Rd. #9, Lafayette
Goldman William A, 211 Atlas Rd, Youngsville
Gomez Macedo Joel, 412 NPierce St, Lafayette
Gomez Romo Ana L, 1111 Roper Dr Lot 72, Scott
Gonsoulin Aaron, 103 Westwood Dr Apt 155, Lafayette
Gonsoulin Joseph Sidney,311 Fabiola Avenue, Lafayette
Gonzales Craig, 215 Republic AveApt 2105, Lafayette
Gonzalez Antonio, Trlr 95 2900 WWillow St, Scott
Gonzalez Carlos, 201 Haven Loop 201, Scott
Gonzalez Pedro, 600 Berlin A, Lafayette
Gonzalez Tonya L, 705 Janvier Rd, Scott
Gonzalez-Cintron Jonathan A, 3201 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette
Gonzalez-Gamboa Cristian Y, 2520 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy L, Lafayette
Goodbeir Kevin, 401 West Vermillion Street, Lafayette
Goode Philip M, 307 Ryder Dr,Lafayette
Goodie Garian, 108 Merchants Blvd Apt 28, Lafayette
Goodie Gertrude, 323 Patterson St #1005, Lafayette
Goodley Janaire, Po Box 92762, Lafayette
Goodman Sara L, 332 Lippi Boulevard, Lafayette
Goodman Tyler,104 Ambroise St, Lafayette
Gordon Eddie, 1901 Eraste Landry Rd Apt 2050, Lafayette
Gordon Ronald, 322 SFieldspan Road, Scott
Gordon Tyra T, 90 NLuke St Apt 104L, Lafayette
Gossen Robert, 115 Emma Drive, Lafayette
Gossen Ronald J, 204 Kingston Dr,Lafayette
Goudeau Samuel R, 101 Papa Joe Dr,Broussard
Goudeau Terri P, Po Box 93101, Lafayette
Goulas Matthew S, 100 Clara Von Drive, Lafayette
Graciana Bryan, 107 Steve St, Lafayette
Graczyk Louise, 6609 Youngsville Rd Lot 12, Youngsville
Grafe Till, 206 Grand Pointe Blvd, Lafayette
Gragson Keith, 103 Exchange Place, Lafayette Graham Nick, 110 East Martial Ave, Lafayette
Grainger Brenda, 301 Rials Dr,Lafayette
Granelli Maria, 213 Bendel Rd, Lafayette
Granelli Nestor,213 Bendel Rd, Lafayette
Granger Christopher,113 Triangle Cir,Lafayette
Granger Maudry Ann, Po Box 762, Duson
Granger Tammy,111 Sylvan Dr,Duson
Granger Theresa M, 904 Omega Dr,Lafayette
Granger Zane, 112 Pamela Dr,Lafayette
Grant Marie-Victoria, 122 Caladium Ct, Lafayette
Graves Patrick M, 302 Green Springs Rd, Youngsville Graves Travis, 104 Bramber Dr,Lafayette
Gravouia IsadoreF,609 EVermilion St, Lafayette Gravouia Pamela N, 116 Waterstone Dr,Youngsville
Gravouilla Brenda, 220 Wilkie St Apt 777, Lafayette
Gray Barron D, 3210 Flat Lakes Rd, Youngsville
Gray Julia R, Po Box 51165, Lafayette Gray Patrick W, Po Box 51165, Lafayette Gray Severia, 106 Bentgrass Dr,Lafayette Green Betty,600 Myrtle Pl, Lafayette Green Carolyn, 3603 WCongress St 3A, Lafayette Green Ethel Y, 3750 Landry Rdapt Lot36, Scott Green Jaquan, 1113 Plum St, Lafayette Green Loveless, 407 Sandy Bay Dr,Broussard Green Natasha, 221 VerotSchool Road Apt347, Lafayette Greene Anslee D, Theater Street, Lafayette Greene SEnergy Group Llc, 201 Rue Iberville Ste 400,
917
Guidry Jeramy P, 200 Merchants BlvdApt 225, Lafayette
Guidry Jerry Charles, 215 Ardenwood Dr,Lafayette
Guidry Jessica L, 119 Ridge CrestLn, Duson
Guidry Kenneth D, 2312 Robley Dr,Lafayette
Guidry Lastrapes Lynn M, 101 Mid Ocean Ct, Broussard
Guidry Madeline C, 442 Janine Dr,Youngsville
Guidry Magee Rose Marie, 215 WFarrel Rd Suite 103, Lafayette
Guidry Margaret, 1219 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette
Guidry Mark, 1314 Ne Evangeline, Lafayette
Guidry Melvin, 103 Exchange Place, Lafayette
Guidry Preston L, 165 Industrial Pkwy,Lafayette
Guidry Ridge, 2700 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette
Guidry Robbie, 402 Foreman Dr,Lafayette
Guidry Shondria, 304 Cantal Dr,Lafayette
Guidry Toni, 300 S. BernardRd., Broussard
Guidry Wildon P, 947D Vatican Rd, Carencro
Guilbeau Amy,135 Ferndell Ave, Lafayette
Guilbeau Kandace, 416 Althea Dr,Duson
Guilbeau Kristin K, 200 Burlington Ave, Broussard
Guilbeau Paul, 1228 WGloria Switch Rd, Carencro
Guilbeau Stephen, 212 St Fazzio St, Youngsville
Guilbeaux Jeremiah, 220 Westpointe Circle, Lafayette
Guilbeaux Kori S, 2509 Johnston St Apt 4-5, Lafayette
Guilbeaux Louis, 4920 WCongressSt, Lafayette
Guillaumin Donoval, 205 Bocage Cir,Lafayette
Guillory Blane, 202 SMontaubaun Drive, Lafayette
Guillory Camille, 202 Silver Creek Cir,Lafayette
Guillory Dylan S, 201 Harvest Dr,Lafayette
Guillory Jeromey M, 710 SCollege Rd, Lafayette
Guillory Leslie, 209 TreasureCove, Lafayette
Guillory Linda, 313 Grossie Dr,Lafayette
Guillory Maegan E, 127 Darden Rd, Lafayette
Guillory Malcolm J, 100 SMeyers Dr Apt 608, Lafayette
Guillory Monica, 103 Windy Feather Dr,Broussard
Guillory Robert K, 113 Mable Grove, Youngsville
Guillotte Ellamae, 406 Scotsdale St, Lafayette
Guiroz Michael, 100 Ruth Dr,Lafayette
Gulf Fleet Holdings In, Po Box80707, Lafayette
Gulf South Research Foundation, 127 Enchanted Oaks Blvd, Lafayette
Gummer Martin, 201 Montgomery Dr,Lafayette
Gumpert Felecia G, 103 Alpha Dr,Lafayette
Gumpert Paul N, 103 Alpha Dr,Lafayette
GundaShreya, 123 BrookshireGardens Dr,Lafayette
Gunter Trevor,213 Elwick Dr,Lafayette
Guys Towing Service Inc, 329 Westgate Rd, Lafayette
Hack Rhonda L, 1512 Louisiana AveApt 813, Lafayette
Haddad Chelsi, 308 Stoneridge Dr,Duson
Hagan William, 204 Dublin Cir D, Lafayette
Hagen Ronald, 2201 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette
Hagle William R, 113 Mission Hills Dr,Broussard
Hains Julian, 1311 Hugh Wallis Rd S, Lafayette Hairston Dealie, 111 Amber St, Lafayette
Haith Geneviev J, 3600 ESimcoe Apt 24, Lafayette
Haley Grand Pointe Apartments, 3606 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette
Hall Carol, 102 VanBuren DriveApt 202 A, Lafayette
Hall Dejuanna, 201 Jeffrey Dr Apt 203F,Lafayette
Hall Jessica, 1720 Kaliste Saloom Road Suite C-1, Lafayette
Hall Tierra N, 110 Caneview Dr,Broussard
Hall William H, 305 Elmwood Dr,Lafayette
Hamid Akram, 227 Ivory St, Lafayette
Hamilton Jacob P, 411 WTaft St Apt A, Lafayette Hamilton Norma Gene Morris, 104 Hal Dr,Lafayette
Hamilton Steele, 5826 Johnston St, Lafayette
Hamm Elaine, 809 Alonda Drive, Lafayette HammettAlbert, 101 Kilbourne Cir,Carencro
Hammond Anita, 1235 Eraste Landry Road, Lafayette Hampton Leroyal, 100 Bullrun Cir,Broussard
Hand Trevor,505 Harbor BendBlvd, Lafayette Handwerger Michael, 17002 Hillside Dr,Lafayette Handy Damien J, 126 WAvondale Dr,Lafayette Handy Rontravion Demon, 620 Goldman St, Lafayette Hankamer EL,319 Elmwood Dr,Lafayette
Hankins Vivian, 124 Erika Dr,Lafayette
Hanks Jonathan M, 100 Winchester #603, Lafayette Hanna Amy,6000 Johnston St Apt 101, Lafayette Hanson Brandon, 2700 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette
Hardesty Patrick G, 204 VennardAve,Lafayette Harding Kimberly,538 Catholique Rd, Carencro Hardroder Madeline Grace, 1418 Alice Dr,Lafayette Hardy Dorothy A, 210 Saddlewood Corner,Lafayette Hardy George W, POBox 93110, Lafayette Hardy Gilda L, 100 Kentville Cir,Lafayette Hardy Shannon C, Po Box 2187, Lafayette Hargrave Brandon Michael, 112 Pathway Ln, Lafayette Hargrave Hunter,4811 Ambasader Caffery Pa Suite 100, Lafayette Hargrave James, 101 Woodbine Dr,Lafayette Hargrave Justin, 207 Essen Drive, Lafayette Hargrave Justin P, 207 Essen Dr,Lafayette Hargrave Mark, 102 Sunny Peak St, Youngsville Hargroder Amber,211 Meridian Ave, Lafayette Hargroder Company Inc, 3861 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette Hargroder Courtney,315 Summerland Key Ln, Lafayette Hargroder Don Paul, 1418 Alice Dr,Lafayette Hargroder Jackson S, 213 Bendel Rd Rm 206, Lafayette Hargroder Real Estate Group Llc, 3861 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette Harkins Deborah, Apt 21 111 GirardPark Dr,Lafayette HarleenFrame, 346 Rena Dr,Lafayette Harmon Annette, 810 Mills St., Scott Harmon Charles, 1219 SOrange St, Lafayette Harpenau Aubrey,110 Cypress Sunset Dr,Broussard Harper Ray E, 206 Windcreek Lane, Youngsville Harrell Leslie A, 121 Coconut GroveCircle, Lafayette Harriet Lagasse, 123 Sheridan Dr,Lafayette Harrington James M, 104 Eldorado Ct, Lafayette Harris Shawana, 127 Benton Dr,Lafayette Harris Sherlene M, 1003 Poplar St, Lafayette Harris Terrance L, 106 Millie Park, Lafayette Harris Tyler J, 206 Alyene Dr,Lafayette Harrison Constance H, 2500 ESimcoe St #67, Lafayette Harrison Estate Of Genevieve, 1005 Eraste Landry Rd, Lafayette Harrison Exalton,326 Attakapas Rd, Lafayette HarrisonGenevieve, 1005 Eraste Landry Rd, Lafayette Hart Shawanna, Po Box 51127, Lafayette Hartman Scot, 123 Maple Grove Ln, Youngsville Harvey Cornelius, 319 Lafayette St Apt 1, Lafayette Harvey John, 20 Aroda Dr,Lafayette Harvey Warren, 421 Daisy St, Lafayette Hauerwas Nicole, 600 Grassy Meadows Ln, Lafayette Hawaiian Sun Tanning Salon Inc, Po Box 90488, Lafayette Hawes Sterling T, 228 Ovey Dr,Lafayette
Hawkins Jessica B, 112 Country Village Dr,Youngsville Hawkins Scott,506 Cedar Lake Dr,Youngsville
Hawkins Terry L, 317 EAlexander St, Lafayette Hawsey Clayton S, 116 Stonehurst Drive, Youngsville Hay Vicky,109 Louisa Blvd, Lafayette Haydel Madeline, 231 Princeton Woods Loop, Lafayette Hayes EChristine, 122 General Gardner Ave, Lafayette
Hayes Elizabeth A, 99 Becky Lane, Lafayette
Hayes GoldbergDeborah, 117 Silver Medal Drive, Lafayette Hayes Macy,1291 Duchamp Rd, Broussard
Hayley Simmons, 319 Benedict Dr,Lafayette
Hays Angela, 128 La Rue Malaga, Broussard
Hays Katherine Mcquitiy,203 Woodmont Dr,Lafayette
Hays Payden M, 110 Syrup Row,Lafayette
Hays Simon Christophe, 203 Woodmont Dr,Lafayette
Hays William, 228 Montrose Ave, Lafayette Hayward Lindsey,206 DelordSt, Lafayette
Head John, 3603 WCongressSt, Lafayette
Heape Mary,103 Exchange Place, Lafayette
Hebert Aristotle, 204 Marquette Dr,Lafayette
Hebert Benjamin C, 103 Pullin Drive, Youngsville
HebertBrent Charles, 101 Concerto Crst, Duson
Hebert Britni, 204 Bonnie Dr,Lafayette
Hebert Christopher,104 Tiger Court, Youngsville
Hebert Christopher J, Po Box1168, Youngsville
Hebert Cora W, 104 Abundance Ct, Lafayette Hebert Delphin D, CODDHebert 205 Bernice Ave, Lafayette
Hebert Frederique, 6104 Youngsville Rd, Youngsville
Hebert Harold, 301 Bee Hebert Rd, Scott
Hebert Iii Clifford, 609 Sandhurst Dr,Lafayette
Hebert Jaimie, 6879 Johnston Street, Lafayette
Hebert James K, 101A Breaux St, Scott
Hebert Jay,701 Espasie Rd, Youngsville
Hebert Joseph Patrick, 302 Angeloz St, Lafayette
Hebert Joshua A, 203 Neil St, Lafayette
Hebert Leah, 100 Settlers Trace Blvd, Lafayette
Hebert Mark, 3600 ESimcoe St, Lafayette
Hebert Mary,418 Hector Connoly Rd, Carencro
Hebert Michael, 615 Duhon Rd, Lafayette
Hebert Michael D, 200 RustburgDr, Lafayette
Hebert Pamela, 205 Bernice Drive, Lafayette
Hebert Parker A, 401 Black Water River Dr,Lafayette
Hebert Ross, 317 NorcrossDr, Lafayette
Hebert Ross L, 1011 Gallet Rd, Youngsville
Hebert Ryan, 106 Juanita Dr,Lafayette
Hebert Stephan, 201 Wilbert St, Lafayette
Hebert Stephen, 201 Wilbert St, Lafayette
Hebert Stephen E, Po Box 841, Scott
Hebert Terence Brett, 103 Saint Bede Pl Apt B, Youngsville
Hebert Teresa, 509 Winthorpe Row,Lafayette
Hebert Tye, 137 Teljean Rd, Lafayette
Hebert Yazmine, 200 Lynn Drive, Lafayette
Heggelund Loretta, 402 Cautillion Dr,Youngsville
Hei Sharon, 23 Ashwood Dr,Lafayette
Heim Tammy G, 501 Woodvale Ave, Lafayette
Heinens Rv Body Repair,PoBox 80768, Lafayette
HelaireKatelyn A, 314 Paul Breaux Ave, Lafayette
Heldenbrand Troy,205 Moss Brook Dr,Lafayette
Helicopter Accessory Service, 220 Jared Dr,Broussard
Henderson Erder,103 Exchange Place, Lafayette
Henderson Jacob, 233 Rosemary Place, Lafayette
Henderson Jacob Reilly,233 Rosemary Place, Lafayette
Henderson Matthew,106 Laurelwood Dr,Lafayette
Hendersonjr Leonforeman, 664 Bellevue Plantation Rd, Lafayette
Henry Brett B, 200 Grand Ave, Lafayette
Henry Bruce, 817 Fox Run, Lafayette
Henry Craig, 114 Marietta Drive, Youngsville
Henry David, 716 Cambridge, Lafayette
Henry Marie Llc, 101 Enchantment Ave, Youngsville
Henry Spence, 1300 WUniversity,Lafayette
Hensgens Matthew J, 213 Symphony Pl, Duson
Henson Shelia, 601 Rue Carnot,Carencro
Hentz Max F, 141 Pleasant View Dr,Lafayette
Herbert Taruas, 221 VerotSchool Rd Apt 224, Lafayette
Herman Venable Ins Agency,1027 Johnston St, Lafayette
Hernandez Hugo, 8990 Lamar St, Lafayette
Hernandez Iii John A., 4313 W. University Ave, Carencro
Hernandez Jenni, 907 Saint Anne St, Scott
Hernandez Maricela, 309 Meadow Ln, Lafayette
Hernandez Martha, 113 SaturnDr, Lafayette
Herndon Jamie M, Po Box 140, Youngsville
Herrera Edras, 166 Manchester Cirlce, Lafayette
Herrera Michael C, 105 Plauche Dr,Carencro
Herrington Christopher,186 NSouthlawn Dr,Lafayette
Hetherwick Rebecca, 702 Gerald Dr,Lafayette
Hetzel Catherine M, 204 EBayou Pkwy,Lafayette
Heun Lauren, 402 Summerland Key Ln, Lafayette
Hewel Scott, 1017 Ridge Rd, Duson
Hewitt Micah R, 3601 Kaliste Saloon Road Apt 703, Lafayette
Hicks Adrian, 200 Saint Matthias Dr,Carencro
Hicks Quincy,117 Thames Dr,Lafayette
Hidalgo Josh, 103 Whispering Meadows Rd, Broussard
Hidalgo Larry,240 Pinecrest Ln, Duson
Hidalgo Lucas, 128 Robicheaux Rd, Broussard
Highland Resources Llc, Po Box 51682, Lafayette
HilburnDebra A, 201 Settlers Trace Blvd Apt 3205, Lafayette
HilburnRay E, 201 Settlers Trace Blvd Apt 3205, Lafayette
Hilda Jones, 303 Marilyn Dr,Lafayette
Hildestad Gabrielle, 109 Maple Dr,Lafayette
Hill Kelli L, 112 Earline Dr,Lafayette
Hill Kevin K, 111 Edia Ann Dr,Lafayette
Hill Lewis W, 4640 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette
Hill SharronAnn R, 706 Aberdeen Dr,Lafayette
Hill Stacey,230 Fairwood Drive, Broussard
Hill Terry J, 109 Valencia Dr,Lafayette
Hill Walter,405 Rue Colombe, Carencro
Hills Terrance, 405 Peak Run, Youngsville
HirshbergJacklyn, 104 GirardWoods Rd, Lafayette
HirshbergRichardM,104 GirardWood Rd, Lafayette
Hni Llc, 3909 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette
Hobbs Michael C, 115 Canton Ct, Youngsville
Hodge Eddie, 365 Andres Rd Lot 6, Scott
Hodges Thomas B, 125 Kristen Ln, Lafayette
Hoelker Kassie, 115 Township Ln Apt C, Lafayette
Hoffpauir Eric James, 103 Greenvale Dr,Carencro
Hoffpauir Lonnie, 203 NewshireDr, Broussard
Hogan Chyna, 411 Dulles Dr Apt 3201, Lafayette
Holden Elizabeth, 115 Chicory Ln, Lafayette
Holland Azalie, 102 Versailles Blvd Ste 400, Lafayette
Holland Jessi Moesta, 209 Westridge Dr,Broussard
Hollie Mark W, 728 WGloria Switch Rd Lot 9, Lafayette
Hollier Angella M, 205 Red Robin Trl, Lafayette
Hollier Jeremy A, 1336 Saint Mary St Lot 1, Scott
Hollier Jessica, 303 Coles Creek Drive, Carencro
Hollier Lorena, 721 Rue Du Belier, Lafayette
Hollier Pamela A, 111 SJefferson St, Broussard
Hollier Shoshonia S, 1410 Westgate Rd Lot 45, Lafayette
Hollier Wayne J, 205 Red Robin Trl, Lafayette
Hollingsworth Management Group CO Betty,141 Teche Dr,Lafayette
Holloway Kimberly S, 109 Beau Sejour,Lafayette
Hollowell Neal, 213 San Marcos Dr,Youngsville
Holmes Kathy A, 117 Nottingham Cir,Lafayette
Holmes Tanya, 1413 WSaint Mary Blvd, Lafayette
Holmes Velma Bush, 511 Fox Run AveApt 1, Lafayette
Home Pest Control Llc, 212 Londonderry Sq, Lafayette
HonoreKavias Ross, 1016 Antoine Chretien Rd, Broussard
Hood JarardD,511 Bertrand Dr Apt 4205, Lafayette
Hoover Nathan G, 209 Atlas Rd Youngsville La, Lafayette
Hopkins Gerald J, 700 Sweetbriar Street, Lafayette
Horning Carolann, 550 Eraste Landry Rd, Lafayette
Horning Jake, 112 WAvondale Dr,Lafayette
Horning Kenneth, 550 Eraste Landry Rd, Lafayette
Horschel Jodie M, 411 Crest Cir,Youngsville
Hoskins Mark D, 6000 Johnston St 211, Lafayette
Hoss Michael, 201 Grand Pointe Blvd, Lafayette
Hoss Paul, 104 Clo Dr,Carencro
Hotz Ronnie, 212 Valley View Drive, Lafayette
HowardIan P, 337 Coliseum Rd, Lafayette
HowardLatarsha, 105 Cantal Drive, Lafayette
HowardMorgan M, 224 Orangewood Dr,Lafayette
HowardRisk Advisors Llc, 201 WVermilion St 200, Lafayette
HowardRyan R, 211 Dulles Dr 2309, Lafayette
HowardTracy,141 Paige St, Duson
Howell Bobby,Apt 2001 1630 Rue Du Belier, Lafayette
Howell Philip Ross, 106 Oak Glen Dr,Lafayette
Hoyte Jaquan, 1312 Roper Dr Lot 100, Scott
Hrabik Jonathan L, 110 Boston Ct, Carencro
Huang Pinxu, 111 Grace View Dr,Lafayette
Huang Samantha Mei Hong, 316 Brockton Dr,Carencro
Hub City Ford, 2909Nw Evangeline Thruway,Lafayette
Hub City FordInc, Po Box 90670, Lafayette
Hub City Industries Llc, 4023 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy
Hub Enterprises Inc, Po Box 3162, Lafayette
Hudgeons Jerry,115 Albarado Rd, Scott
Hudgeons Jerry B, 115 Albarado Rd, Scott
Hudson Nicholas, 105 Saint Bede Place Apt A3, Youngsville
Huebner Rhonda, 122 Harvest Pointe Cir,Lafayette
Huey HMiller Sr Llc, 119 CreditDr, Scott
Hughes Stacey,2349 Louisiana 1252, Carencro
Hughes Torrie, 3201 Kaliste Saloom Rd 262, Lafayette
Hughes Tyler,110 WBayou Pkwy Apt 702, Lafayette
Hugo Brian G, 100 SMeyers Dr Apt 1715, Lafayette
Hukins Chase S, 113 Keelingwood Ln, Lafayette
Hull Ryan, 106 Nautilus Ct, Lafayette
Humble Kent W, 214 Huntley Ave, Lafayette
Humphries Nickolas, 1005 Ersate Landry Rd, Lafayette
Hundley Minch Rosemary,1121 Camellia Blvd Unit 306, Lafayette
Hunt ClaireR,115 Pigeon Loop, Lafayette
Hunt Hannah, 421 Telijean Road, Lafayette
Hunt James R, 140 Statesman Dr,Lafayette
Hurst Lori, 4023 Amb Cafry Pkwy Ste 100, Lafayette
Hurth John D, 1307 Saint Esprit Rd, Carencro
Hutchinson Myriam D, PO Box 1228, Youngsville
Huval &Associates Inc, Bldg 12C 6700 Jefferson Hwy,Lafayette
Ibrahim Abdel A, Po Box 62837, Lafayette Ibrahim Aziz, Po Box 62837, Lafayette Iconic Construction Llc, 201 Rue Beauregard# 202, Lafayette
Idealease Of Acadiana, Po Box 90503, Lafayette
Industrial Solutions Group, 600 Jefferson St Ste 1400, Lafayette
Innovative Ins Con Inc, 4400A Ambass Caff292, Lafayette
Net Syste, 111 Zothique Rd, Milton Institutional Pharma, 610 Guilbeau Road Suite E, Lafayette
Group Of Acadiana Llc, 101 Feu Follet Rd. Suite 203, Lafayette Intermedia Technologies, Po Box 80306, Lafayette Intertrust Armored Service, Po Box 80651, Lafayette Ireland Warren V, 205 Mark Ln, Lafayette Isaac Daniqua Dane, 605 Aster Dr,Lafayette Isaac Geraldine J, 906 1/2 NUniversity Ave, Lafayette Isaac Trey Gerell, 906 1/2 NUniversity Ave, Lafayette IsadoreCharlotte, 105 Saint Claude Pl Apt C, Youngsville IstreBert, 231 Santander Dr,Youngsville Iverson Butler,607 SSterling, Lafayette Ivie James Larry,107 Spanish Moss Lane, Broussard J&JExterminating, Po Box 51470, Lafayette JAMMTransportation Llc, 139 BJames Comeaux Road 577, Lafayette J.F.New &Associates, 221 Rue De Jean Suite 200, Lafayette Jackson Allison, 411 Woodvale Avenue, Lafayette Jackson Ben Alexander,611 Brentwood Blvd, Lafayette
Jackson Dennis, 1630 Rue Du Belier,Lafayette
Jackson Jeffery L, 1042 Camellia Blvd Apt 3407, Lafayette
Jackson Leslie C, 216 Tupelo Dr,Scott
Jackson Pearl F, 216 Tupelo Dr,Scott
Jacobs Alicia, P.O. Drawer 51367, Lafayette
Jacobs Dwayne, 241 1 2LaRue France, Lafayette
Jacobs Quincy,2719 Cameron St Apt 2, Lafayette
Jacobs Simmons Hayley Janine, 220 Leonpacher Rd, Lafayette
JacquardEllen, 404 Alyene Dr,Lafayette
Jacs 3, 3217 EMilton Ave, Youngsville
Jacs Market And Deli 4, 3217 EMilton, Youngsville
James Bernice, 1103 Lamar St, Lafayette
James Connie, 1172 Lee Ave, Lafayette
James Jimmie C, 547 Pecan Grove Road, Scott
James Keshawn Micheal, 417 Louveteau Rd 24, Carencro
James Renwick Carson Iv Dvm, 309 NLocksley Dr,Lafayette
James SFontenette Jr,C ORemy Jardell Attorney 625 St John St, Lafayette
James Shannon, 102 Kingswood Dr,Lafayette
James-Babineaux Tanjunika, 411 Dulles Dr,Lafayette
Jamie WThe Cut House, 3810 Ambassador Caffery,Lafayette
Jaquevion, 210 Ginger Street, Lafayette
Jared Pohle, POBox 3847, Lafayette
Jarrell Jody,406 Silverstone Rd, Lafayette
Jasmine Chimere, 810 SCollege Rd Apt 84, Lafayette
Jason Perry Transport Inc, 101 Raphael Dr,Lafayette
Jasper Penny N., 203 Mercer Lane, Lafayette
Jaubert Christian, 200 East Monroe St, Broussard
Jaubert David, 219 Henry St, Lafayette
Javy Construction Llc, 215 Gireer Rd Lot 16, Youngsville
Jeansonne Beckett P, 239 Brothers Rd, Scott
Jeansonne Chris, 1019 Kaliste Saloom Road 1213, Lafayette Jefferson Deshawn, 509 Downing St, Lafayette
Jefferson Nickolas, 315 Amesbury Dr,Lafayette
Jefferyes Tanner J, 129 Sea Pines Dr,Youngsville
Jen Tomas, Lot 133 1111 Roper Dr,Scott
Jenkins Bryan, 200 Oakcrest Dr Apt 247, Lafayette Jenkins Crystal, 228 Jenkins Rd, Duson
Jenkins Derrick J, 101 Westwood Dr Apt 215, Lafayette
Jenkins William, 127 Chemet Rd, Youngsville
Jennifer Somers, 211 Liberty AveApt 216, Lafayette
Jennings Bruce, 102 Georgetown Loop, Lafayette Jennings EdwardB,102 Georgetown Loop, Lafayette Jennings Elsie, 102 Georgetown Loop, Lafayette Jennings Thomas Richard, 1804 WCongress St, Lafayette
Jensen Jens T, Co Schulmberger Dm 135 Rousseau R, Youngsville
Jerod Petry Dds, 2900 Moss St Ste D, Lafayette
Jerquin Jermaine Edwards, 111 Banister Ct, Lafayette
Jerry Jermond Collins, 4110 NUniversity Ave, Carencro
Jett Joab M, 102 Billy Lour,Lafayette
Jewell Kristin D, 507 Cypress Cv,Youngsville
Ji Hongyan, 208 Rue De Chambery,Broussard
Jillian, Llc Dba Coco Eros, 340 Kaliste Saloom Rd Suite Gi, Lafayette
Jimenez Josue Nater,310 Martin Oaks Dr,Lafayette
Jimenez Olivia, 33744355 4208 Cameron St, Lafayette
Jkr Resources, 2200 Cameron St, Lafayette
John Brandon, 203 Brookwood Circle, Lafayette
John Jeremiah J, 211 Republic AveApt 224, Lafayette
John Jessica A, 309 WMarigny Cir Apt B, Duson
John Joseph, 536 Beaullieu Dr,Lafayette
John Waynes Body And Paint Shop, 213 Woodoak Cir,Lafayette
John Waynes Paint Body Shop, 110 Gateau Rd, Scott
Johnlewis Shaderricka, 1408 WWillow St Apt 157, Lafayette
Johns Robert R, 207 Summerland Key Ln, Lafayette
Johnson Adria Theriot, 219 Cherry St, Lafayette
Johnson Allegra, 4501 Captain Cade Rd, Youngsville
Johnson Andrell, 419 Hellen St., Lafayette
Johnson Anita, 201 Lauren Dr,Scott
Johnson Antonia, 314 Malapart Rd Lot 16, Lafayette
Johnson Ferlis, 1217 SOrange St, Lafayette
Johnson HowardM,106 Ophelia Lane, Lafayette
Johnson Jacintta M, 3600 Kaliste Saloom Rd Apt 602, Lafayette
Johnson Jalen, 6000 Johnston St Apt 1005, Lafayette
Johnson Jarell Rashon, 353 EBroussardRd, Lafayette
Johnson Jeremy,209 Santa Cruz Dr,Lafayette
Johnson Lisa Helgeson, 209 Santa Cruz Dr,Lafayette
Johnson Marianne, 309 Tasvo Trl, Lafayette
Johnson Michael, 301 Ardenwood Dr,Lafayette
Johnson Sam, 127 Town Homes Dr,Lafayette
Johnson Terrance, 425 Saint John St Apt 5, Lafayette
Johnson Tyrik L, 221 VerotSchool Road #129, Lafayette
Johnson Walter,213 Elmwood Dr,Lafayette
Johnstone Scott Craig, 205 Harbor Bend, Lafayette
Jolivette Brandon, 136 Venus Drive, Lafayette
Jolivette Gidget, 103 Brockton Dr,Carencro
Jolivette Walter,234 Broland Dr,Duson
Jolivette Weldon, 5616 Landry Road, Duson
Jones Aaron, 501 Stewart Street, Lafayette
Jones Daphne, 205 Noble St, Lafayette
Jones Dearreo R, 411 Vieux Orleans Cir Apt C, Lafayette
Jones DeidreA,125 Avalon St 22, Lafayette
Jones Delvin, 405 Bell Downs Dr,Lafayette
Jones Financial Services Inc., 113 Scarborough Ln, Youngsville
Jones Gloria S, 600 Division St, Lafayette
Jones Harold, 114 Cane Creek Dr,Broussard
Jones Isaac, 1776 Blanchet, Lafayette
Jones Kenneth WJrAlc, 600 Jefferson St Ste 402, Lafayette
Jones Mitchell, 5930 Red BluffRoad, Lafayette
Jones Tajana, 417 Louveteau Rd Lot 13, Carencro
Jones Travon, 100 Mercer Lane, Lafayette
Jones Victoria L, 720 Evangeline Dr,Lafayette
Jordan Brett, 110 Theo St Unit J, Lafayette
Jordan Tangela, 104 Pebble Beach Dr,Youngsville
Joseph Ignatius A, 108 Merchants Blvd Apt 19, Lafayette
Joseph Nathan, 301 Blue Wing Dr,Lafayette
Joseph Thomas, 630 Brothers Rd Trlr 34 And Brenda Joseph, Lafayette
Joshua Breaux, 209 Stoneridge Dr,Duson
Joshua Ida Belle C, 106 Beringer Dr,Duson
Joubert Blaine, 117 LuxfordWay,Carencro
Jouett Marie, 121 Miller St, Lafayette
Journet Rondrick, 1307 WWillow St Apt 123A, Lafayette
Journet Thomas, 330 Feu Follet Rd Apt 293, Lafayette
Lafayette
Joy Ride Auto Sales Llc, 500 WPinhook Rd, Lafayette
Jta Supps Llc, POBox 60006, Lafayette
Jth Culinary Services Llc, 8617 General Middleton St, Youngsville
Juanita Boudreaux, 167 Lloyd Rd, Lafayette
Judice Brandi, 1916 Mills, Scott
Judice Judson, 303 EMain St, Broussard
Judice Madison M, 101 WilbournBlvd Apt 702, Lafayette
Judice Ronald, 323 NSterling St, Lafayette
Juergens Jeffery,110 YorkshireCircle, Lafayette
Julian Nolan St, 409 Atlanta, Lafayette
Julien Robert, 1001 Saint Mary St #E,Scott
Julien Theresa, 124 Jomela Dr,Lafayette
Julio Remodeling &Painting, 1114 Birdsong Rd, Lafayette
Jumonville Mary Tina, 107 Robert Dr,Lafayette
Jumonville Wayne, 108 Julenie Way, Youngsville
Junca Harold, 151 Fernhill Ave, Lafayette
Junior Achievement Of Greater Baton, 110 Capital Drive, Lafayette
Jurasek Kenneth S, Po Box 52382, Lafayette
Justice Robert, 103 Gulls Pointe Dr,Lafayette
K.R. Smith Enterprises Llc, 128 Mirada Ln, Lafayette
Kahler Benjamin Michael, 920 Marilyn Dr,Lafayette
Kallepu Sunil, 103 Westwood Dr Apt237, Lafayette
Kamsali Mounika, 220 Wilkie St Apt 892, Lafayette
Huval Annette, 107 Chip St, Scott
Huval Hansel, 413 Saint Camille St, Lafayette
Huval Layne, 1000 Robley Dr Apt 1435, Lafayette
Huval Theresa, 110 Hilda Petitjean, Duson
Huynh Azaria, 200 Theater St Apt 716, Lafayette
Huynh Thituyet N, 113 Buffalo Run, Lafayette
Huynh VanN,211 Kevin Dr,Lafayette
Hyde Brady J, 328 Mill Pond Dr,Youngsville
Hyde Stacie, 333 EGloria Switch Rd, Lafayette
Karras Mary E, 207 Brookhaven Dr,Youngsville
Kates Amel, 153 Vital St, Lafayette Kates Paul, 153 Vital St, Lafayette Kathryn McclureMdLlc, 811 Albertsons Pkwy Suite A, Broussard
Kathy Turpin Trust Uw Stanely Turpin, 1521 Camellia Blvd Apt 3101, Lafayette Kaufman Phillip, 100 EVermilion St Suite 160, Lafayette
Kay Courville LDessa, Rt 1Box 342, Carencro
Hebert Dylan, 116 Reserve Dr Appt 213, Lafayette
Hebert Elizabeth H, 115 Shadyside, Lafayette
Iblings Sarah, 108 Navy Seal Dr,Duson
Keepemlaced Apparel Llc, 3545 Nw Evangeline Trwy,Carencro
J, 306 Roswell Xing, Lafayette
Paek Ronald, 215 Republic Ave, Lafayette
Page China, 900 Provost Street Apt 90, Scott
Pahal Mariah, 1005 Young St. Unit D, Broussard
Pal Development Group Inc, Dba Massage EnvyLafayette 130 NCollege Rd Ste BAttn Leigh Phillips, Lafayette
PalaceCleaning Contractors Ll, 1011 Maurice Huval Rd, Broussard
PalermoJohn, 1630 Rue De Blier,Lafayette
Palfrey Alfred C, 301 Marguerite Blvd, Lafayette
PalfreyGary,119 Bermuda Cir,Scott
Palma Ordonez Noel, 304 Country Breeze Ln, Duson
Palmer Charles E, 230 Beverly Dr,Lafayette
Palmer Joan A, 230 Beverly Dr,Lafayette
PanczykJack J, 106 Normandy Rd, Lafayette
Pankhurst Arryn V, 215 Republic AveApt 5203, Lafayette
Pankhurst Kirk, 215 Republic Ave, Lafayette
Pantaleo Michael, 309 Oats Drive, Lafayette
Papillion Alisha, 1618 -L Terrace Hwy, Broussard
ParamountbnbLlc, 103 Inlet Dr,Broussard
Parejo Kathryn Elizabeth, 212 Olive Vista Dr,Scott
ParentPartners, 1304 Bertrand Dr Ste 5D, Lafayette
Parfait Brad Michael, 704 Harding St, Lafayette
Parich Kaydee Rae, 205 NewshireDr, Broussard
Parich Timothy Joseph, 205 NewshireDr, Broussard
Paris Gilbert, 206 Brockton Drive, Carencro
Parish Corey,404 Norman Dr,Lafayette
Park Lane Llc, 111 Settlrs Trce Blvd Ste 1004, Lafayette Park Place Surgical Hospital, 4811 Ambassador Caffery Parkwa, Lafayette
Parker Benjamin, 119 Mathews Blvd, Lafayette
Parker David J, 711 Saint Joseph St, Lafayette
Parker Dorothy C, 100 Stonington Dr,Lafayette
Parker James W, 208 Majestic Blvd, Lafayette
Parker Jordan JL,116 Damon Dr,Lafayette
Parker Joshua, 201 High Meadow Blvd #201, Lafayette
Parkerson Jamie Owen, 102 Briargate Walk Cir,Lafayette
Parra Parker A, 6000 Johnston St, Lafayette Party City Of Lafayette, 5700 Johnston St, Lafayette
PateOcean, 305 Aristotle Dr,Broussard
Patel Dipakkumar,2615 Cameron St, Lafayette
Patel Kiran, 2501 Southeast Evangeline Thru, Lafayette
Patel Nanubhai, 1801 Nw Evangeline Trwy,Lafayette
PatelReshma H, 231 St NazaireRd, Broussard
Paterwic Mariya W, 131 Wild RoseLane, Youngsville
Patin Beth, 159 Grand Ave, Lafayette
Patin Dru, 101 Winged Foot Dr,Broussard
Patin Jesse, 135 Boulon Rd, Carencro
Patin Kayla, 113 Peak Run, Youngsvillle
Patin Orry,416 Kidder Rd, Carencro
Patout Eric C, 305 Harrell Dr,Lafayette
Patout Luke, 225 Republic Ave2206, Lafayette
PatrickHolly L, 115 Bentwater Dr,Broussard
Patrick JenniferC,140 SMall St, Lafayette
PatriotConstruction &Development Llc -, 600 Jefferson St Ste 820,
Lafayette
Patriot Construction And Indus,Attn: Courtney Lookwood 1026 Toby Mountain Road, Duson
Patten Dustin, 1410 North Will, Carencro
Patterson Damon Ernest, 1007 Bonnie Dr,Lafayette
Patterson Felicia M, 1000 Robley Dr Apt 1936, Lafayette
Patterson Sabine, 351 Moss St, Lafayette Patterson Stephanie, 117 Buena Vista Blvd, Lafayette
Patton Carol C, 504 White OakDr, Lafayette Paul John, 909 West Pont DesMouton Rd, Lafayette
Paul Marter Kevin, 3014 WPinhook Rd, Lafayette
Payton Caitlyn, 144 Teche Dr,Lafayette
Pdet Llc, 515 SCollege Rd Ste 115, Lafayette
Pdetllc, 515 SCollege Rd Ste 115, Lafayette
PeRentals Inc, 133 Fouet Road, Broussard
Peak Insurance Agency Llc, 140 Rue Beauregard, Lafayette
Pearland Cullen Properties Llc, Kent Ballard412 Worth Avenue, Lafayette
PelafigueJoseph, 1209 Jeanne St, Lafayette
Pelafigue Patricia, 1209 Jeanne St, Lafayette
PelicanOilfield Rentals, Po Box 80095, Lafayette
Pellegrin Ronald, 806 Kaiser Dr,Lafayette
Pellerin Bridget Sherae, 114 Case Lane, Lafayette
Pellerin Energy Group, 108B Burgess Dr,Broussard
Peltier Deltha J, 404 Macklyn St, Lafayette
Peltier Michael, 102 BriarwoodDr, Lafayette
Peltier Russel, 105 Margaret St, Lafayette Pena Claudio E, 109 Lita Dr,Lafayette
Penman Micah A, 211 Republic AveApt 826, Lafayette Penny &Hardy,Post Office Box 2187, Lafayette Penny &Hardy Professional Law Corp, Po Box 2187, Lafayette
Peno John Oneal, 204 Grazing Trace Drive, Lafayette Peno Meagan Bahlinger,204 Grazing Trace Drive, Lafayette Perea ParraJose E, 1312 Roper Dr Lot 49, Scott Perez Alzora,630 Brothers Rd Malenie Rd, Lafayette PerezEnrique, 314 Fabiola Ave, Lafayette Perez Juan J, 205 Remington Dr,Lafayette Perez Manuel, 3201 Kaliste Saloom Lot 73, Lafayette Perez Paula Diana, 207 Celine St, Carencro Perez-Lezcano David, 773 Credeur Rd Lot 4, Scott Performance Medical Group, 103 Deer Tree Drive, Lafayette Perkins Mary Anne, 205 Antoinette St, Lafayette Perodin Brandon, 132 Kennedy Dr 132 Kennedy Dr,Lafayette Perret Angelle, 704 Aberdeen Dr,Lafayette Perret Doise Law Firm, Po Box 3408, Lafayette Perrin Tammy L, C/O Tamara LDominque 2805 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette Perrodin Andrus, 307 Pecan Grove, Scott Perrodin Devin, 2820 Louisiana Ave, Lafayette Perrodin Mary,203 Stoney Shadow Dr,Lafayette Perry Anjana A, 1213 Victoria St Apt B, Scott Perry Mallory A, 410 Misty Wind Dr,Broussard PerryMichael, Apt 385 655 Marie Antoinette St, Lafayette Pete Crystal, 110 Baywood Ave, Lafayette Pete Steven, 111 East Angus Drive, Youngsville
Pete Terrance, 301 Smalley,Lafayette
Peters Pamela J, 104 Oak Glen Dr,Lafayette
Peterson Miles R, 323 Norcross Dr,Lafayette
Petit Cheri, 806 I10S Frontage Rd Ste B, Scott
PetticrewJohn D, 100 Countryview Dr,Youngsville
PfeiferAmanda, 106 Siesta Dr,Lafayette
Pham Cole, 107 Capri Ct, Lafayette
Pham Elizabeth, 104 Everglades Dr,Lafayette
Pharis James J, 118 Mannering Ave, Lafayette
Pharr Chelette, 128 Memory Lane, Lafayette
Phca Houma Llc, 537 Cajundome Blvd, Lafayette
Phi Inc, 2001 SEEvangeline Thwy,Lafayette
Phi Tech Service, Po Box 90340, Lafayette
Philip Gordon Coreil, 1302 EBayou Parkway,Lafayette
Philip Todd Eliot, 100 Belle Fontaine Dr Apt 225, Lafayette
Phillip Paul, 407 Marseilles Drive, Lafayette
Phillips Artalor N, 182 Eraste Landry Road, Lafayette Phillips Daylan, 204 Quebec Cir,Lafayette
Phillips Frank G, 113 Township Ln Apt A, Lafayette Phillips Shareall, 155 Mimosa Pl Apt 129E, Lafayette
Phillips Vincent R, 221 Marne St, Lafayette Philpott Thomas H, Po Box 3745, Lafayette
PhippsTabitha E, 202StanfordDr, Lafayette Phommachanh Sisouvanh, 230ForestGrove Dr,Youngsville
PhornPhay,408 Hillbrooke Dr,Broussard
Phung Tham, 309 Quick Dr Lafayette
Physynergy Med Ser Llc, Po Box 53627, Lafayette
PicardDustin, 108 Rattan Way, Youngsville
PicardElvis James, 169 Manchester Cir,Lafayette
Piccione Michael, 212 Colonial Dr,Lafayette
PichoffCindy,210 Baltusrol Dr,Broussard
Picou Frank, 220 Gouaux Rd,Lafayette Picou Timothy,314 Stutes Rd, Duson
PierceWanda, 103 Exchange Place, Lafayette
PierreAlexxus, 134 NMeyers Dr Apt D, Lafayette
Pierre Aniah, 535 Tolson Rd #535, Lafayette Pierron Estate Of P, 105 Jonah Cir,Lafayette
Pillette Cassandra M, 100 Farmington Dr,Lafayette
Pineda Denis A, 314 Elias GRd, Lafayette Pinhook South Apartments, 200 Merchants Blvd, Lafayette Pinkney Joseph, 113 SJune Dr,Lafayette Pinto Isabel B, 116 Reserve Dr Apt No411, Lafayette Pinto Joseph, 137 Sis Ln, Carencro
PiroKelsey K, 240 Forest GroveDr, Youngsville
Pirouznia Brenda, 1000 Robley Dr,Lafayette
PitreJustin, 221 VerotSchool Rd 264, Lafayette
Pizza Joint Llc, 409 Lee AveSte 3, Lafayette
Pj’S Coffee Of New Orleans, 4316 Landry Rd, Scott
Placer Maria, 135 Westchester Dr,Lafayette
Plaisance Terry J, 319 Oak Hill Ln, Youngsville
Plauche George, 108 Peck Blvd, Lafayette
Playyus Danielle, 5Brittany Close, Scott
Plumbar Michelle, 113 Oak Coulee Dr,Lafayette
Plumley Dustan, 1019 Riceland Road, Duson
Plunkett Cecil, 405 Rue Carnot, Carencro
Plybon Evan V, 205 SLong St, Lafayette
Pm Investments &Consulting Inc, 3414 Moss St Ste F, Lafayette
Pna Foods Coolidge Llc, 1921 Kaliste Saloom Rd., Lafayette
Poche Arianne, 107 Hayes Dr F204, Lafayette
Poche Bettie R, 116 Village GreenDr, Youngsville
Poche Jamie, 218 Robinhood Cir,Lafayette
Poirier Grace S, 2415 EBroussardRd, Lafayette
Poirrier Cecile, 3319 General Patton St, Youngsville
Polk Katherine M, 108 Merchants Blvd Apt 9, Lafayette
Pollingue Karl L, 2851 Johnston St #335, Lafayette
Polozola Kyle P, 610 Beverly Dr,Lafayette
Pomerenke Conley R, 131 Hillside Dr,Lafayette
Pomier Mary,207 Lincoln St, Lafayette
Pomier Mary C, 207 Lincoln St, Lafayette
Ponson Ryan Patrick, 111 Bacon Lane, Carencro
Ponton John Preston, 215 Republic Ave3105, Lafayette
Pool Nathaniel David G, 111 Thrasher Dr,Lafayette
Poole Benjamin A, 214 Alice Dr,Lafayette
Poole Christopher,118 Laurel Grove Blvd, Youngsville
Pop ALock, 152 Banks Ave, Lafayette
Pope Ella Ruth Fitzp, 132 Green Oaks Dr,Lafayette
Portalis James, 107 Debutante Rd, Carencro
Porter Freda, 201 Porter Ln Apt 43, Lafayette
Porter Michael, 2132 Highway 93 N, Scott
Portillo Mario, 1021 Lebesque Road Lot B, Scott
PotenzaMarketing Llc, 600 Jefferson St Ste 730, Lafayette
Potier Charlene, 109 Delano St, Lafayette
Potier Jennifer,107 Beulah Park Drive, Lafayette
Poupart Patrick G, 207 Estainville Ave, Lafayette
Powell Anthony,100 SMeyers Dr,Lafayette
Powell Kayra M, 315 Amesbury Dr Apt 202, Lafayette
Powell Parker,100 Pirates Cove, Lafayette
Power Cleaning Solutions, Po Box 519, Carencro
Power Enterprise Etc, 105 Row Three, Lafayette
Power Investors Llc, 305 Flanders Ridge Dr,Youngsville
Power Tyrone, 126 Virginia Ave, Lafayette
Power Up Products Llc, Dba Batteries Plus 301 Cornish Place, Youngsville
Powers Lynn S, 1300 EPont Des Mouton Rd Apt 102F,Lafayette
Powers Robert J, 208 Rocky Mound Dr,Lafayette
Pradier Holly M, 100 Cheyenne Dr Apt 9, Scott
Pradier Mona, 222 Angelloz Street, Lafayette
Prater Cheyenne, 200 Rue Royale Apt D, Lafayette
Pratt Carla, 901 Guillot Rd, Youngsville
Pray Leonor,1005 Ersate Landry Rd, Lafayette
Precision Bikes La, 114 Rena Drive, Lafayette
Precision Diagnostic Llc, 1304 Bertrand Dr Ste E8, Lafayette
PrecisionEnergy Services, Fka Computalog Wireline
Trail Hwy,Broussard
Preis Plc, 102 Versailles Blvd Ste 400, Lafayette
Prejean Adele L, 1404 Carmel Dr Apt 7D, Lafayette
Prejean Carolyn, 123 Martin Oaks Dr,Lafayette
Prejean Chase Michael, 207 EncoreLane, Scott
Prejean Denise, 912 Center St, Lafayette
Prejean Denroy,105 Symphony Pl, Duson
Prejean Frankie J, 226 BradfordDr, Carencro
Prejean HowardJ,505 Breaux Rd, Lafayette
Prejean Joseph B, Po Box 51909, Lafayette
Prejean Marlon J, 107 Mondavi Dr,Lafayette
Prejean Rebecca, 110 Gateau, Scott
Prejean Samantha, 424 Daisy St, Lafayette
Prejean Shetare, 804 Martin Luther King Jr Dr J111, Lafayette
Prejean Tyler,222 Country Living Dr,Lafayette
Prejean Vinice, 2700 Ambassador Caffery Apt 11, Lafayette
Premier Laboratory Svc Llc, 105 Park West Dr,Lafayette
Prescott Drilling Motors Inc, 101 Holstien Ln, Youngsville
Prestigious Home Builders Llc, Po Box 81412, Lafayette
Prevail Heart Clin Eunice, Po Box 80564, Lafayette
Prevot Cheryl, 1300 EPont Des Mounton Rd Apt A107, Lafayette
Price Henry Annagail M, 416 Marigold Loop, Lafayette
Price Lindsay Adams, 321 Elmwood Dr,Lafayette
Price Penny,217 Ridgewood St, Lafayette
Price Supply Inc, 109 Cason Road Broussard La, Broussard
Prier Brittany,242 Woodrow St E4, Lafayette
Prime Marine Services Inc, 312 SBernardRd, Broussard
Primeaux Bethel, PO Box 604, Youngsville
Primeaux Donald R, 801 NPierce St, Lafayette
Primeaux Estate Of Vernelle, 507 WhitmoreRoad, Scott
Primeaux Larry E, 303 Tuscany Vly,Lafayette
Primeaux Leah, 109 Hector St, Lafayette
ProValve, 1610 Saint Etienne Rd, Broussard
Professional Wireline Rental, 1016 NCruse Ave, Broussard
Project Sunday Inc., 312 Guilbeau Rd Ste 5C, Lafayette
Proliant Inc., 211 Sandhurst Dr,Lafayette
Proserv Operations Inc, Bldg A224 Burgess Dr,Broussard
Provost Holly,2626 Gendarme Rd, Carencro
Provost Michael, 32 Guilbeau Rd Apt 114, Lafayette
Provost Oliver Estate Of, 357 Viaulet Rd, Youngsville
Provost Ronald H, 717 Alice Dr,Lafayette
Provost Trey,112 Summit Crest Dr,Youngsville
Provost-Warren Sharon, 27 Heather Row,Lafayette
Prudhomme Ronnie, 115 North Roclay Drive, Lafayette
Pullen Megan C, 500 Cane Dr,Lafayette
Pulmonary And Sleep Clinic, 227 BBendel Rd, Lafayette
Purkey Jennifer,318 Camberly Cir,Lafayette
Purtle Amy B, 120 Nicole Dr,Youngsville
Purtle Annette L, 103 Field Crest Pkwy,Youngsville
Putnam James L, 1019 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette
Pyle Sammy Carlton, 625 Alonda Dr,Lafayette
Qadri Syed Jawed A, 806 Tolson Rd, Lafayette
Quang Tuyen, 331 Victoria Lights Lane, Broussard
Quebedeaux Ray A, 100 Steep Meadows Ln, Lafayette
Quick Paul, 200 ELewis St Apt 186L, Lafayette
Quick Dish, 310 BChemin Metairie, Youngsville
Quinilla Mario, 3603 WCongress St 233 B, Lafayette
Quinn Physical Therapy,1103 Kaliste Saloom Ste. 204, Lafayette
Quinonez Luis E, 2900 WWillow St, Scott
Quinters Joe D, 136 Heathwood Dr,Broussard
Quirk Kenneth, 102 Still Waters Rd, Broussard
Quoyeser Beverly,PoBox 3059, Lafayette
Quoyeser Clement B, Po Box 3059, Lafayette
R&HSupply Inc, Po Box 1106, Broussard
R1Med-StaffInc, 201 Rue BeauregardSte 202, Lafayette
Rabalais Nicholas M, 103 Harrell Dr,Lafayette
Rabeaux Charles R, 201 WaterfordDr, Lafayette
Rabeaux Matt, 105 Dove Circle, Lafayette
Rabeaux Theresa M, 201 WaterfordDr, Lafayette
Rabeaux Thomas J, 501 CrawfordSt, Lafayette
Racca Justin R, 205 Pillette Rd Apt J, Lafayette
Racine James R, 102 Vintage Sq, Lafayette
Rack Superior,PoBox 110, Youngsville
Rack Willdric, 105 Bowen Lane, Broussard
Rader Neil P, 107 Cellar Ct, Lafayette
Rader Raymond, Apt A1324 Dulles Dr,Lafayette
Rader Rebecca C, 205 Harvey Cay Ln, Youngsville
RadfordMaria S, 118 NMannering Ave, Lafayette
Ragin Trailers, 2601 Se Evangeline Thwy,Lafayette
Rainey David, 103 Hazy River Way, Lafayette
Rainey Morgan, 117 Mosswood Cir,Lafayette
Rajaphone Bouaphay,3708 Melancon Rd, Broussard
Raley Chad D, 411 Dulles Dr Apt 2113, Lafayette
Raley Tierra A, 411 Dulles Dr Apt 2113, Lafayette
Ram Services Inc, 115 Charbonnet Rd, Duson
Ramada Inn, 2032 Ne Evangeline Thruway,Lafayette
Ramazanli Fatima, 655 Marie Antoinette St, Lafayette
Ramazanov Faig, 207 Stags Leap Ln, Broussard
Ramirez Salem, 103 Westwood Drive Apt 248, Lafayette
Ramos Abram K, 201 Kincaid Ct, Lafayette
Ramos Investments Company,101 Larue France Ste 200, Lafayette
Ramos Kaleb A, 201 Kincaid Ct, Lafayette
Ramos Kathleen R, 201 Kincaid Ct, Lafayette
Ramos Kruz A, 201 Kincaid Ct, Lafayette
Ramos Maira, 3603 WCongress Apt 235, Lafayette
Ramsey Allison A, 5500 Moss St, Lafayette
Ramsey Steve, 2700 Amb Caffery Pkwy Apt 143, Lafayette
Rancich John E, 3603 W. Congress St. Unit 131B, Lafayette
Randall James, 2830 Louisiana AveApt 2, Lafayette
Randall Kenneth J, 202 Metals Dr,Youngsville
Ranger Directional Inc, 200 Ida Road, Broussard
Rankin Michael W, 100 SMeyers Dr 1923 Apt, Lafayette
Ranson BMcQitty Ltd, Easy Corporate ProfitSharing 102 Parkway Dr
Lafayette Ransonnet Francins Tawana, 131 Happiness St, Lafayette
Rapid Energy Services, Po Box 81277, Lafayette
Rastegar Mohammadreza, 1019 Kaliste Saloom Rd #114, Lafayette
RatliffKeith A, Po Box 80215, Lafayette
Ray Brylan, 127 EBayou Shr,Lafayette Ray Malea, 127 EBayou Shr, Lafayette Ray Robert G, 112 Rue Aubin, Lafayette Ray Steven, 103 Homas Rd, Lafayette
Elliott,
Youngsville
Reed Cassandra, 225 Larchwood, Lafayette
Reed Darren, 805 Kaiser Dr,Lafayette
Reed Elizabeth R, 100 Belle Fontaine Drive, Lafayette
Reed Joshua J, 210 Anslem Dr,Youngsville
Reed Monty,106 Sauternes Circle, Lafayette
Reed Ryan, 117 Charles Dr,Lafayette
Rees Md Stephen, 1817 Blanchet Dr., Lafayette
Rees Marie, 1817 Blanchet Dr,Lafayette
Regan Joshua, 101 Flanders Ridge, Youngsville
Regatta La Seafood &Steakhouse, 111 BrookshireGordon Drive, Lafayette
Regina Sutherland, 306 Herbert Rd Apt, Lafayette
Reichert HClay,135 NDemande St, Lafayette
Reid Anne D, 109 Elise Dr,Youngsville
Reid Marsha, 117 Sun Village Dr,Lafayette
Reilly Joanne, 810 SCollege Rd Apt F, Lafayette
Reliance Real Estate Group Llc, Po Box 62563, Lafayette
Rembert David, 811 Lanellais, Youngsville
Ren Chong, 110 EMartial AveApt 8321, Lafayette
Rendon Leopoloo, 203 Basin St Apt C, Lafayette
Rendon Michael, 1111 Roper Rd 4, Scott
Renew Physical Therapy Llc, Po Box 80964, Lafayette
Repp Verlie, 103 Coral Reef Dr,Lafayette
Republic National Distributing, Po Box 3587, Lafayette
Retrouvaille Rediscovery Of Acadiana, 700 Morningside Dr,Duson
Retrouvaille Rediscovery Of Acadiana In, 700 Morningside Dr,Duson
Revolorio Asencio Demetrio, 2520 Ambassador Caffery,Lafayette
Reyes Luis E, 3121 Johnston St, Lafayette
Reyes Mario David, 105 105 Sunny Ln, Lafayette
Reynolds Chrystal, 108 Sis Lane, Carencro
Reynolds Kevin J, 108 Sis Lane, Carencro
Rhee Jenny,4118 Decon Rd, Youngsville
Rhymes Isiah, 704 Plaza Village Dr,Lafayette
Rhymes Shawn, 822 Harding St, Lafayette
Rhymes Thomas, 235 VanBurden, Lafayette
Rials Madison J, 4032 Dara Beth Rd, Youngsville Rice Carol, 215 WFarrel Rd Rm 417, Lafayette Rice Karly,217 Golden Cypress Dr,Youngsville Rice Margaret, 139 Oakbend Drive, Lafayette
RichardJoshua, 307 Louveteau Rd, Carencro
RichardAshley E, 105 Scarlet Oak Dr,Carencro
RichardB Feucht Ii Md Llc, 206 East St Peter St, Carencro
RichardCynthia C, 113 Mountainside Dr,Lafayette
RichardDustin, 103 GrandmereCircle, Lafayette
RichardEvan M, 173 Emerite Dr,Lafayette
RichardHManess Dds Msd, 202 Feu Follet Rd, Lafayette
RichardHManess Dds Msda Professio, 202 Feu Follet Rd, Lafayette
RichardHarold D, 1036 9Th St, Lafayette
RichardJeremy P, 99 Karolwood Dr,Lafayette
RichardJoseph Miller Jr,220 Nicole Dr,Youngsville
RichardJuanita F, 120 Hector St, Lafayette
RichardMarvin Joseph, 111 Dairyman Ln, Lafayette
RichardNormaniski Rayshawn, 218 Morelan Dr,Lafayette
RichardTheresa, Po Box 530, Broussard
RichardYvonne D, 1036 9Th St, Lafayette
Richards Herma, 112 14 St, Lafayette
Richards Paul A, 204 Oak Hollow Dr,Lafayette
Richardson James R, 611 Bellevue St Apt C, Lafayette
Richardson Keith, 1513B Chemin Agreable, Youngsville
Richardson Patrick, Po Box 944, Broussard
Richmond Markus A, 302 Francis Prejean Circle Ln, Duson
Richoux Rachel C, 615 Saint Camille St, Lafayette
Richter Chad, 507 EGloria Swith Road, Lafayette
Ricks James, 244 Monteigne Dr,Lafayette
Riddle Terry W, 34 Larkspur Lane Box 10, Lafayette
Rideaux Latre, 246 Cane Run Court, Duson
Rider Joshua K, 1100 Robley Dr Apt 7305, Lafayette
Riera Carlos Alberto, 1042 Camellia Blvd Apt 5208, Lafayette
Riggs Harvey,PoBox 60022, Lafayette
Riley Catherine B, 106 Claremont Cir, Lafayette
Rinardo Ray,611 Roger Rd, Scott
Rios Juan Carlos, 301 Birch Dr,Lafayette
Rippas Walter,PoBox 2909, Lafayette
Rita Prejean, 247 Cankton Road, Carencro
Rivas AguirreFatmia Helen, 115 West Foch Street Apt H, Lafayette
Rivera RichardA,2800 WPinhook Rd Ste 5, Lafayette
Rivera Steven H, 112 Miller St, Lafayette
RiveroAndreah, 124 Field Crest Parkway,Youngsville
Rivers Maria, 1076 Sherwood Circle, Lafayette
RiviereEarleen M, Po Box 427 ThirdSt, Broussard
Roadway Management Supply Llc, 201 Rue BeauregardSte 202, Lafayette
Roberts Kenneth J, 403 Astor Drive, Lafayette
Roberts Russell, 104 Range Dr,Lafayette
Robertson Allison J, 405 Lebesque Rd, Lafayette
Robertson Draymus L, 212 Walker Rd, Lafayette
Robertson Es Myrtis M, 336 Elizabeth Ave, Lafayette
Robertson Joseph Junius, 326 Guilbeau Rd Apt 149, Lafayette
Robertson Kameryn J, 202 Adam Ln, Duson
Robertson Lane T, 100 Winchester Dr,Lafayette
Robertson Paul S, 227 Sampson St, Lafayette
Robertson Robert A, 405 Lebesque Rd, Lafayette
Robertson Samuel Andrew,1000 Greenbriar Road, Lafayette
Robertson Shannon, 140 Kentwood Drive, Carencro
Robertson Zach, 710 SCollege Rd Apt 93, Lafayette
Robichaux BernardP,PoBox 82067, Lafayette
Robin Bryan K, 130 Faul Rd, Lafayette
Robin Jr Merlin, 108 Amite Dr,Lafayette
Robinson Benjamin, 116 Onye St, Lafayette
Robinson Iantha, 217 Martha St, Lafayette
Robinson Jonathan, 503 Burlington Cir,Broussard
Robinson Jontaries, 304 LoireAve Apt C, Lafayette
Robinson Stacy Al,1042 Camellia Blvd Apt 3302, Lafayette
Roche Travis, 501 Stewart St, Lafayette
Rochel Alicia, 324 Oak St, Lafayette
Rochon Amy,315 Amesbury Dr Apt 292, Lafayette
Rochon AndreF,1901 Eraste Landry Rd Apt 2068, Lafayette
Rochon August R, 1901 Eraste Landry Rd Apt 2068, Lafayette
Rochon Monica, 414 Plaza Village Dr,Lafayette
Rochon Scottie B, 404 Burlington Ave, Broussard
Rodas Teddy E, 301 Sedric Dr,Duson
Rodrigue Lance, 310 Waterview Rd, Youngsville
Rodriguez Deuwaldo, 204 Downing, Lafayette Rodriguez Jean, 1324 Sherwood Circle, Lafayette
Rodriguez Jefferson, 2900 WWillow St Trlr 80, Scott
Rodriguez Keith A, Po Box 3445, Lafayette
Rodriguez Migdalia, Apt C119 Township Ln, Lafayette
Rodriguez Rebeca, 108 SLakepointe Dr,Lafayette Rodriguez Trustee Keith, Po Box 3445, Lafayette Rodtspalenik Olivia, 809 South Beau PreRoad, Lafayette
Roger Jaycee Rae, 212 Adaline Street, Carencro
Roger Michael M, 420 FenetreRd, Scott Rogers Brenda Ann Blanch, 211 Kim Dr,Lafayette Rohrberger Heather,106 Bennington Ln, Youngsville Rohrberger Ryan, 106 Bennington Ln, Youngsville Rojas Ana, 314 Malapart Rd Lot 34, Lafayette Rojas Milady,357 Manchester Circle, Lafayette Rolig Madison, 410 ELewis St, Lafayette Rolke Dana A, 201 Desoto Rd, Carencro Rolling MFarms Inc, 1018 Harding St Ste 208, Lafayette Romain Joseph, 142 South Saint Louis Street, Lafayette Romano Fran M, 106 Bonita St, Lafayette Romanow Michael, Po Box 82297, Lafayette RomeroAnd Montgomery,PoBox 3704, Lafayette RomeroBrody,210 Polly Ln Apt 137, Lafayette RomeroCelia S, 5838 Eagle Pass Dr,Youngsville RomeroCharles R, 107 Wheat Cir,Scott RomeroFlo Anna, 212 Felecia Drive, Lafayette RomeroJason, 123 Blazer Dr,Lafayette RomeroJustin, 2314 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette RomeroKendall, 3216 Captain Cade Rd., Broussard RomeroKrislyn, 230 Saint George St, Lafayette RomeroLee Roy,212 Felecia Drive, Lafayette RomeroLori Hargroder,1418 Alice Dr,Lafayette RomeroLuke, 1002 La Petite Ln, Broussard RomeroMegan, 119 Rost Rd, Lafayette
Turner
Thibeaux Thelma, 215 Fourth St, Youngsville
Thibodeaux Alison Claire, 127 Keeneland Ln, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Anne, 101 Woodrich Ln, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Betty Jane, Po Box 195, Duson
Thibodeaux Brittany,218 Talon Rd, Youngsville
Thibodeaux Bryan J, Po Box 81191, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Calasia N, 173 South Beadle Rd Apt 114, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Chadrick, 414 Vieux Orleans Cir Apt 2, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Claire, 121 Acacia Drive, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Erica S, 201 Settlers Trace Blvd Unit 4414, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Jack G, 308 Sidney MartinRd, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Jaxon G, 201 Janin Rd, Broussard
Thibodeaux Jennifer,401 DArceneaux Rd Lot 9, Scott
Thibodeaux Jessie, Apt 1304, Lafayette
Thibodeaux John, 224 Ivory St, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Mary L, 201 Settlers Trace Apt 2217, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Matthew,202 Felecie Dr,Lafayette
Thibodeaux Michael, 100 Stovewood Circle, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Mitchell J, 2615 Cameron, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Nettie V, 308 Sidney Martin Rd, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Rachel, 103 Exchange Place, Lafayette
Thibodeaux Ray,810 ALanglinais Rd Lot A, Youngsville
Thibodeaux Scott, 209 Norman Dr 209 Norman Dr,Lafayette
Thibodeaux Sonya M, 205 Hidden Oak Dr,Carencro
ThibodeauxTerrell J, 1018 Hugh Wallis Rd S, Lafayette
Thibodeaux TheodoreM,201 Valcour Pl, Youngsville
Thibodeaux Tyler J, 504 Stewart St, Lafayette
Thibodeaux VerneL,201 Settlers Trace Apt 2217, Lafayette
Thierry Carmelita, 201 Darbonne Rd, Lafayette
Thigpen Janet, 120 Cecile Dr,Lafayette
Thistlethwaite John Richmond, 202 Henry St, Lafayette
Thomas Amanda, 212 Symphony Pl, Duson
Thomas Cagney D, 110 Maywood St, Lafayette
Thomas Cierra, 815 Martin Luther King Dr 28, Lafayette
Thomas Clarisa, 105 Rojean Dr,Carencro
Thomas Darrian C, 208 Harrell Dr,Lafayette
Thomas Demetra Hayes, 330 Mill Pond Drive, Youngsvillle
Thomas Hannah C, 101 GYearling Rd, Duson
Thomas Jamacaine Randell, 502 LoireAve,Lafayette
Thomas Johntrell, 231 Saint NazaireRoad, Broussard
Thomas Louis, 1105 Foreman Dr,Lafayette
Thomas Masika, 409 Greig St, Lafayette
Thomas Miles Bennett, 115 N. Mannering Ave., Lafayette
Thomas Norma Jacqueline, 1105 Foreman Dr,Lafayette
Thomas Orlando Paul, 330 Mill Pond Drive, Youngsvillle
Thomas Richardson Llc, Po Box 90461, Lafayette
Thomas Shakia, 110 Township Lane, Lafayette
Thomas Trania, 408 SMarigny Cir Apt D, Duson
Thomas Wilbert J, 300 Georgia St, Lafayette
Thompson Cynthia Devillier,201 Felicie Drive, Lafayette
Thompson Danielle, 2901 Johnston St Ste 301, Lafayette
Thompson Kauree, 315 Guilbeau Rd Apt 226, Lafayette
Thompson Keely,316 Stevenson St Apt 2, Lafayette
Thompson Mark W, 907 EBroussardRd, Lafayette
Thompson Myisha, 605 Lafayette St, Lafayette
Thompson Ray,1101 NBienville St, Lafayette
Thompson Roger E, 210 Running Deer,Lafayette
Thornton Leona, 204 Ella St, Lafayette
Thornton Leona B, 204 Ella St, Lafayette
Three Guys Pump &Tank Co Inc, 651 I-10 NFrontage Rd, Scott
Thurmond Mary E, 115 Antigua Dr,Lafayette
Tichy Tatiana L, 208 Rue De La Rochelle, Broussard
Tiffany Capps Lpc, 501 WSaint Mary Blvd Ste 405, Lafayette
TillTaylor Ann, 102 Stonewall Ave, Carencro
Tilley Lolita D, 1042 Camellia Blvd Apt 2110, Lafayette Tillman Danny,205 Bell Downs Dr,Lafayette
Timco Services, Po Box 80368, Lafayette
Time Potty,3221 Kaliste Saloom Rd Potty Time Portable Toilets, Lafayette
Timothy JBradley,109 Chartwell Lane, Lafayette
Tina MManikowski Jason MManikowski, 3500 ESimcoe, Lafayette
Titan Contracting, 2108 Cameron Street John Atkinson, Lafayette
Titan Inspection Services, Llc 105 Bolton Ave, Lafayette
Toasperm Alma,100 Village Ln, Lafayette
Toce Johnette M, Po Box 69, Milton
Toce Mary H, 109 Tonbridge Dr Lafayette
Todays Eyecare, 5725 Johnston St Ste 2314, Lafayette
Todays EyecareLlc, 5725 Johnston St Ste 2314, Lafayette
Todd Erin E, 111 Hornsby Rd, Lafayette
Todd Pump &Specialty,POBox 338, Scott
Toepfer Claire, 110 Gateau Rd, Scott
Toering Michelle, 123 Sugar Creek Dr,Youngsville
Tolivour Justin, 208 General Gardner AveApt 10, Lafayette
Tolm Group Inc, 700 Jefferson St, Lafayette
Tompkins Catherine A, 101 Laura Ave, Lafayette
Tonga Michael, 1616 JeffersonSt, Lafayette Torres Miguel, 101 Meuton St Apt., Duson
Torres Miguel Torres, 206 NMarigny Cir Apt A, Duson
Torres Vasquez Jesus Francisco, 101 Norine St, Lafayette
Total E&P Usa Inc., 2916 N. University Ave, Lafayette
Total Safety Us Incorporated, 5749 Highway 90 East, Broussard
Touchet Irene, Po Box 92401, Lafayette
Touchet Rachel, 201 Broad Ave, Scott
Touchet Robin, 232 Mills St, Scott
Touchet Timothy James, 117 EWeeks Dr,Youngsville
Touchet Vicki Broussard, 117 EWeeks Dr,Youngsville
Toups Andrew,2310 WSaint Mary Blvd, Lafayette
Toups Barret, 1235 Eraste LandrytRd, Lafayette
Toups Peter,PoBox 61594, Lafayette Tower Engineering Inc, 556 Jefferson St Suite 201, Lafayette Traco Production, 425 GriffinRd, Youngsville Tracy FabreCrna, 2390 West Congress St, Lafayette Tracy Travis, 321 Travis St Suite 10B, Lafayette
Trahan Gabrielle Elizabeth, 100 Saint Claude Pl Apt D, Youngsville Trahan Aimee, 208 Verger Dr,Youngsville Trahan Andrew,222 Ryder Dr,Lafayette Trahan Annette, 172 Louisa Blvd, Lafayette Trahan Brodrick D, 510 WGilman Rd, Lafayette
Trahan David, 403 SDomingue Ave, Lafayette Trahan Devin E, 102 Westwood Dr Apt 407, Lafayette Trahan Dexter,3230 SFieldspan Rd, Duson Trahan Dreux J, 109 Gentle Crescent Ln, Lafayette Trahan Genevieve Hernandez, 403 SDomingue Ave, Lafayette Trahan Jon D, 209 Crest Cir,Youngsville Trahan Mark, 148 Kingspointe, Lafayette Trahan Mia S, 143 Albarado Rd, Scott Trahan Micheal J, 205 Sandhill Crane Dr,Lafayette Trahan Paul, 306 Sidney Martin Rd, Lafayette Trahan Paul R, 205 Dear St, Lafayette Trahan Paul S, 216 Gaslight Ln, Youngsville Trahan Russell, 204 Roosevelt St, Lafayette
Trahan Sandy P, 109 Gentle Crescent Ln, Lafayette Trahan Sebastian W, 404 Elmwood Dr,Lafayette Trahan Shannon, 2215 SFieldspan Rd, Duson Trahan Shirley,8407 General Collins,Youngsville Trahan Terry B, 304 Virginia Ave, Lafayette Trahan Zachary J, 211 Liberty AveApt 1122, Lafayette Trailer Travis, 720 Madeline Ave, Lafayette
Tran Chad Q, 201 Prescott Blvd Apt 923, Youngsville Tran Dung T, 331 Victoria Lights Lane, Broussard
Tran Ngoan, 909 Robley Dr,Lafayette Trapp Joseph, 215 Republic AveApt 2303, Lafayette Trappey Albert J, 223 Darden Rd, Lafayette Trappey Albert Joseph, 223 Darden Rd, Lafayette Trappey Susan B, 223 Darden Rd, Lafayette
Treadway Gregory M, 100 Mcdonald Street Apt 10E, Lafayette
Trevino Arturo, Po Box 284, Scott
Trevino Bridget H, Po Box 284, Scott Tribe Fitness Llc, 304 King Arthurs Way, Youngsville
Trichelle Melancon Od, P.O. Box 90752, Lafayette
Tricia KAlexander,2110 Gerald Dr,Lafayette
Triple SHydrostatic Inc, Po Box 1527, Scott
Triplett Lisa, 440 Hiedi Cr Lot 48, Scott
Trisler Cody Ryan, 1400 N. Bertrand Dr., Lafayette
TritschlerCarl, 346 Rena Dr,Lafayette
Tritschler Carl W, 551 Tracey Cir,Lafayette
Trosclair Andrew,213 Candy Lane, Lafayette
Trosclair Reggie, 312 Martin OaksDr, Lafayette
Trosclair Scott James, 207 Celine St, Carencro
Trosclair Tony J, 104 Rue Saint Barts,Youngsville
Trosclair Warner Blaine, 103 Teurlings Drive, Lafayette
Trotter William E, 111 King Ranch Dr,Lafayette
Trouillier Vincent, 1116 Celeste St, Lafayette TruDrill Energy Servoces Llc, Po Box 80011, Lafayette TruckMorrison, Po Box 607 Sales &Salvage, Duson
Trudrill Energy Servoces Llc, Po Box 80011, Lafayette
Trumps Jackquelyn C, 107 Millcrest Dr,Lafayette
Trumps Jarrod P, 107 Millcrest Dr,Lafayette Truong Thuba T, 109 EMartial Ave, Lafayette Tucker Rodney,221 VerotSchool Road, Lafayette
Orleans Circle, Lafayette
Twilbeck Raymond Paul, 133 Timber Edge Dr,Youngsville
Tylock Lauren, 108 Royal Palms Dr Broussard
Tylock Paul, 108 Royal Palms Dr., Broussard
Tyson Jr Bobby J, 303 Marseilles Dr,Lafayette
Uncle Luck SExpress Cafe Llc, 930 Veterans Dr,Carencro
Unique Lemondrop, 1209 Albertson Pkwy Ste FBoutique, Broussard
United Rental Tools Inc, 226 Bruce St, Lafayette
Unlimited Supply Inc, Po Box 395, Broussard
Uptown Financial Group Inc., 201 Rue Beauregard, Lafayette
Urban John, 1117 Old Spanish Tra, Scott
Valentino Vernon A, 601 WSaint Mary Blvd Ste 2, Lafayette
Valentino Vernon A, 601 WSaint Mary Blvd Ste 204, Lafayette
Valico Sonia Maribel Maribel, 105 Naches St Ap A, Lafayette
Valin William, 122 North Meyers Dr,Lafayette
Vallery Jkari Anna, 502 WAdmiral Doyle Dr Apt K5, Lafayette
Vallery Wade, 227 Longleaf Dr,Broussard
Valles Denise R, 320 Sonny St, Lafayette
Vallier Crystal, 300 Mango Dr,Lafayette
Vallier Davon, 118 Thelma Dr,Lafayette
Vallot Grant, 110 Squirrel Run, Youngsville
Valve Sealant Supply Inc, 204 South Locksley Dr,Lafayette
VanRight, 610 Pillette Rd Apt 206, Lafayette
VanVolkenburgWilliam T, 104 Indian Mound Rd, Lafayette
VanasselbergRicky,112 WindfernDr, Youngsville
Vanderpool Mark, 115 SycamoreDrApt 127, Lafayette
Vandrome Wilda Roberta, 106 Young Dr,Lafayette
Variet Arthur,216 Rue Envie, Carencro
Varner Lakisha L, 200 Mango Drive, Lafayette
Vasile Rosu, 811 Rue Du Belier, Lafayette
Vaughman And Associates, 4630 Embassador Caffrey, Lafayette
Vazquez Karina Reyes, 202 Belgium St D, Lafayette
Veazey James, 131 MireRd, Scott
Vedol Yolonda, 102 Tennessee St, Lafayette
Veeramachineni HareKiran, 6000 Johnston St Apt 508, Lafayette
Veerina Kalyan, 100 Arabella Blvd, Lafayette
Vegetation Management, Po Box 413, Duson
Vela Jason, 112 Croft Row,Lafayette
Velasquez Angel, 826 EBayou Pkwy,Lafayette
Velasquez Vilman Lopez,1116 Kaliste Saloom Apt 4, Lafayette
Velazquez Glendy, 219 Leon St, Broussard
Venable April, 326 Guilbeau Rd, Lafayette
Venable Jason, 203 Courtney Dr,Duson
VentureTransport Logistics, 200 Corporate Blvd Ste 104, Lafayette
Vera Jaime, 125 Grace View Dr Apt C, Lafayette
Vercher Lauren E, 123 TroubadoreDr, Youngsville
Verhage David R, 208 Newlands St, Lafayette
Vernon Charles, 211 BClaymoreDr, Lafayette
VeronTanner,216 Village SquareDr, Broussard
VerotSwain, 115 Country Ln Apt B, Lafayette
Verret Caleb M, 3600 Kaliste Saloom Rd Apt 511, Lafayette
Verret Ricky,202 PicardRd, Lafayette
VerrettShamon, 402 Attakapas Rd, Lafayette
Viator Knight, 315 Shenandoah Dr,Broussard
Viator Vernon C, 112 Countryside Dr,Youngsville
Vice Beverly,105 NWashington St, Lafayette
Vice Emilianna, 105 NWashington St, Lafayette
Vice William, 119 Vice Lane, Youngsville
Victoriano Bridget, 104 SongbirdLn, Lafayette
Vidrine Llc, 805 St. Joseph, Lafayette
Vidrine Anneysa, 609 Colonial Drive, Lafayette
Vidrine Anneysa Miller,120 Alyene Dr,Lafayette
Vidrine Charles A, 130 Ransome St, Lafayette
Vidrine Dawn, Po Box 32, Duson
Vidrine Jacob, 112 Kim Dr Lafayette
Vidrine Kenneth W, 109 FernHolw,Youngsville
Vidrine Matthew S, 119 Ironside Dr,Lafayette
Vidrine Nicholas, 112 Everglades Dr,Lafayette
Vidrine Nick, 112 Everglades Dr,Lafayette
Vidrine Paige, 710 SCollege Rd, Lafayette
Vidrine Ross, 325 Oak St, Lafayette
Vidrine Tammy,2937 WGloria Switch Rd, Carencro
Vidrine Todd, 315 Amesbury Dr Apt 252, Lafayette
Vidrine William, 711 W. Pinhook Rd, Lafayette
Vidrine Wilma B, 100 Lamas Cir,Lafayette
Vie Sauvage Llc, 2200 Cameron St, Lafayette
Villalobos Tomas R, 503 Scottsdale St, Lafayette
Villava Floriberto, 307 Pecan Grove Rd Lot 38, Scott
Villier Bethsaida, Apt 1607 1630 Rue Du Belier, Lafayette
VimLlc, 700 Canberra Rd, Lafayette
Vincent Anna, 808 SStAntoine St, Lafayette
Vincent BuffordEstate Of, 808 SStAntoine St, Lafayette
Vincent Christian L, 502 Lancaster Dr,Lafayette
Vincent Daive, 102 Natchitoches Dr,Lafayette
Vincent Dawn, 6500 WCongress St, Lafayette
Vincent Dolores A, 610 St Joseph St, Lafayette
Vincent Dominique Louise, 6500 WCongress, Duson
Vincent Jake, 114 NHillary Ave, Lafayette
Vincent Judy,1720 Detente Rd, Youngsville
Vincent Paige, 118 Vivian Dr,Lafayette
Vincent Roy,1913 VerotSchool Road, Lafayette
Vinet Jake, 215 Constitution Dr,Lafayette
Vitte Katelyn, 221 VerotSchool Rd, Lafayette
Vizueth Trejo Hugo, 115 SGirouardRdApt A1,Broussard
Vo Cuc, 202 Titan Dr,Lafayette
Voinche Barbara, 1042 Camellia Blvd Apt 2105, Lafayette
Voisin Angie, 108 NGovernor MiroDr, Lafayette
Vondenstein Tyler,105 QueensfordWay,Youngsville
Voorhies &Labbe Aplc, Po Box 3527, Lafayette
Vowell Perry,128 Manchester Circle, Lafayette
Vu Thuong K, 109 Franklin Lane, Lafayette
Vu Trung, 1000 Robley Dr Apt 821Ctct, Lafayette
WH Renovations Llc, 409 Azalea St., Lafayette
Waddle Andria A, 981 Hickory Ave., Lafayette
Wade Batchelor,210 Traditions Dr,Lafayette
Wade Julia, 314 Madison Street, Lafayette
Wadlow Keandra, 606 Jessica, Lafayette
Waguespack Robby,204 Richland Ave, Lafayette
Waitr Inc, 1100 Bertrand, Lafayette
Walker Cecil, 102 Briarmeadow Dr,Lafayette
Walker Cinderella, CareOfSadie George 230 Lasalle, Lafayette
Walker Donna, Po Box910, Carencro
Walker Malik E, 201 High Meadows Blvd Apt 163, Lafayette
Wallace Gene, 126 ClaymoreDr, Lafayette
Waller Elizabeth Bowen, 111 GirardPark Dr 28, Lafayette
Walls Jalin L, 105 Calco Blvd Apt 1303A, Lafayette
Walton Justin D, 300 NWilderness Trl, Carencro
Wang Jigang, Apt 204 655 Marie Antoinette St, Lafayette
Wang Robert Shuchen, 317 Corona Drive,Lafayette
Ward Charles Mike, 204 Gordon Crocket Dr,Lafayette
WardDanny,407 River Oak Cir,Lafayette
Ward Ralph R, 411 Woodvale Apt 104G,Lafayette
Ward Walt, 513 Bordette Dr,Lafayette
Warner Trosclair,PoBox 41764, Lafayette
Warren Jr Kermit J, 138 Oakbend Dr,Lafayette
Warrior Energy Services, 203 Commission Blvd., Lafayette
Washington Barracus, 112 Rue Mirbeau, Lafayette
Washington Bernadette, 100 Allison St A, Lafayette
Washington Cheryl, 411 Woodvale AveApt 104, Lafayette
WashingtonCrystal, 711 Poplar St Crystal Washington, Lafayette
WashingtonCynthia, 108 Meudon St Apt D, Duson
Washington Delisa, 105 Socrates Place, Lafayette
Washington Dontrayvien, 1104 Louisiana Avenue, Lafayette
WashingtonEnola, 100 Becky Lane, Lafayette
Washington Jessica, 209 Trewhill Parkway,Lafayette
Washington Jr Willie, 215 Buick Street, Lafayette
Washington Willie J, 215 Buick St, Lafayette
Waters Karen, 1008 SCollege Rd 207, Lafayette
Watkins Holly Monroe, 104 Country Village Dr,Youngsville
Watkins Ivy,1200 Robley Dr,Lafayette
Watson Claude, 210 Allen St, Lafayette
Watson Conner,101 WilbournBlvd Apt 207, Lafayette
Watson Nicholas, 161 Opus Ln, Lafayette
Watson Nicholas J, 161 Opus Ln, Lafayette
Wattigny Amber R, 214 Stags Leap Ln, Broussard
Wattigny Amber Rene, 214 Stag SLeap Lane, Broussard
Watts Carrie Ray,PoBox 1312, Scott
WayBrian, 109 Stoneridge Dr,Duson
Wead Shelley,104 Blanco Dr,Youngsville
WeatherfordPat, 110 Galvez Dr,Lafayette
Weaver Brendan K, 110 Braxton Drive, Youngsville
Weaver Herb, 102 Chatwood Cr,Lafayette
Weaver Jason A, 106 Aron Dr,Lafayette
Webb Aiden C, 142 Chantilly Cir,Lafayette
Webb Ethan Joel, 142 Chantilly Cir,Lafayette
Webb Jessica Lynn, 142 Chantilly Cir,Lafayette
Webb Jordyn Elizabeth, 142 Chantilly Cir,Lafayette
Webber Sharnell, 111 Mulligan Way, Lafayette
Weber Angela, Po Box 748, Carencro
WebreTyler J, 1031C Pierre Washington Rd, Broussard
Webster Antoinette, Po Box 62414, Lafayette
Webster Cassandra Germaine, 232 Country Breeze Ln Lot 133, Duson
Weekly Lawrence J, 130 Comeaux Cv,Scott
Welch Dylan M, 3121 Johnston St Apt 221, Lafayette
Wellband Judith Lynn, 202 Claystone Rd, Youngsville
Wellband Keith James, 202 Claystone Rd, Youngsville
Wellemeyer Edith G, Po Box 61021, Lafayette Wells Terrance D, 121 TreasureCv, Lafayette Wendt MB,518 Robert Lee Cir,Lafayette
Wesberry Judy,620 BKidder Rd, Carencro Wesco Distribution, 200 Matrix Loop, Lafayette Wesco Distribution Inc, 200 Matrix Loop, Lafayette
Satiesha P, 315 Guilbeau Rd Suite 415, Lafayette
Tiffany,112 Rue Fountaine Apt 4, Lafayette
100 HummingbirdLane Apt D, Lafayette White Debra W, 1218 EAlexander St, Lafayette
Jerry,3201 Kaliste Saloon Rd Lot 297, Lafayette
Joni, P.O.Box 987, Youngsville
Ransom C, Po Box 90922, Lafayette
White Resources La Inc, Po Box 80538, Lafayette
White Samuel, 526 Saint John St, Lafayette
White Sean, 304 RayburnStApt P, Lafayette
White Travis, 306 Old Cypress Dr,Broussard
Whiting Stephanie C, 502 Constitution Dr,Lafayette
Whitlock Michael, 122 Norcross Dr,Lafayette
Whitrack Tamia, 501 Stewart St 262, Lafayette
WhittenbergJoanna, 503 Wind Haven Ln, Lafayette
Whittington Richard, 395 Louisa St, Broussard
Whittle Matthew D, 102 Alphonse Dr,Lafayette
Wichterich Johnathan E, 715 Canberra Rd, Lafayette
Wiggins Hazen B, 302 Glade Blvd, Lafayette
Wigginton Lola Marie, 214 San Carlos Cir,Lafayette
Wiggs Cindy,1005 Ersate Landry Rd, Lafayette
Wilder Austin A, 107 CrawfordSt, Lafayette
Wilkerson Richard, 300 Morningside Dr,Duson
Wilkinson Addison Albert, 128 Shannon Rd, Lafayette
Wilkinson Hailey,Apt 789 220 Wilkie St, Lafayette
Will Montz, 900 ESaint Mary Blvd Ste 200, Lafayette
Willem Mast Drafting And Design And Bank, 114 Toledo Dr,Lafayette
William Montfort, 144 Brightwood Dr,Lafayette
Williams Clara, 1609 NSaint Antoine St, Lafayette
Williams Corey,707 Jack Street, Lafayette
Williams Courtney,1344 Saint Mary St, Scott
Williams DAnna, 411 Dulles Drive Apartment 1111, Lafayette
Williams Desmond, 102 Barracks St Apt D, Duson
Williams Devin Jonathan, 116 Clara St, Lafayette
Williams Dorsey I, 203 Zoie Dr,Lafayette
Williams Frank S, 116 Baudoin St, Lafayette
Williams Jordahn, 2700 Ambassador CaffApt 208, Lafayette
Williams Karonica Danique, 840 Jenkins Rd Lot 2, Duson
Williams Lariza, 101 Des Jardin Ave, Lafayette
Williams Richard, 218 BiltmoreWay,Lafayette
Williams Shaperra A, 112 Byron St, Lafayette
Williams Sheila, 214 Azelie Street, Lafayette
Williams Sr Lorenzo, 326 Guilbeau Rd Apt 145, Lafayette
Williams Thelma, 103 Exchange Place, Lafayette
Williams Timothy,2820 Louisiana Ave, Lafayette
Williams Tradaija, 242 Woodrow Street Apt #A27, Lafayette
WillifordAimee, 114 Range Dr,Lafayette
WillifordChristian, 114 Range Dr,Lafayette
Willis Arlanda, 503 Birchview Dr,Broussard
Willis Courtney,622 Stevenson Street, Lafayette
Willis Jessie, 131 Hebert Rd Lot 53, Lafayette
Willis Michael, 142 Lilly St, Lafayette
Willis Payton, 200 Allen St, Lafayette
Wills John C, 721 Lebesque Rd, Lafayette
Wilson Alec, 104 Hazy River Way, Lafayette
Wilson Betty R, 113 Bernice Drive, Lafayette
Wilson DandreRamon, 308 Sandhurst Dr,Lafayette
Wilson Raymond, 308 Sandhurst Dr,Lafayette
Wilson Terrie, 308 Sandhurst Dr,Lafayette
Wiltz Chad, 201 Porter Lane #5, Lafayette
Wiltz Jerron K, 102 VanBuren Drive, Lafayette
Wiltz John F, Po Box 1353, Youngsville
Winder Sidney,111 Matthieu St #7,Lafayette
Windsor Pamela A, 914 Carriage Light Loop, Youngsville
Wing Krystal Glover,305 Inverness Lane, Broussard
Wingstop #2292, 1137 SBernardRdBldg J, Broussard
Winkler Mike, 1019 Kaliste Saloom Rd, Lafayette
Winn John L, 107 Sedric Dr,Duson
Wirt Lynda N, 312 WFarrell Rd, Lafayette
Wjl Holdings Llc, 310 Fernway Lane, Duson
Wokoma Kao C, 318 Monroe St, Lafayette
Wolfe Sarah E, 1200 Robley Dr,Lafayette
Wood Ethan, 201 Case Lane, Lafayette
Wood Group Talos, Ste 250 3861 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette
WoodardKayla, 2314 Kaliste Saloom Rd Apt 201, Lafayette
WoodardMatthew,412 NMall St, Lafayette
Woodellison Julie C, 200 Theodora Blvd, Lafayette
Woods David W, 319 Mudd Ave, Lafayette
Woods Joshual, 403 Joan St, Lafayette
Woods Lorty,804 Martin Luther King Jr Dr Apt B16, Lafayette
Woosley Shelly,114 Navy Seal Dr,Duson
Workover Equipment Rental Co, Po Box 61805, Lafayette
Works Mc Concrete, 519 Brothers Rd, Lafayette
Worley Jerry G, 211 Liberty AveApt 311, Lafayette
Woten Joseph G, 301 Windchase Dr,Lafayette
WrenDonna, 319 Dewey St, Lafayette
WrenIsabel, 143 Knollwood Dr,Lafayette
Wright Jessica, 123 Saint Julien Ave, Lafayette Wright Leslie, 306 Josephine St, Lafayette
Wu Chienlin, 305 Old Pottery Ln, Lafayette
Wu Wenxue, 125 Deer Run Dr,Lafayette
Wyble Lynnette, 201 W Governor MiroDr, Lafayette
Wyll Holly,502 Harrell Dr,Lafayette Xiaojing Tan, 4089 Sherwood Circle, Lafayette Yadav Shubham Vijay Kumar,200 Oakcrest Dr Apt 318, Lafayette Yammarino Kathi C, 230 Jenkins Rd Lot 2, Duson
Yang Yao, 306 ETaftSt, Lafayette
Yates Ashley BMinor,301 Marguerite Blvd, Lafayette
Yates Reagan, 125 Templeton Dr Lafayette
Yeboah AfiaS,200 Theater St, Lafayette
Yelverton Anna C, 611 Rue Chavaniac, Lafayette
Yelverton Chance, 102 EPinhook, Lafayette
Yocupicio Cinco Juan P, 301 Cautillion Dr,Youngsville
Yokum Debra, 104 Moss Brook Dr,Lafayette
Yonke Stephan E, 400 Alice Dr,Lafayette
Yontosh Gary L, 108 Westchester Dr,Lafayette
Youman Roshanda, 200 Merchants Blvd Apt 211, Lafayette
Young Daniel, 206 Carlton Dr,Lafayette
Young Mona, 102 Crossfield Ln, Carencro
Young Rochelle Amelia, 113 Canton Ct, Youngsville
Young Waylon J, 203 Vincent Drive, Scott
Youngsville Pediatrics, 814 Fortune Rd Ste 108, Youngsville
Yunker John A, 313 Woodbine Drive, Lafayette
Zachary Godshall Llc, 210 NLocksley Dr,Lafayette
Zadok Technologies, Po Box 1139, Youngsville
Zagal Apablaza Miryam A, 5530 Ambassador Caffery Pkwypt, Youngsville
Zeno Brittany,1312 Roper Drive Lot 80, Scott
Zeno Christopher,2401 East Simcoe St, Lafayette
Zeno Janet, 209 Verdun St, Lafayette
Zeno Ken M, 5215 NUniversity AveLot 1, Carencro
Zeno Theresa, 417 Louveteau Rd Trlr 6, Carencro
Zenon Deantrell, 101 WilbournBlvd Apt 901, Lafayette
Zepernick Sheila, 420 BiltmoreWay,Lafayette
Zerbe Zeth, 113 ClaymoreDr, Lafayette
ZeroDegrees, 114 Meadow Farm Rd, Lafayette
Zettler Irene G, 139 James Comeaux Rd Apt 823, Lafayette
Zhang Andy,1400 NBertrand Dr Apt 6141, Lafayette
Zhu Yangpeng, 300 Mcdonald St Apt 25U, Lafayette
Ziler Thomas, 2900 WWillow St Trlr 140, Scott
Zimmerman Richard, 312 Founders St, Lafayette
Zucco Timothy F, 319 Stewart St. Apt. C, Lafayette
Zuniga Garcia Belter,2520 Ambassador Caffery Pkwy,Lafayette
Zuniga Hernan, 300 Spruce Dr,Lafayette










































































































































































