Grounded by Indictment, Cantrell to Attend Westwego’s Global Forum on Boudin Ball Innovation

Indictment may ground her, but Mayor Cantrell insists she’s still shaping global policy, this time from a seafood market in Westwego.
Central Greenlights Surf Lake, Considers Gondola System for Sullivan Road Traffic

Central is going big: first a surf lake, now a gondola system over Sullivan Road. Officials say it’ll ease traffic, critics say it’ll look like Disney World on discount. Either way, it’s happening feasibility studies already underway.
Cantrell Says Indictment Won’t Interrupt Her Commitment to Accomplishing Nothing

Federal charges won’t slow Mayor Cantrell’s famously leisurely approach to leadership, with City Hall assuring residents that “strategic inactivity” remains the top priority.
Denham Springs Police Raid Local Ice Cream Shop, Seize 12 Cases of Rum Raisin

Officers warned that Rum Raisin posed a “moral threat,” even going so far as to bag the tubs as evidence of frozen rebellion. Critics say the raid shows the city clings to Prohibition logic whenever it suits them.
Zachary Man Kills Girlfriend’s Dad at Dad’s Home, Gets Same Sentence as Kid Who Egged a House

A Louisiana man broke into his underage girlfriend’s father’s home, killed the man, and walked away with just probation. The judge’s reasoning? Rehabilitation, so long as it doesn’t interfere with Wheel of Fortune. Welcome to Homicide Lite™, where bedtime is the new justice.
LSU Hires Indicted Developer For Arena Project After Struggling To Find One With Felony Warrants

City leaders defend the move as “perfectly on brand” for Louisiana. The arena is set to include a “Jury Deliberation Suite” for VIPs, and opening night will bring out everyone from ex-mayors to celebrity athletes with pending charges.
Denham Springs Says Ice Cream Parlor Too Holy for Liquor License, Not Holy Enough For Tax Exemption

Denham Springs ruled Mustard Seed Creamery is a church for blocking booze, but a business when it’s time to collect taxes.
Livingston Family’s Pet Deer “Rehomed” to Freezer After Surprise LDWF Raid

Officials claim a pet deer on private acreage is a major threat, though they admit they’re still figuring out exactly what that threat is.
OLOL Bids $50M for LSU Arena Naming Rights, Says It’ll Take 12 ER Visits to Recoup

Hospital officials say the $50 million arena deal is a “community investment.” But for patients facing $6,000 bills for minor injuries, it feels more like a reminder that billing is the only sport they truly dominate.
Orleans Parish Criminal Court Goes Fully Paperless By Dumping Records in Trash

In a surprise leap toward “modernization,” New Orleans’ criminal court has gone paperless by reportedly tossing its files in a dumpster. Officials insist this isn’t negligence, but “innovative documentation liberation.”
SLU Says Professor Dismissed for Use of Comic Sans in Reports, Not Lake Maurepas Findings

While her research raised alarms about toxins in Lake Maurepas, SLU says Dr. Emami’s choice of Comic Sans made the information “aesthetic malpractice.” The university acted swiftly to preserve its reputation, if not the lake.
Indian Shrimp Hit with Tariff; Local Shrimpers Shocked to Learn Feds Actually Helped Them

Louisiana shrimpers were stunned this week after a rare sighting: government policy that actually helped them. Trump’s 25% tariff on Indian shrimp imports could mark the first meaningful boost to the state’s struggling shrimp industry in years.
Post-Jailbreak Donations Drop So Low, Hutson Campaign Now Accepting Canned Goods

NEW ORLEANS, LA – Facing the kind of financial drought usually reserved for abandoned vending machines, Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson’s re-election campaign has officially entered barter mode. After raising a mere $155 in the wake of a jail escape and a mistaken inmate release, Hutson’s team is pivoting to alternative donations, namely canned corn, […]
SLU Scientist Who Found Metals in Lake Maurepas Reassigned to Campus Gift Shop

After reporting contamination in Lake Maurepas, an SLU researcher has traded lab gloves for barcode scanners. The university says the gift shop role “better aligns with the school’s messaging,” now selling branded merchandise instead of raising environmental concerns.
Orleans DA Recruits Fired Jail Deputies, Citing “Unmatched Experience in Emptying Jails”

After two deputies were fired for mistakenly releasing an inmate, DA Jason Williams quickly recruited them for a new unit within his office. The “Accelerated Release Taskforce” is designed to fast-track freedom for suspects before formal charges even materialize an approach Williams calls “efficient, if nothing else.”
Forum Moderator Accidentally Becomes Frontrunner in Orleans Sheriff Race After Sounding Marginally Competent

The Orleans Parish sheriff forum took a turn when the moderator, not a candidate, became the star. Voters say her ability to speak clearly and not dodge questions makes her the new unofficial frontrunner—despite not even running
New ‘Equitable’ Crescent City ID Guarantees Access to Incompetent Services for All

New Orleans’ new ID card guarantees equity by offering every resident the same access to broken, missing, or imaginary public services.
Landry: DMV Excited to Replace Old Confusing Process With New, Sleeker Confusing Process

Governor Jeff Landry says Louisiana’s new OMV software will “revolutionize” the DMV experience by replacing the old confusing system with a modern, equally confusing one only sleeker and in high definition.
Perkins Overpass Project’s Phase One Includes Removing Everything People Liked About Perkins

Phase One of the Perkins Road Overpass project has begun with a clear mission: remove everything people actually liked about Perkins.
BREC Builds Temporary Splash Pad at the Brave Cave; Claims It’s Much Safer Than Howell Park

Despite Brave Cave’s dark history, the new splash pad’s security measures make it a better option than Howell Park’s pool that lasted only a month.
BREC Zoo Installs “Caution: Animals May Be Alive” Signs to Prevent Future Lawsuits

After a child was bitten by a zoo bird, BREC defended itself by claiming it couldn’t have predicted such wild behavior from a live animal. In response, the Baton Rouge Zoo has installed new signs reading “Caution: Animals May Be Alive” to prevent future lawsuits
Escape Room Franchise Sues Orleans Parish Jail for Copyright Infringement

Sheriff Susan Hutson denies OPSO is an entertainment venue, though admits, “at this point, maybe we should start charging admission.”
West Feliciana President Launches Hands-On Leadership Tour, First Stop: Your Face

When a man questioned the ethics of a parish land sale, President Kenny Havard delivered answers in the form of a punch. The “Hands-On Leadership” tour was born with bruises, not brochures.
BREC Gun-Free Zone Signs to Be Upgraded to All-Caps

BREC officials say they’re upgrading the “Gun-Free Zone” sign to all-caps font hoping the change will stop future armed teens in their tracks.
East Baton Rouge Library Staff Must Now Refer to Colleagues Using Preferred Font and Type Size

BATON ROUGE, LA – The East Baton Rouge Parish Library has rolled out a new inclusivity policy requiring staff to address all patrons using their self-identified font and type size preferences. According to an internal document sent to The Sadvocate, this is part of the library’s broader “Typographical Sensitivity Initiative,” launched after a patron claimed […]
Landry Names Head of Office of Highway Construction, Start Date TBD After 15 Year Feasibility Study

Governor Landry has named a director for Louisiana’s new Office of Highway Construction, but the job won’t start until at least 2040, pending an 11-year feasibility study on whether the office should exist at all.
Police Chiefs Accidentally Attend ‘How to Stay Out of Federal Prison’ Workshop and Immediately Fail

Two Louisiana police chiefs were arrested mid-conference in Baton Rouge after allegedly filing a fake armed robbery report, ironically just steps from a session on law enforcement ethics.
EBR Library Terminates Man Who Refused to Address Colleague as “Dungeon Master of Reference Materials”

A local man was fired from the EBR Library after refusing to address his coworker as “Dungeon Master of Reference Materials,” per the institution’s new lore-based identity policy.
New Orleans DA Lands Emmy Nomination for Best Performance in Fictional Trial Series

Move over, ‘Law & Order’—New Orleans has rolled out its own courtroom drama, complete with imaginary proceedings, ghost witnesses, and a DA who now has more in common with actors than attorneys
Drivers Say They’ll Stop Crashing in St. George to Protest Privatized Accident Reporting

Several drivers have pledged to no longer crash their vehicles within St. George city limits, citing the recent privatization of accident response as a “personal insult to inefficient public service.”