26, happened at the end of a balloon release around 6:26 p.m. No one was injured and no property was damaged, however, officers recovered more than 20 shell casings. in the 1900 block of Ninth Street, Fondel said. They were on all four corners, and one was actually inside,” parent Yamil Olivo said. “The school was on lockdown, but I kind of felt reassured because there were police around the school facility. “Our electricity was off and my husband’s a diabetic and has to have electricity for his insulin so he set up the generator, and after that we came inside,” witness Brenda Picard said.īarbe Elementary School was also placed on a precautionary, temporary lockdown as a result. The subjects barricaded themselves in the attic of the home before the incident was resolved, Fondel said.ĭavantee Damond Bartie, 22, James Lee Bartie, 36, Lamarcus Deshawn Chatman, 19, and Kalin Stevens, 19, were taken into custody.Īuthorities say the incident forced detectives to cut the electricity to the neighborhood and protect nearby children. “It’s very disturbing when you have a neighborhood where they are hearing shots over 20 something odd times or a neighborhood to hear shots over 60 some odd times,” Deputy Chief Franklin Fondel said.ĭeputy Chief Fondel said officers with the Lake Charles Police Department SWAT Team located several subjects with arrest warrants from the investigation in a home in the 2500 block of Demarest Street. 25, and a shooting at the end of a balloon release on Sunday, Sept. Lake Charles police were investigating a drive-by shooting on Saturday, Sept. Outside of walking the cats (he really does, and without a leash), he spends outside work time at the gym and sightseeing.Lake Charles, LA (KPLC) - A barricade situation on Demarest Street Monday was the result of two ongoing investigations, officials with the Lake Charles Police Department said. Jeff moved to Lake Charles with his rescue cats Sonny and Janice. In addition to a bachelor of science degree in meteorology from Mississippi State, Jeff has degrees in political science, public administration-policy analysis, small city analysis, and business management. From there, stops at KRCR in Redding-Chico, Calif., Oregon, Wisconsin, sister-station KNOE in Monroe, then Kentucky. In 2015, Jeff joined the weather team at WTVO in Rockford, Ill. The opportunity to do television weather was inevitable. Weather took to the background as he embarked on a long radio career that took him coast-to-coast. As he made his way through grade school and high school, Jeff did a lot of public speaking - church, talent shows, and sporting events. His parents bought him a weather station to go with the other odd weather instruments he used to gather weather mornings before school. Jeff had an unusual fascination with the weather in grade school. He has also lived in Alabama and Tennessee, among other places, so the heat is not new to him. Jeff is not unfamiliar to Louisiana, though - he was working at KNOE in Monroe during the active 2020 hurricane season. more known for snow versus the heat and humidity that Southwest Louisiana is known for. Jeff Andrews joined the KPLC 7 News First Alert Weather team from WTVQ-TV in Lexington, Ky., where he was Chief Meteorologist.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |