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Zachary pastor reflects on Louisiana history following Nottoway Plantation fire

Zachary pastor reflects on Louisiana history following Nottoway Plantation fire

Yahoo5 days ago

ZACHARY, La. (Louisiana First) — The Redwood Baptist Church was first organized in 1857 by slaves, according to the church's pastor. Following the Nottoway fire this month, he reflected on the way slaves are contextualized in Louisiana's history.
Pastor Dale Flowers said he never visited Nottoway, which was finished in 1859 in White Castle. He said following the May 15 fire, he noticed online debates on social media about the plantation's legacy.
'Some people were like, 'Hey, pass the marshmallows,'' Flowers said. 'Others were extremely upset.'
Support for the plantation began before the embers completely cooled. Iberville Parish President Chris Daigle called the fire a tragedy considering its history in the area.
'The preservation of history is so important,' Daigle said in the fire's aftermath.
Nottoway constituted the South's largest existing antebellum mansion, according to its website. The location has been popular for portraits, weddings, fine dining, and tours.
'The event is going to take a toll on Louisiana tourism,' Daigle said.
Daigle said at the time recent renovations did not include installing a sprinkler system.
'It's a day we were always afraid of,' Daigle said.
The state fire marshal ended its investigation into the fire Tuesday without any conclusions on what caused it. Evidence was sent to the Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) Crime Lab in Georgia to be analyzed.
Daigle discussed the controversy already beginning to take shape online, which included whether the fire burning down the structure was a blessing or a curse.
'There's so much controversy with the past,' Daigle said. 'We didn't live in that generation, but the preservation of history, even the uncomfortable parts, is important.'
The plantation's owner shared that sentiment in a statement published soon after the fire. William Daniel Dyess, an attorney and preservationist from Natchitoches, did not respond to a Louisiana First News request placed through his law office by publication. In a statement to the New York Post, he dismissed much of the criticism while calling for people to 'move forward.'
'I take this position — we are non-racist people,' Dyess said in the article. 'I am a lawyer and my wife is a judge. We believe in equal opportunity rights for everyone, total equality and fairness. My wife and I had nothing to do with slavery, but we recognize the wrongness of it. We are trying to make this a better place. We don't have any interest in left wing radical stuff. We need to move forward on a positive note here and we are not going to dwell on past racial injustice.'
Dyess said he plans to rebuild the mansion. A couple of signs are posted outside the property, including one that suggests construction is already happening.
'Rebuild it,' Flowers said. 'Slaves built that building. Slaves aren't going to build this one.'
Flowers said there is a sentiment from many in America to romanticize the Antebellum period.
'Some people are nostalgic about that time,' Flowers said.
Flowers said the prioritization of weddings and the positive elements of history are part of the reason so many people have the opposite opinion: that Nottoway displayed a largely incorrect version of its history. People who view the website and click the 'History' tab will be met with a list of named trees on the property.
'I honestly thought, 'I wonder how many people hung from those trees,'' Flowers said.
Flowers said a better representation of history can be found at Whitney Plantation. Located in Edgard, Whitney operated from 1752 to 1975, according to its website. Whitney has been open about its purpose, posting in 2020 that it would not hold weddings because of slavery's impact on the property.
'Plantations are sites of immense cruelty and violence,' the Instagram post read. 'We do not allow any event that would overshadow this reality and disrespect the memory of all those who suffered, labored and died here.'
A recent trip to Whitney was emotional, Flowers said, but he said his children began to learn about the reality their ancestors experienced.
'It's honestly a hard place to visit,' Flowers said. 'They present it as it is.'
Flowers said those slaves who directly ramped up Louisiana's economy in the late 1800s also founded the church he now serves. He said the record is unclear on whether they got permission from their master to organize or secretly did so in a wooded area.
'It was actually organized by slaves,' Flowers said.
Flowers said he thinks the original congregation would be proud that the church carries on their legacy.
'The work they started in 1857 is still going on today,' Flowers said.
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Sheriff: Nearly a dozen gang members tied to multiple shootings arrested in Baton Rouge drug bust, 1 at-large
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Sheriff: Nearly a dozen gang members tied to multiple shootings arrested in Baton Rouge drug bust, 1 at-large

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Kelly Dever denies seeing key figures near Karen Read's vehicle in 'disaster' testimony: expert
Kelly Dever denies seeing key figures near Karen Read's vehicle in 'disaster' testimony: expert

Yahoo

time11 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kelly Dever denies seeing key figures near Karen Read's vehicle in 'disaster' testimony: expert

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Kelly Dever denies seeing key figures near Karen Read's vehicle in 'disaster' testimony: expert
Kelly Dever denies seeing key figures near Karen Read's vehicle in 'disaster' testimony: expert

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  • Fox News

Kelly Dever denies seeing key figures near Karen Read's vehicle in 'disaster' testimony: expert

Karen Read's defense team put a hostile witness on the stand Monday in the form of a Boston police officer who was working for the Canton Police Department the morning Karen Read and two friends discovered John O'Keefe dead under a pile of snow. Kelly Dever, who was on duty that morning but did not play any role in the investigation, previously told the FBI that she saw two key figures in the case standing near Read's SUV in the sallyport at Canton's police headquarters for "a wildly long time." They were ATF Agent Brian Higgins — who was carrying on a flirtatious relationship with Read behind O'Keefe's back — and then-Canton Police Chief Kenneth Berkowitz. They would have been placed next to the vehicle before other investigators found fragments that matched Read's taillight at the crime scene. Dever testified that she retracted that statement immediately because the FBI agents showed her a timeline that indicated she left work well before Read's Lexus arrived. Then she accused Read's defense team of trying to coerce her into lying about it on the stand. "You threatened to charge me with perjury during our phone call prior to the first trial if I didn't lie on the stand right now," she told defense attorney Alan Jackson, from the witness stand. "I'm telling you, I did not see anything. Factually, I've been provided evidence by a timeline that it is not correct." WATCH: Karen Read challenges officer's testimony in tense murder trial Read denied that her team pressured Dever in remarks to reporters outside the courthouse Monday afternoon. "We subpoenaed her to testify to what she told other authorities and just wanted her to be as honest with us as she was with them," she said. "And today she's now telling us that was a lie." She later claimed that Dever seems like "a compromised person." Dever was visibly frustrated at times, huffing on the stand and at one point snapping at Jackson for mispronouncing her name. "Like you can't remember my name, I don't remember," she said. The defense is trying to show jurors that there is reasonable doubt in the investigation's findings — noting that the lead detective was fired for sending inappropriate texts and that Canton police made a series of sloppy missteps early in the investigation, before state police arrived. Their position is that her SUV never struck O'Keefe, and something or someone else caused his fatal injuries. In her first trial, they also alleged that police framed Read. GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB "[Dever] illustrated perfectly the defense theory — that sketchy cops are lying to help the prosecution," said Mark Bederow, a New York City-based criminal defense lawyer who is following the case. He called her testimony "a disaster" and questioned whether she had been pressured by colleagues in law enforcement into recanting her story, rather than the defense. "It was a risky move to call her, but her demeanor was so awful that combined with what she admitted telling the feds, it likely helped the defense," Bederow told Fox News Digital. Retired Massachusetts Superior Court Judge and Boston College professor Jack Lu called Dever "a profile in courage" and that putting her on the stand suggests desperation from the defense. "She's out of central casting, says that she has confirmed her prior memory is factually, irrefutably wrong," he told Fox News Digital. "If they say she has damaged her future ability to testify that is laughable." She's also facing blowback. Lu pointed to a Facebook group called Free Karen Read with more than 40,000 members, where a user urged others to call the police commissioner's office if they "believe Kelly Dever should be given the axe." Dever could not immediately be reached for comment. It's up to the jurors to decide whether she was truthful on the stand or when she first made her statements to the FBI.

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