The Day

Louisiana city refuses to take storm evacuees as officials blame protesters

- By TEO ARMUS

As Hurricane Laura hurtled into the Gulf Coast last week with alarming speed, powerful winds and historic flooding, Lafayette, La., missed the worst of the devastatio­n.

But as protests against the local police shooting of a Black man have resumed this week, officials say there’s another danger that could be headed their way: outside agitators, ready to wreak havoc at demonstrat­ions.

Now, citing this “serious, local security threat,” Lafayette — a combined city and parish of 244,000, and one of the largest municipali­ties near Laura’s path — has barred charity groups from sheltering hurricane evacuees fleeing Louisiana’s battered coast.

“We are not in a position to safeguard people displaced by Laura,” Cydra Wingerter, Lafayette’s chief administra­tive officer, wrote in an email to area humanitari­an groups Saturday, according to the Acadiana Advocate. “We know that bad actors will take our hospitalit­y and use it against us.”

Claims from local officials about these mysterious outsiders, swooping in from out of town to stir up trouble, go back decades and have been criticized elsewhere this year as a ploy to dismiss racial justice campaigns. But as The Washington Post’s Isaac Stanley-Becker has reported, individual­s from both the far right and far left have indeed ramped up the violence this summer as crowds rally against the all-too-familiar occurrence of the police shooting a Black person.

Since May, there has been no shortage of gruesome incidents of police violence to protest, many of them captured on camera: in Minneapoli­s and Louisville, then Atlanta, and more recently in Kenosha, Wis.

Earlier this month, another incident unfolded in Lafayette, in the heart of Louisiana’s Cajun country.

On the night of Aug. 21, six police officers arrived at a Circle K gas station in response to “a disturbanc­e involving a person armed with a knife,” the Lafayette Daily Advertiser reported.

In the parking lot, they found Trayford Pellerin, a 31-year-old Black man, and tried to apprehend him. But Pellerin kept walking away with a knife, a bystander told the newspaper. Officers trailed him for about half a mile before they tased and then shot him 11 times.

Pellerin died in the hospital, and all six officers were placed on leave amid an investigat­ion by state authoritie­s. And it was not long before a viral video of the scene — condemned by the Louisiana ACLU as a “horrific and deadly incident of police violence against a Black person” — unleashed massive unrest.

People descended to a Confederat­e monument downtown to carry signs and block traffic. At another demonstrat­ion, some people lit a highway median on fire and police set off smoke canisters, the Associated Press reported. There was a silent sit-in outside city hall, and a cookout on Mayor-President Josh Guillory’s front steps.

Over the course of about a week of demonstrat­ions, police arrested dozens of people, most of them from Lafayette or nearby cities, the Advocate reported. But elected officials repeatedly insisted that outside figures were influencin­g protests.

“They’re not our community. They’re not our people,” Scott Morgan, the interim police chief, said at a news conference Saturday. “They’re coming over here for trouble. Don’t support ‘em, don’t get involved with ‘em. Stay out of it.”

In the midst of all the controvers­y was a rapidly intensifyi­ng hurricane that became the strongest storm to hit the Gulf Coast in decades and prompted evacuation orders for over half a million people. When Laura made landfall early Thursday, Lafayette was largely spared from the damage. But further south and to the west, the Category 4 storm killed at least 16 people, overturned trailers and flattened entire towns.

More than 80 water systems in Louisiana failed in the wake of the devastatio­n, forcing nursing homes and hospitals that can typically rely on generators to evacuate their residents and patients. As of Saturday morning, more than 400,000 did not have power and about 200,000 lacked water, officials said.

Normally, those residents could travel to Lafayette to rely on government officials, churches, and other local humanitari­an groups. But not this time, said Wingerter, the Lafayette government official.

Writing to the heads of a group that coordinate­s relief efforts, she wrote in a Saturday email: “This is a serious threat and we must handle this issue before we can care for our neighbors,” according to the Advocate.

“It goes against what we believe and how we usually respond after a disaster,” Wingerter added, “but it would be irresponsi­ble to potentiall­y put others in harm’s way.”

Jamie Angelle, a spokespers­on for the city-parish government, told reporters on Sunday that local pastors who oversee shelters at their churches had shared worries about “the threat of outside entities.”

While protests this past weekend were “lawful and peaceful,” he added, the possibilit­y of violence — like a shooting that injured two people at one early demonstrat­ion — was enough to justify their decision.

“Just given everything that’s circulatin­g ... our fear is that something will happen,” he said.

As for the thousands of residents from Lake Charles or smaller, wrecked coastal towns who are dealing with destroyed homes or sustained power outages? Angelle insisted they will still be able to find shelter — just not in Lafayette.

While hotels in the parish were fully booked, he told the Advocate, efforts spearheade­d by Louisiana state officials would ensure they will be taken care of.

“Will they have to maybe go a little farther?” he said. “Unfortunat­ely, that’s probably the case.”

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