Sentinel & Enterprise

Mardi Gras brings joy - but also worry over crime

- By Kevin Mcgill The Associated Press

New Orleans’ annual Carnival season entered its ebullient crescendo Tuesday with thousands of revelers gathering in the French Quarter and lining miles of parade routes in a citywide Mardi Gras celebratio­n underpinne­d this year by violent crime concerns and political turmoil.

Celebratio­ns began before dawn in some parts of the city. TV crews captured images of The North Side Skull and Bones gang — skeleton- costumed revelers — spreading out through the Treme area to awaken people for Mardi Gras. As the sun rose, peaking through breaks in the cloudy sky, parade watchers were already claiming spots along the St. Charles Avenue parade route. Barbecue smells wafted through the Central Business District.

Revelers were undeterred by violence that marred a glitzy weekend parade. Gunfire that broke out during a parade Sunday night left a teenager dead and four others injured, including a 4-yearold girl. Police quickly arrested Mansour Mbodj, 21, for illegally carrying a weapon, then upgraded the charge to second- degree murder.

Officials stressed Monday that the shooting was an isolated event.

“It’s discouragi­ng, but it’s not going to stop me from coming,” said Roz Walker, 55. She and her friend Tracy Dunbar are Baton Rouge residents who were among the crowd awaiting the parades of the Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club and the Rex Organizati­on. They have been visiting New Orleans on Mardi Gras for decades.

“In our 40-plus years of coming to Mardi Gras we’ve never been involved in a situation at all,” she said.

First- time Mardi Gras participan­t Ken Traylor of Houston had heard about the shooting, but shrugged it off. “I just think you have to be careful with your surroundin­gs,” he said. “Things happen nowadays everywhere.”

Crime has contribute­d to dissatisfa­ction with New Orleans Mayor Latoya Cantrell. She won reelection easily in 2021, but has suffered a myriad of political problems since, including criticism about crime, the slow pace of major street repairs and questions over her personal use of a city- owned French Quarter apartment.

A recal l pet it ion launched last year is nearing a Wednesday deadline. One of the organizers, Eileen Carter, said she believes the movement has enough signatures, but will make a last- minute push.

“We’re going to have people canvassing the parade routes,” Carter said. “That’s been really helpful to us.”

There was no sign of political rancor as Cantrell watched St. Charles Avenue parades from a restricted access reviewing stand with city council members in front of Gallier Hall, the 19th century Greek Revival style building that once served as City Hall. She greeted Zulu’s parade leaders with hearty shouts of “Hail Zulu!” in a traditiona­l mayoral tribute.

It was in stark contrast to a scene from the weekend when Cantrell was captured in a social media video gesturing with her middle-finger as a parade passed a city reviewing stand. What sparked the gesture was unclear. The mayor’s press office did not respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press. A statement given to The TimesPicay­une/the New Orleans Advocate shed little light.

“Mardi Gras is a time where satire and jest are on full display,” spokespers­on Gregory Joseph said in a prepared statement. “The city has been enjoying a safe and healthy Carnival,” the statement said, adding that the mayor was looking forward to continuing the celebratio­n.

Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, is the culminatio­n of Carnival season, which officially begins each year on Jan. 6, the 12th day after Christmas, and closes with the beginning of Lent on Ash Wednesday.

New Orleans’ raucous celebratio­n is the nation’s most well-known, but the holiday is also celebrated throughout much of Louisiana and the Gulf Coast. Mobile, Alabama, lays claim to the oldest Mardi Gras celebratio­n in the country.

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