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Louisiana

Aug 2006

Number of single-family homes sold in the New Orleans area during the first quarter of 2006: 3,659

Percentage by which this exceeds the number sold during the first quarter of 2005: 28

Average percentage by which the price of these homes has increased: 20

Source:

New Orleans Metropolitan Association of Realtors (Metairie, La.)

Mar 2006Minimum number of registered sex offenders who evacuated during Hurricane Katrina and cannot be accounted for: 2,000
Source:

U.S. Administration for Children and Families

Dec 2005Average number of New Orleanians killed by gunfire each month since 2000: 16
Source:

U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics

Dec 2005Number of the 1,035 confirmed Hurricane Katrina‒related deaths that were caused by gunfire: 8
Source:

New Orleans Coroner’s Office (New Orleans)

Dec 2005Days after Katrina hit that the first strip club was reopened in New Orleans: 20
Source:

Déjà Vu (New Orleans)

Dec 2005Portion of British food aid for Katrina evacuees that still sits unused in an Arkansas warehouse: 7/10
Source:

British Embassy (Washington)/USAID (Washington)

Nov 2005Days after Hurricane Katrina that the White House authorized sending federal troops to New Orleans: 4
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense, Northern Command (Peterson, Colo.)

Nov 2005Number of out-of-town men who posted to New Orleans’s Craigslist site seeking refugee women: 49
Source:

Harper’s research

Nov 2005Percentage of homes in Orleans Parish that lacked flood insurance: 54
Source:

FEMA (Washington)/U.S. Census Bureau (Suitland, Md.)

Aug 2005Number of New Orleans bars visited this spring by an undercover team investigating racial discrimination : 40
Source:

Greater New Orleans Fair Housing Action Center (New Orleans)

Nov 2003Amount that a Louisiana preacher paid white people to integrate his Sunday services last August, per person: $5
Source:

Greenwood Acres Full Gospel Baptist Church (Shreveport, La.)

Jan 2003Number of Louisiana's last three elected insurance commissioners convicted of corruption: 3
Source:

Louisiana Department of Insurance (Baton Rouge)

Aug 2000Number of months last spring that a Louisiana town's sewage lines were connected to its fresh water supply: 3
Source:

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Jun 1999Number of men ticketed for indecent exposure in Opelousas, Louisiana, last year for wearing low-riding pants: 14
Source:

Opelousas Police Department (Opelousas, La.)

January 17, 2009A homeless Louisiana man, who robbed a bank of $100 and then voluntarily turned himself in the next day and apologized, was sentenced to fifteen years in prison.
Source:

Digital Journal

August 31, 2008One million people fled New Orleans to avoid Hurricane Gustav, which landed in Louisiana as a weakened category-2 hurricane and caused relatively little damage. Mississippi officials ordered people still living in the FEMA trailers erected after Hurricane Katrina to evacuate, and John McCain canceled opening-day ceremonies for the Republican National Convention at the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, Minnesota. “This is a time when we have to do away with our party politics and we have to act as Americans,” said McCain. “Not as Republicans.”
Source 1:

Guardian

Source 2:

IOL.co.za

Source 3:

New York Times

Source 4:

USA Today

Source 5:

Yahoo!

August 24, 2008The National Guard was still patrolling New Orleans.
Source:

The New York Times

April 25, 2008A Mexican diplomat was fired after a video-surveillance tape showed him stealing BlackBerrys belonging to White House officials at a meeting in New Orleans.
Source:

Fox News

March 26, 2008A stray bullet bounced off chef Paul Prudhomme as he set up a cooking tent in New Orleans,.
Source:

NO Times-Picayune

January 8, 2008A victim of Hurricane Katrina was suing the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for $3,000,000,000,000,000 after the Corps admitted that it had done a poor job designing the broken New Orleans levees.
Source:

Click2Houston.com

November 11, 2007Half of New Orleans streetcars were still broken.
Source:

CNN.com

September 1, 2007 Republican presidential candidate Tom Tancredo marked the second anniversary of the Hurricane Katrina disaster by suggesting that the “gravy train” of “so-called 'recovery'” should leave “the New Orleans station.”
Source:

The Hill via Drudgereport.com

August 20, 2007 Scientists in Louisiana determined that some obese people may be infected with a fat virus.
Source:

MSNBC.com

July 12, 2007Tangled clumps of worms fell from the sky in Jennings, Louisiana.
Source:

WAFB

March 30, 2007In Spearsville, Louisiana, two fifth-graders had sex on a classroom floor during an assembly about murder.
Source:

AP

February 21, 2007Residents of New Orleans celebrated Mardi Gras with brass bands, parades of Zulu warriors and Day-Glo feathered Indians, vats of gumbo, and pounds of turkey necks and pigs' feet. “It's back, y'all,” Mayor Ray Nagin exclaimed. “It's back!”
Source:

Washington Post

January 16, 2007In the United States a boy was born from an embryo rescued from a fertility clinic flooded during Hurricane Katrina.
Source:

BBCnews.com

November 16, 2006The city council of Greenleaf, Idaho, passed an ordinance that makes it mandatory for most residents to own a gun so that the town will be able to protect itself from refugees from natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina.
Source:

MSNBC

September 27, 2006The Saints beat the Falcons in the opening night game at the Superdome in New Orleans. The win, said a fan, was “a victory against Hurricane Katrina.”
Source:

Voice of America

August 29, 2006 President Bush, visiting hurricane-damaged New Orleans, spoke optimistically of the rebuilding effort. “There will be a momentum, momentum will be gathered,” said Bush. “Houses will begat jobs, jobs will begat houses.”
Source:

New York Times

August 24, 2006In Coushatta, Louisiana, nine black students were sent to the back of a school bus to make room for white children.
Source:

The Shrevport Times via Drudge Report

August 23, 2006 President Bush cautioned against placing too much importance on the upcoming one-year anniversary of the Hurricane Katrina disaster.
Source:

San Jose Mercury News

August 14, 2006 Houston's rising crime rate was blamed on refugees from New Orleans, which has been gripped by a baby boom.
Source 1:

The New York Times

Source 2:

Breitbart.com

July 18, 2006A doctor and two nurses at the Memorial Medical Center in New Orleans were charged with the murder of four patients during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Source:

BBC

June 26, 2006A gang of marauding transvestite thieves was terrorizing New Orleans businesses.
Source:

New Orleans City Business

June 2, 2006The Army Corps of Engineers admitted that its incompetence was largely to blame for the destruction of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina.
Source:

New York Times

May 31, 2006It was determined that New Orleans was sinking faster than previously thought.
Source:

Breitbart

May 21, 2006Ray Nagin was re-elected mayor of New Orleans.
Source:

The New York Times

May 2, 2006 Qatar announced $60 million in aid for New Orleans.
Source:

The New York Times

April 28, 2006The Louisiana state senate approved a bill that bans abortion except when the procedure can save a woman's life; an amendment to allow exceptions in the cases of women who have been raped or are victims of incest was defeated.
Source:

Ms. Magazine

March 17, 2006A government study found that FEMA had wasted millions of dollars in the Hurricane Katrina recovery effort; among other things the organization was accused of spending $3 million for 4,000 beds that were never used and awarding hundreds of contracts without competitive bidding.
Source:

Democracy Now

March 7, 2006Two more bodies from the Hurricane Katrina disaster were found in New Orleans.
Source:

ABC News Online

March 6, 2006Investigators found that termites had survived the flooding of New Orleans.
Source:

Reuters via Yahoo! News

March 1, 2006A videotape emerged showing President Bush being warned that Hurricane Katrina could flood New Orleans.
Source:

AP via Yahoo! News

February 11, 2006Former FEMA director Michael Brown told a Senate committee that the White House knew about the flooding of New Orleans immediately after the the levees were breached, even though President Bush has said he didn't know about the flooding until the following day.
Source:

ABC AM

January 24, 2006A Senate committee investigating the government response to Hurricane Katrina criticized the Bush Administration for ignoring the findings of a hurricane-preparedness exercise called "Hurricane Pam," which had warned that New Orleans would be flooded. "It is apparent that a more appropriate name for Pam should have been 'Cassandra,'" said Senator Susan Collins (R., Maine).
Source:

USA Today

January 23, 2006Three thousand two hundred people were still missing in New Orleans.
Source:

Democracy Now!

January 18, 2006 New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said that the rebuilt New Orleans "will be chocolate at the end of the day." He clarified: "You take dark chocolate, you mix it with white milk, and it becomes a delicious drink. That is the chocolate I am talking about." One New Orleans resident said that Nagin "used the wrong dairy product."
Source:

CNN.com

January 16, 2006Shots were fired during a New Orleans parade intended to celebrate unity, and four people were hospitalized with gunshot wounds.
Source:

AP

January 5, 2006The New Orleans puppy population was out of control.
Source:

IndyStar.com

November 20, 2005Bodies were still being found in New Orleans.
Source:

Time

November 4, 2005 Louisiana was told that it owes FEMA $3.7 billion for the aid organization's help after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Source:

USA Today

October 23, 2005A Louisiana barber, tired of telling African-American customers that he doesn't know how to cut their hair, put a sign outside of his barbershop that read "whites only."
Source:

KATC3

October 16, 2005Tens of thousands of African Americans rallied in Washington, D.C., to mark the tenth anniversary of the Million Man March. Louis Farrakhan charged America “with criminal neglect” but did not repeat his allegations that the New Orleans levees had been blown up by bombs.
Source:

BBC News

October 11, 2005President George W. Bush visited a home-building project in Louisiana and spent a few minutes pounding nails into a sheet of plywood.
Source:

LA Times

October 10, 2005Two New Orleans policemen were arrested for severely beating a 64-year-old man.
Source:

MSNBC

October 5, 2005It was revealed that during the Hurricane Katrina disaster no one actually shot at a helicopter outside of the Louisiana Superdome, and that reports of homicides and rapes at the Superdome were mostly false. The repetition of rumors by the media, it is believed, slowed the official response to the disaster.
Source:

Washington Post

October 3, 2005The Hurricane Katrina death toll reached 964 in Louisiana, and the search for more bodies was called off.
Source:

Tuscaloosa News

September 24, 2005 Hurricane Rita, the third-most intense hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic basin, struck Florida, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana, killing 36 people and causing flooding, tornadoes, and storm surges, and re-flooding parts of New Orleans. Hurricane evacuations caused miles of traffic jams in Texas, and a bus filled with elderly people exploded when an oxygen tank caught fire, incinerating at least 24 passengers.
Source 1:

Wikipedia

Source 2:

Houston Chronicle

September 23, 2005The National Rifle Association convinced a district court to stop gun confiscations in New Orleans.
Source:

The National Rifle Association

September 19, 2005The confirmed death toll from Hurricane Katrina rose to 883, with 663 of those in Louisiana. About $9.8 billion had been spent so far on the relief effort, and it was estimated that up to $200 billion remained to be spent. President Bush promised to rebuild the communities that had been destroyed by the hurricane. "To the extent that the federal government didn't fully do its job right," he said, "I take responsibility."
Source 1:

Democracy Now!

Source 2:

KPLC

Source 3:

Time

September 16, 2005A 73-year-old New Orleans woman was being held on $50,000 bail for allegedly looting sausages.
Source:

Democracy Now!

September 15, 2005 Karl Rove was named to head the relief effort in New Orleansin the wake of Hurricane Katrina.
Source:

Washington Post

September 15, 2005Many uninsured evacuees from New Orleans were receiving medical care for the first time in years.
Source:

NOLA.com

September 11, 2005Doctors in New Orleans admitted that they had euthanized critically ill patients rather than leaving them to sufferin the wake of Hurricane Katrina. "Those who had no chance of making it," said an emergency official, "were given a lot of morphine and lain down in a dark place to die."
Source:

Daily Mail

September 8, 2005Emergency officials in Louisiana requested 25,000 body bags for victims of Hurricane Katrina, and a total evacuation of New Orleans was ordered. Much of the city was still underwater, though several people who lived on high ground objected to the evacuation. "I haven't even run out of weed yet," said one woman.
Source 1:

The Guardian

Source 2:

The New York Times

September 8, 2005Wealthy residents of New Orleans were devising ways to rebuild the city with a minimum of poor people.
Source:

Raw Story/WSJ

September 7, 2005Representative Richard Baker gave Hurricane Katrina credit for finally cleaning up public housing in New Orleans.
Source:

[Link]

September 5, 2005In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina the United States declared disasters in Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Taken together, the 90,000-square-mile disaster area would be the twelfth largest state. Emergencies were declared in Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Utah, and West Virginia.
Source:

U.S. Department of Defense

September 5, 2005 The Superdome and Convention Center were finally evacuated, but evacuees were not allowed to take their pets with them. “Snowball!” cried a little boy after police took away his dog. “Snowball!”
Source 1:

MSNBC

Source 2:

The Charlotte Observer

September 4, 2005“There is way too many fricking . . . cooks in the kitchen,” said New Orleans Mayor C. Ray Nagin.
Source:

CNN.com

September 4, 2005It was announced that it could take up to six months for New Orleans to be pumped out, and another three months for it to dry. Officials estimated that 10,000 people had been killed in the flood; about the same number of people remained in the city.
Source 1:

The Independent

Source 2:

Times Online

September 3, 2005The situation in New Orleans quickly worsened, but little help appeared. Shelters set up at the Superdome and at the New Orleans Convention Center became squalid, hot, and dangerous.
Source:

LA Times

September 2, 2005About 57,000 troops, many assigned to combat operations, entered the New Orleans area. “This place is going to look like Little Somalia,” said a brigadier general.
Source:

Army Times

September 2, 2005“New Orleans now is free of Southern Decadence,” said the pastor of the New Covenant Fellowship of New Orleans, “and the sodomites, the witchcraft workers, false religion—it's free of all of those things now.”
Source:

Agape Press

September 1, 2005The Louisiana National Guard patrolled the Superdome with machine guns as flood victims, locked behind metal barricades, shouted “we need more water.” Cigarettes in the Superdome sold for $10 a pack, and a brisk market in anti-diuretics, which allowed people to avoid the overflowing bathrooms, developed. “We are like animals,” said a woman.
Source:

The Los Angeles Times

September 1, 2005Shootings, carjackings, and looting were reported across New Orleans. Thousands of people, most of them poor, were stranded for several days; many died waiting for rescue.
Source:

BBC News

August 31, 2005President Bush decided to end his month-long vacation two days early and return to Washington, D.C. During his trip, Air Force One flew low over New Orleans. “This was a natural disaster,” said Bush.
Source 1:

The Washington Post

Source 2:

The Village Voice

August 30, 2005Eighty percent of New Orleans was flooded after levees were breached by rising water.
Source:

LA Times

August 26, 2005 Hurricane Katrina killed 11 people in Florida, and more than a million homes and businesses lost power. Katrina then crossed over the Gulf of Mexico and went ashore east of New Orleans, becoming a Category 5 storm along the way. "PERSONS . . . PETS . . . AND LIVESTOCK EXPOSED TO THE WINDS," said the National Weather Service, "WILL FACE CERTAIN DEATH IF STRUCK . . . WATER SHORTAGES WILL MAKE HUMAN SUFFERING INCREDIBLE BY MODERN STANDARDS." The hurricane eventually weakened to a tropical storm; winds tore off parts of the roof of the Superdome, where thousands of poor people sought shelter, and at least 55 people were killed in Mississippi.
Source 1:

AP

Source 2:

The Roanoke Times

June 16, 2005A man in Shreveport, Louisiana, attempted to rob a beauty school at gunpoint only to be severely beaten by nearly thirty women with sticks, table legs, and curling irons. “They kept pulling him back in and beating him,“ said a policewoman. “I wore him out with that stick,” one woman said.
Source:

TodaysTHV.com

October 3, 2004 Squirrel season opened in Louisiana.
Source:

New York Times

September 1, 2004A man was arrested in West Monroe, Louisiana, for committing a crime against nature with his sister's 125-pound Vietnamese potbelly pig.
Source:

The News Star

July 10, 2004In Shreveport, Louisiana, police arrested a man in a wheelchair for shooting a man on crutches who apparently hit the accused over the head with a crutch.
Source:

Shreveport Times

March 26, 2004Police no longer need search warrants in Louisiana, an appeals court said, though the judgment was supposedly limited to "brief searches"; two dissenting judges denounced the ruling as the "road to Hell."
Source:

New Orleans Channel

November 12, 2003A judge in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana, was in trouble for dressing up in blackface for Halloween.
Source:

New York Times


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