2020 Election: The State of The Union and The State of Louisiana

All over the nation, civil unrest rings out. On May 31, 2020, the city of Lake Charles, Louisiana, took to the streets to protest the killing of George Floyd at the hand of law enforcement. On October 3, 2020, the NFAC, Not F***** Around Coalition, an all-black armed militia, stood in solidarity with the citizen of Lafayette, Louisiana, in protest of the shooting death of Trayford Pellerin on August 22, 2020, by the Lafayette police department. Lake Charles activist and former Congressional candidate Verone Thomas stood with NFAC, Grandmaster Jay, and other activists and community leaders to address the protestors, media, and spectators. Thomas stressed the importance of blacks, not only registering but getting out to vote. He also emphasized supporting black candidates and those who can better represent the black community. 

In 2018, Verone Thomas ran as a Democrat for the U.S. House in Louisiana’s 3rd Congressional District election. Thomas lost to the incumbent, Clay Higgins (R). Thomas later changed his original agenda and began focusing on criminal justice reform and its effects on the black community. Namely, non- unanimous jury convictions. He successfully helped to get this issue on the 2018 ballot. Under the changed statute, a jury verdict of 10-2 or 11-1 would no longer suffice to convict a defendant. On April 20, 2020, the Supreme Court ruled to banned non-unanimous jury verdicts in cases involving serious crimes. Along with The Promise of Justice Initiative, Thomas began to focus on getting the criminal law retroactive and releasing people who fell under this type of sentencing released.

Thomas is working to bring reform to a system that still operates under Jim Crow laws. Of these Jim Crow laws, the first sentence of the Thirteenth Amendment of the United Constitution gives the United States the right to justify slavery. There are over 63,000 people incarcerated in Louisiana. In 2014 a report showed the Black: White ratio as 4.0, with an alarming increase in the years since. 

The infamous Angola State Penitentiary, population of approxiametley of 6300, was once a slave plantation. The large fields are worked by many of the inmates, comprised of mostly black males. Men forced to work on a former plantation field is just one of Thomas’s issues in his quest for criminal justice reform.  

The Promise of Justice Initiative and the Equal Justice Initiative is dedicated to criminal justice reform, which includes the habitual offender law.

On November 7, 2020, the Associated Press confirmed the election results. The 46th President of the United States is Joe Biden, who has the first black female, Kamala Harris, as the Vice President. What will this new chapter in American history mean for the nation, and what will it mean for Louisiana and the fight for criminal justice reform?

LOUISIANA, JIM CROW, AND NFAC

2020 has definitely seen its share of major issues. From a global pandemic, hightened racial tensions, more killings of blacks at the hands of police, the 2020 presidential election, and for Louisiana an unprecedented rash of hurricanes and tropical storms.

On October 3, 2020, five weeks after the senseless killing of 31-year old, Trayford Pellerin.  the “black militia” NFAC (Not F****** Around Coalition) made a special visit to Lafayette, Louisiana after negative and threatening comments were made by Congressman Clay Higgins.

NFAC’s founder and leader, Grandmaster Jay, said he then made a decision to visit Lafayette because “we have a problem.”

Photo Credits: Tracy E. Antoine
Father of slain Victor White holds his son’s picture.

Not only did Grandmaster Jay address Congressman Higgins, outrageous remarks but he was accompanied by hundreds of members of the NFAC to “stand in solidarity with the sisters and brothers of Lafayette.”

Verone Thomas, a Louisiana activist also attended the march and spoke to the crowd about exercising their right to vote as well as educating themselves, so that they can work to get more African Americans on the ballot. I caught up with Mr. Thomas via phone and he had this to say,

Photo Credit: Tracy E. Antoine
Crowd at march holding signs.

A life long resident of the area, Cassandra Demouchet, along with her fiancé and their ten kids, ranging from age 15 years old to their one-year-old, said, “I am mesmerized by the amount of structure, discipline, and restraint the NFAC display. Im excited that my kids could see something like this, besides just in the movies.”

Horace Cheffin, who also attended the march said, “I have never been to a protest, so my friend asked me if I wanted to go, and we took that 3 hour drive. I wanted to see first hand how things really go down and how the media tries to make it into something else.” Cheffin goes on to say, “The overall protest was needed because it’s time to take a stand against injustice.”

Photo Credits: Tracy E. Antoine
Crowd of peaceful protesters.

Although, some white citizens also felt the need to attend the march, armed, the protest remained peaceful.

Photo Credits: Tracy E. Antoine
Crowd at Parc Sans Souci in Lafayette, LA

Verone Thomas and Grandmaster Jay (John Jay Fitzgerald Johnson) ran together on the presidential ballot in 2016 and have begun preparations to run again during the 2024 presidential election.

Photo Credits: Tracy E. Antoine
Grandmaster Jay – NFAC

Photo Credits: Tracy E. Antoine and Pixabay.com

For more information visit Black NFAC.

Photo Credits: Tracy E. Antoine
GrandMaster Jay NFAC Founder