
New Orleans jail, site of a brazen inmate escape, faces flooding and plumbing failures
Embattled Sheriff Susan Hutson and her deputies have portrayed the bold jailbreak — one of the largest in recent U.S. history — as the result of an ailing facility in dire need of repairs and improvements such as replacing faulty locks.
State and local officials have generally disputed Hutson's characterization of the $150 million state-of-the-art facility built in 2015 and blamed the sheriff's leadership since taking office in 2022. The jail system has been under the oversight of a federal judge and the U.S. Justice Department since 2013.
'These recurring plumbing issues highlight a much deeper infrastructure crisis at OJC, rooted in years of deferred maintenance, chronic overcrowding, and a lack of meaningful investment,' Hutson said in statement Wednesday. 'This is not just a facilities problem. It's a public safety issue, a staffing issue, and most of all, a human dignity issue.'
The sheriff's office renewed calls this week for 'immediate and sustained infrastructure investment,' saying jail flooding and other issues were both 'foreseeable and preventable.' It said it requires at least $13 million in urgent fixes and that requests for help have been made repeatedly to city officials.
But New Orleans City Council members questioned management of the jail last week during a tense meeting and argued the sheriff's office requires greater transparency and accountability. The city's chief administrative officer also noted the department has received a larger proportionate increase in funding since 2019 than any other public safety agency in the city.
The longstanding debate over how to improve the city's jail system persists as two inmates remain at large. The group of fugitives escaped in the early hours of May 16 by yanking open a jail door, removing a toilet and crawling through a hole in the wall where steel bars had been cut away, then hopping over barbed-wire fencing using blankets.
Authorities say the inmates were able to escape because a maintenance worker, Sterling Williams, turned off the water in the cell after an inmate allegedly threatened to shank him.
Williams' lawyer Michael Kennedy has said the plumber was not threatened and had only turned off the water after being told to do so by a deputy. Williams was unaware that the inmates intentionally clogged the toilet as part of an orchestrated plan to escape, Kennedy said. Authorities have made no mention of the cell having a clogged toilet.
Over the weekend — in a seemingly unrelated incident — the jail received 'emergency repairs' as water pooled and the facility remains forced to rely on an 'external water supply" as of Wednesday, the sheriff's office said.
Flooding in the jail has been exacerbated by inmates' 'misuse the plumbing system' such as flushing 'inappropriate items' down the toilet, the sheriff's office added.
While the Orleans Justice Center is only a decade old, dysfunction has long plagued the city's jail system.
___
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Kamala Harris's stepdaughter says she has 'climate anxiety'... but fans spot detail that lays bare her hypocrisy
Former Vice President Kamala Harris 's stepdaughter has been blasted online for complaining about her 'climate anxiety' while also still using plastic bags. Ella Emhoff, a 26-year-old model and designer, shared a 'little check-in' with her TikTok followers this week, reflecting on how the past four years - and her stepmother's election loss - have sharpened her focus on the world around her. Environmental change, she noted, stood out as a major driver of the grief and overwhelm she's been experiencing. 'I think everything with the environment is really... f***ing getting to me,' Emhoff said in her video. 'I experience a lot of climate anxiety,' she added with an uneasy laugh. 'Like I think a lot of us do.' But her comments sparked a wave of backlash and accusations of hypocrisy, as she had been seen happily holding a plastic bag just the day before - a detail made all the more striking given her stepmother's previous push to ban single-use plastics. Kamala Harris first endorsed banning plastic straws during her failed presidential campaign during a climate change town hall meeting with CNN in September 2019. 'I think we should, yes,' Harris said when asked if she supported the idea. Just hours before her serious sit-down update, Emhoff posted a TikTok visiting a California-based thrift store, waving a plastic bag in the air while posing in front of the store's sign (pictured) However, when she launched her own campaign in 2024, she reversed her position and quietly dropped the proposed ban. Then, in January, fans expressed outrage after spotting Harris and her husband carrying plastic bags during a grocery store trip - similarly, branding the pair as hypocrites. The plastic bag stood in contrast to what the American would have perceived her to be: an environmentalist, given California's 10-cent fine on single-use bags and the long-term impact on the environment that plastics may pose. Harris' shock decision to walk back her controversial position proved to be an attempt by her failed campaign to make the Dem candidate seem 'more practical' on a host of issues. On Friday, Emhoff's nearly seven-minute video updated her 53,000 TikTok followers on her life since Donald Trump's landslide victory over her stepmom. She voiced her 'disgust' over the current state of global affairs, specifically citing genocide, the erosion of rights, loss of healthcare, and a pervasive sense of fear surrounding affordability and the livelihoods of everyday Americans. Emhoff then shifted her focus to her profound anxiety about the changing climate, admitting that although it's no laughing matter, the gravity of it often leaves her with nothing but a nervous laugh. 'It's scary, it is,' she said directly to the camera lens. 'All of these things are happening - and besides the small things we can do, and pushing for change and fighting and protesting - it's really hard not to sit in those moments where it feels so heavy,' she added. However, just hours before her serious sit-down update, Emhoff posted a TikTok visiting Remainders, a California-based arts and crafts thrift store. In the opening seconds of the clip, the 26-year-old model was seen outside the Pasadena store, waving a plastic bag in the air while posing in front of the store's sign. The video then cut to the store's interior, revealing rows of boxes filled with vintage and heirloom trinkets, before transitioning to Emhoff back at home, ready to share her finds with her followers. Sitting on her bed with her small dog resting behind her, she proudly displayed two bags full of treasures - one stuffed inside a plastic 'Have A Nice Day' bag. Meanwhile, her dog sported a leash fitted with - of all things - a green plastic poop bag. While some praised her for thrifting her supplies instead of supporting big businesses, many online quickly called out what they saw as blatant hypocrisy given her professed climate anxiety. 'Look at allllll the plastic bags,' one comment read. 'In fact, didn't you call for banning single use plastic bags, or was that just for everyone else but you?' Another comment said: 'You should probably not support a store filled with excessive plastic bins as shelves. It might worsen your climate anxiety. Not surprised one bit by the hypocrisy. People like you are truly doing a great amount of damage to our country. It's dangerous.' 'PRAYING FOR YOU THAT THE FALSE CLIMATE NARRATIVE ISN'T OVERWHELMING YOU,' wrote a third. But this isn't the first time Emhoff has been seen using plastic bags so casually. Many viewers were quick to call out Harris's flip-flopping on plastic use - all while criticizing Emhoff over the frequent flights taken by her stepmother and father. 'Please stop having your father and step mom fly private everywhere,' one angered user wrote under the model's video. 'It's giving me terrible climate anxiety,' they added, using Emhoff's own words against her. 'If not for them flying as much as they do privately, I believe the average temperature would be one degree lower.' Last month, Emhoff also shared a video of her farmers market haul - one that didn't exactly shy away from plastic use. She showcased two plastic bottles of tomato juice, tomatoes nestled in a small blue plastic container, fruit being taken out of plastic bags, and tofu wrapped in a sealed plastic package. Last year, she shared an organization video on Instagram, showing large plastic bags filled with dozens of skeins of yarn, which she unpacked and neatly arranged on her wall.

Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Kamala Harris' stepdaughter says she has 'climate anxiety'... but fans spot detail that lays bare her hypocrisy
Former Vice President Kamala Harris ' stepdaughter has been blasted online for complaining about her 'climate anxiety' while also still using plastic bags. Ella Emhoff, a 26-year-old model and designer, shared a 'little check-in' with her TikTok followers this week, reflecting on how the past four years - and her stepmother's election loss - have sharpened her focus on the world around her. Environmental change, she noted, stood out as a major driver of the grief and overwhelm she's been experiencing. 'I think everything with the environment is really... f***ing getting to me,' Emhoff said in her video. 'I experience a lot of climate anxiety,' she added with an uneasy laugh. 'Like I think a lot of us do.' But her comments sparked a wave of backlash and accusations of hypocrisy, as she had been seen happily holding a plastic bag just the day before - a detail made all the more striking given her stepmother's previous push to ban single-use plastics. Kamala Harris first endorsed banning plastic straws during her failed presidential campaign during a climate change town hall meeting with CNN in September 2019. 'I think we should, yes,' Harris said when asked if she supported the idea. Just hours before her serious sit-down update, Emhoff posted a TikTok visiting a California-based thrift store, waving a plastic bag in the air while posing in front of the store's sign (pictured) However, when she launched her own campaign in 2024, she reversed her position and quietly dropped the proposed ban. Then, in January, fans expressed outrage after spotting Harris and her husband carrying plastic bags during a grocery store trip - similarly, branding the pair as hypocrites. The plastic bag stood in contrast to what the American would have perceived her to be: an environmentalist, given California's 10-cent fine on single-use bags and the long-term impact on the environment that plastics may pose. Harris' shock decision to walk back her controversial position proved to be an attempt by her failed campaign to make the Dem candidate seem 'more practical' on a host of issues. On Friday, Emhoff's nearly seven-minute video updated her 53,000 TikTok followers on her life since Donald Trump's landslide victory over her stepmom. She voiced her 'disgust' over the current state of global affairs, specifically citing genocide, the erosion of rights, loss of healthcare, and a pervasive sense of fear surrounding affordability and the livelihoods of everyday Americans. Emhoff then shifted her focus to her profound anxiety about the changing climate, admitting that although it's no laughing matter, the gravity of it often leaves her with nothing but a nervous laugh. 'It's scary, it is,' she said directly to the camera lens. 'All of these things are happening - and besides the small things we can do, and pushing for change and fighting and protesting - it's really hard not to sit in those moments where it feels so heavy,' she added. However, just hours before her serious sit-down update, Emhoff posted a TikTok visiting Remainders, a California-based arts and crafts thrift store. In the opening seconds of the clip, the 26-year-old model was seen outside the Pasadena store, waving a plastic bag in the air while posing in front of the store's sign. The video then cut to the store's interior, revealing rows of boxes filled with vintage and heirloom trinkets, before transitioning to Emhoff back at home, ready to share her finds with her followers. Sitting on her bed with her small dog resting behind her, she proudly displayed two bags full of treasures - one stuffed inside a plastic 'Have A Nice Day' bag. Meanwhile, her dog sported a leash fitted with - of all things - a green plastic poop bag. While some praised her for thrifting her supplies instead of supporting big businesses, many online quickly called out what they saw as blatant hypocrisy given her professed climate anxiety. 'Look at allllll the plastic bags,' one comment read. 'In fact, didn't you call for banning single use plastic bags, or was that just for everyone else but you?' Another comment said: 'You should probably not support a store filled with excessive plastic bins as shelves. It might worsen your climate anxiety. Not surprised one bit by the hypocrisy. People like you are truly doing a great amount of damage to our country. It's dangerous.' 'PRAYING FOR YOU THAT THE FALSE CLIMATE NARRATIVE ISN'T OVERWHELMING YOU,' wrote a third. But this isn't the first time Emhoff has been seen using plastic bags so casually. Many viewers were quick to call out Harris's flip-flopping on plastic use - all while criticizing Emhoff over the frequent flights taken by her stepmother and father. 'Please stop having your father and step mom fly private everywhere,' one angered user wrote under the model's video. 'It's giving me terrible climate anxiety,' they added, using Emhoff's own words against her. 'If not for them flying as much as they do privately, I believe the average temperature would be one degree lower.' Last month, Emhoff also shared a video of her farmers market haul - one that didn't exactly shy away from plastic use. She showcased two plastic bottles of tomato juice, tomatoes nestled in a small blue plastic container, fruit being taken out of plastic bags, and tofu wrapped in a sealed plastic package. Last year, she shared an organization video on Instagram, showing large plastic bags filled with dozens of skeins of yarn, which she unpacked and neatly arranged on her wall.

BBC News
22 minutes ago
- BBC News
US in talks over 10% Intel stake, White House confirms
The White House confirmed on Tuesday that the Trump administration is working on a deal that could see the US government taking a 10% stake in chip giant Intel."The president wants to put America's needs first, both from a national security and economic perspective," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told potential deal could involve swapping government grants for Intel shares, according to US Commerce Secretary Howard move could help Intel as it struggles to compete with rivals like Nvidia, Samsung and TSMC, particularly in the booming artificial intelligence (AI) chip market. Intel has been contacted by the BBC for comment. The US wants a stake Intel in exchange for grants approved during the Biden administration, Lutnick said on CNBC on Tuesday."We should get an equity stake for our money," he added. "We'll get equity in return for that... instead of just giving grants away."The potential deal, which was first reported last week, aims to help Intel build a flagship manufacturing hub in the US state of Ohio. At the time, a White House spokesman told the BBC that the reports "should be regarded as speculation" unless officially week, Intel did not comment directly about reports but said it was "deeply committed to supporting President Trump's efforts" to strengthen manufacturing and technology in the Monday, Japanese investment giant Softbank said it would buy a $2bn (£1.5bn) stake in the announcement, Intel's shares rose by almost 7% in New York on Tuesday.



