The Commercial Appeal

Probe launched into deadly La. arrest

- Jim Mustian

Declaring “no cover-up will be tolerated,” Louisiana’s House speaker announced a bipartisan legislativ­e investigat­ion Thursday into the deadly 2019 arrest of Black motorist Ronald Greene, an inquiry that will examine the state’s response at “all levels,” from troopers to the governor.

Republican Rep. Clay Schexnayde­r said he launched the probe in response to an Associated Press report last month that showed Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards was informed within hours that troopers arresting Greene engaged in a “violent, lengthy struggle,” yet he kept quiet for two years as state police told a much different story to the victim’s family and in official reports: that Greene died from a crash after a highspeed chase.

Edwards, who was in the midst of a tight reelection campaign at the time of Greene’s May 2019 death near Monroe, did not speak out in detail about the case until last May, after the AP obtained and published long-withheld body-camera video showing white troopers jolting Greene with stun guns, punching him in the face and dragging him by his ankle shackles as he wailed, “I’m your brother! I’m scared! I’m scared!”

After decrying the prospect of a legislativ­e probe during a news conference last week as “an absolute witch hunt,” Edwards said in a statement Thursday that he now welcomes “any and all legislativ­e oversight.”

“I am certain that any fair and impartial investigat­ion will conclude that I made no attempt to impede or interfere with any investigat­ion into Mr. Greene’s death,” the governor said. “Any allegation to the contrary is simply not true.”

Edwards’ news conference last week marked the first time he characteri­zed the actions of the troopers involved in Greene’s arrest as “racist.” He said he was unaware Greene had been mistreated until September 2020.

Edwards has denied Schexnayde­r’s contention in the recent AP report that the governor met with him last June and sought to discourage a legislativ­e inquiry into the case by blaming Greene’s death on a car wreck.

Page Cortez, the Republican Senate president, said he was also at the meeting and recalled the governor making the argument that “nothing nefarious” happened in Greene’s arrest.

An AP investigat­ion found Greene’s death was part of a pattern of state police violence shrouded in secrecy, and among at least a dozen cases over the past decade in which troopers or their bosses ignored or concealed evidence of beatings, deflected blame and impeded efforts to root out misconduct.

In a virtual news conference Thursday, the National Bar Associatio­n, which represents more than 66,000 mostly African American lawyers, joined Greene’s mother and sister in calling on Edwards to step down over the Greene case.

“My family will never rest because my son was murdered by the Louisiana state troopers and it was condoned,” said Greene’s mother, Mona Hardin, adding later, “I’m disgusted that you are allowed to hold the office of governor.”

 ?? MATTHEW HINTON/AP FILE ?? Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said he was unaware of the true nature of the events surroundin­g the death of Black motorist Ronald Greene until more than a year after the incident.
MATTHEW HINTON/AP FILE Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said he was unaware of the true nature of the events surroundin­g the death of Black motorist Ronald Greene until more than a year after the incident.

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