The Obama Justice Department thought Ville Platte, Louisiana — where officers jail witnesses to crimes — could become a model of how to erase policing abuses that plague small towns across the nation. Jeff Sessions decided not to bother.
On a chilly morning in December 2016, 12-year-old Bobby Lewis found
himself sitting in a little room at the police station in Ville Platte, a
town of 7,300 in southern Louisiana. He wasn’t sure exactly how long it
had been, but the detective grilling him had been at it for some time.
Bobby was a middle school student — a skinny kid with a polite demeanor —
and though he got in trouble at school from time to time, he wasn’t
used to getting treated like this. He was alone, facing the detective
without a parent or a lawyer.
A blank piece of paper sat on the table in front of Bobby. He and his
friends were thieves, the detective insisted. They sold drugs. They
trafficked guns. The detective brushed off Bobby’s denials. She knew
what he was up to, and if he didn’t write it all down — inform on his
friends and confess to his crimes — she’d charge him. She’d confiscate
his dog, Cinnamon, she told him. She’d throw his mother in jail. Bobby
was nothing but a “B” and an “MF,” as he later relayed the detective’s
words to me, sheepish about repeating them. When his mother finally
turned up at the station house, it seemed only to enrage the detective
further. “Wipe that fucking smile off your face, and sit up in that
fucking chair,” Bobby and his mother recall the detective barking at
him.
Earlier that day, Bobby told me, he had been walking home from a
friend’s house when a police cruiser pulled up alongside him. He
recognized one of the officers. Her name was Jessica LaBorde, but like
most people in Ville Platte, Bobby knew her only as Scrappy. The
sobriquet was too fitting not to stick. Profanity prone in the extreme,
LaBorde was known for her tinderbox temper and hostile disposition. She
styled herself like a Marine drill sergeant — fastidiously pressed
police blues, jet-black hair pulled back tight — and she would become
Bobby’s interrogator. (LaBorde did not respond to calls or a detailed
list of questions about the incident.)
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Source: ProPublica
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