Benefit for Johnnie

A Benefit fundraiser has been scheduled for Johnnie Jaggers on August 19th.  Proceeds will be used to offset upcoming medical treatments.  Johnny is only seven years old.

The event flyer quotes Johnny, “I am seven years old.  I was born with Williams syndrome, Scoliosis and Kyphosis.  I am going to have to spend 6-8 weeks in New Orleans Children’s Hospital in halo traction to help prepare for the spinal fusion.  Please help me so I can have a more normal life.”

Events planned include fish plates, music, a bounce house, bake sale, silent auction, music and contests.  The hours are 11:00 am until on August 19, 2023.

The fundraiser is sponsored by the Troubled Souls R.C. and will be held at their clubhouse at 4248 Hwy 155.  This is the Spaulding’s old store on the Ashland Rd.


Next Weekend, You’re Invited As Louisiana Sports Greatness Is Celebrated In Natchitoches

There are football legends, a women’s basketball great, four baseball icons, a two-time USA Olympian, a world-renowned (now elderly) weightlifting champion with an inspiring and patriotic life story, and five LSU Tigers.

They – and a fun-filled slate of events — are among the reasons to be in Natchitoches next Thursday, July 27 through Saturday, July 29, to enjoy the 2023 Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Induction Celebration.

There are three free events, and four others which require admission charges. Only the grand finale, the Saturday evening, June 29 Induction Reception and Ceremony presented by State Farm Agents of Louisiana, is a dress up affair.

Two – the Friday Bowling Bash presented by BOM, in Alexandria at Four Seasons Bowling Center, and the Saturday morning New Orleans Saints and Pelicans Junior Training Camp on the Northwestern State campus – are activity filled.

Another – the Friday night Rockin’ River Fest Concert featuring Rockin’ Dopsie and The Zydeco Twisters, and rising country artist Jason Ashley, along with a 10-minute fireworks show over Cane River – is activity optional, dancing encouraged.

Tickets for the Bowling Bash, the Friday night VIP Taste of Tailgating party, the Saturday noon Round Table Luncheon, and the big finale, the Induction Reception and Ceremony, are available at LaSportsHall.com or by calling 318-238-4255.

Advance registration at LaSportsHall.com for kids 7-17 is required for the free Junior Training Camp, which will feature many of the 2023 inductees participating as coaches in football and basketball.

Two-time Super Bowl MVP Eli Manning (from New Orleans) joins four-time WNBA All-Star Alana Beard (a Shreveport native) and College World Series champion LSU baseball coach Paul Mainieri in a star-studded 12-member induction class.

The LSHOF Class of 2023 also includes New Orleans native Ron Washington, who managed the Texas Rangers to a pair of World Series appearances and in 2021 helped the Atlanta Braves win the world’s championship; two-time LSU track and field USA Olympian and world champion Walter Davis; and Slidell native, Tulane great and Chicago Bears two-time Pro Bowl running back Matt Forte.

Also elected for induction are All-American LSU pitcher Paul Byrd, a 14-year Major League Baseball veteran who made the 1999 All-Star Game; Shreveport native Wendell Davis, who shattered LSU football receiving records before heading to the NFL; multiple national champion and world class weightlifter Walter Imahara, a UL-Lafayette legend; and retired Baton Rouge-Parkview Baptist baseball coach M.L. Woodruff, whose teams claimed 11 state championships.

Two south Louisiana sports journalists, Bruce Brown of Lafayette and longtime New Orleans Times-Picayune high school reporter Lori Lyons will also be honored.

The LSHOF’s Class of 2023 will be enshrined Saturday, July 29, at the Hall of Fame’s home in Natchitoches to culminate the 64th Induction Celebration.

The Thursday reception, the Friday evening River Fest and the Junior Training Camp are free. As noted above, camp participants must register online in advance.

The 2023 Induction Celebration will be hosted by the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame Foundation, the support organization for the Hall of Fame. The LSHOF Foundation was established as a 501 c 3 non-profit entity in 1975 and is governed by a statewide board of directors.

For information on sponsorship opportunities and other participation, contact Foundation President/CEO Ronnie Rantz at 225-802-6040 or RonnieRantz@LaSportsHall.com, or Greg Burke, Director of Business Development and Public Relations, at 318-663-5459 or GregBurke@LaSportsHall.com.


Notice of Death – July 21, 2023

Justin Russell Lee

December 29, 1983 – July 19, 2023

Funeral services will be held at 10:00 am, Saturday, July 22, 2023 in Ashland Baptist Church, Ashland, LA.

Mattie Lavern Mayes

December 9, 1935 — July 19, 2023

A graveside funeral were held at 10:00 am on Wednesday, July 19, 2023 at Mt. Zion Cemetery in Hall Summit, Louisiana.

The Red River Parish Journal publishes “Remembrances” – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $70. The obituary will be included in the emails sent to subscribers.  Contact your funeral provider or RedRiverParishJournal@gmail.com. Must be paid in advance of publication.


ETC… For Friday July 21, 2023

Back to School time is fast approaching.  The school supply lists from Red River Public Schools and Riverdale Academy have been posted to their various social media sites.

The Red River Industries Bingo fundraiser is tonight from 6:00 to 8:00 pm.  It is being held at the old washateria across from Mabile’s Pharmacy on Ringgold Ave.


Firment Applauds Legislative Override

“Today was a huge win for the children of Louisiana,” said Gabe Firment, District 22 State Representative. “I’m proud of my colleagues in the state legislature for standing up to protect the children of our great state.”

On Tuesday, both chambers of the Louisiana legislature mustered the 2/3 vote of its membership necessary to override a Governor’s veto clearing the way for the “Stop Harming Our Kids Act” (HB 648) to become law. The bill prohibits healthcare professionals from providing gender affirming care or altering a child’s appearance to validate the minor’s perceptions of his sex. The Legislature adjourned following the vote of the Senate.

The Louisiana Constitution mandates a veto session on the 40th day after adjournment of the Regular Session unless a majority of either the House or Senate votes not to return. This year only 12 members of the Senate and 31 members of the House mailed in ballots stating the veto session was unnecessary.  The 2023 Veto Session, which convened on July 18, is only the third in the state’s history since the 1974 Louisiana Constitution was adopted.

Firment said, “We made it clear today that our children are worth fighting for. This great victory would not have been possible without the prayers and support of parents, grandparents, pastors, and grassroots organizations from around the state who rose up and declared with one voice that ‘No one in Louisiana has the right to harm a child’. God Bless the families of our beautiful state!”


Confused to a Tee

By Teddy Allen

Good thing I’m elderly because it is evident as of two weekends ago when I went to my first ever T-Ball tournament that I could not afford to have a child today.

Not an athletic one, anyway.

This was the Dixie Baseball Regional Tournament (I think) at Tinsley Park in Bossier. For T-Ball. An All-Star Tournament. We now have all-star tournaments for 6- and 7-year-olds even though the ball is hit off a tee and there are no pitchers. This has been going on a good while; I’d just never seen it.

I knew the doings were big when I parked and could not hear any baseball things. That’s how far away the parks were and everyone had gotten there a lot earlier than I had. I like to walk, so no complaint there; just trying to convey how many people were parked here on this Saturday evening. It was like the cast party for Gone With The Wind.

The first sign of trouble was a nice lady walking toward me. She handed me a wrist band. “Here, I’ll save you 10 bucks,” she said and handed me the band. “I was in there five minutes.”

Mister Teddy did not know it cost money to watch T-Ball.

And now I have an idea how much money it costs to play T-Ball, or at least be the guardian of a person who plays T-Ball.

It’s a lot.

Jerseys. Colors. Full uniforms with “Saline” or “Ruston” or “Bossier” across the front. Dozens of teams. “Olla” and … is there a team from “Greater Olla” here? Seems everyone else in Louisiana is.

The winners are traveling to the Dixie World Series in Center, Texas this weekend, and if you’re going to that, best leave now because traffic will not be a walk in the park. (If you’re interested in sponsoring, Hospitality Tents are only $200 a day and the Team Dinner/Opening Ceremonies are just $1,500. This is a big jump from 30 years ago when T-Ball was a YMCA T-shirt and a cap and your cleanest dirty shorts, and when the “regular season” was over, you met at Johnny’s Pizza.)

It took less than five minutes for me to figure out two things.

One, the gear required. Full uniforms. Battery-operated fans. (Could have used those back in the day.) Bat bags. And a clever invention—a wagon. Most everyone had these fold-up wagons, and in them were chairs for Mee Maw and Pee Paw, coolers, fans, bat bags, and sometimes a baby.

And two, most everyone I saw was sweating, but also smiling. It wasn’t my scene, but then again, none of these people wanted to be on the No. 7 tee box with me. They pay for a wagon, I pay for a pitching wedge. Different strokes … Same feeling of fun.

The little team I went to support came in 14th out of 16 teams, I think, but they all looked happy as little dudes on Christmas morning.

Things change. Used to, “travel ball” was one trip each summer out of town for a two-day tournament so my guys could experience a hotel and be together for a weekend. Then it was wiffle ball in the parking lot at night. Low overhead, high return. It was a different time, I guess.

Today, if they were grading, I’d make an F in T-Ball.

Things change, but still … when was the last time you saw boys and girls riding bikes with their baseball gloves hooked to the handlebars, or playing pickup baseball at a park or wiffle in the yard? Something in my old soul always thought that would be timeless. At least it’s still free.

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu or Twitter @MamaLuvsManning


Pee Wee Sport Sign-Up

Students may sign up for Pee Wee sports at the Riverdale Ice Cream Social on August 3, 2023.  The social begins at 5:00 pm in the gym.

Pee Wee sports offered at Riverdale include football, boys and girls basketball, cheer, baseball and softball.


Website Design Case a Resounding Defeat for the Thought Police

By Royal Alexander

U.S. Supreme Court Reaffirms Freedom of Speech and Conscience

The U.S. Supreme Court has recently ruled that a Colorado web designer may refuse to work on same-sex wedding announcements.  The party in the case is Lorie Smith who runs 303 Creative, a web-design company in Littleton, Colo. 

Miss Smith conscientiously objects to same-sex marriage and believes “the First Amendment’s Free Speech Clause protects her from being compelled to speak what she does not believe.”  It is important to note that while Miss Smith provides her website and graphic services to customers regardless of their race, creed, sex, or sexual orientation she has never created expressions that contradict her own views—whether that means generating works that encourage violence, demean another person, or defy her religious beliefs.

The Constitution, she insists, “protects her right to differ.”  

On the other hand, the state of Colorado asserted that its public accommodation laws (which cover virtually every public business offering a good or service) required her to create websites that celebrate gay weddings if her business was also designing sites to celebrate other weddings. 

So, she filed suit in federal court seeking an order declaring her business exempt from state antidiscrimination laws should any same-sex couple seek her services.

Justice Gorsuch, writing for the majority, concluded that the 1st Amendment entitles Miss Smith to refuse commissions for same sex wedding announcements.   The Court reasoned that Colorado’s so-called anti-discrimination law couldn’t be applied in such a way that it required a business owner to express ideas he or she opposes even if the state considers those views discriminatory.  In other words, the government Thought Police can’t dictate speech, and can’t tell us what to think and believe.

“The opportunity to think for ourselves and to express those thoughts freely is among our most cherished liberties and part of what keeps our Republic strong,” Gorsuch wrote, further stating that while that “means all of us will encounter ideas we consider” wrongheaded or even offensive “the First Amendment envisions the United States as a rich and complex place where all persons are free to think and speak as they wish, not as the government demands.”

This ruling will apply beneficially to Americans across the political and ideological spectrum.  For example, as noted by Senator Ted Cruz:

“The state of Colorado wanted to compel the speech of Christian artists and business owners who declined to use their God-given talents to celebrate views that run contrary to what their faith teaches,” reasoning “… should a Muslim artist be compelled by the government to draw the image of Muhammed? Should Jewish artists be forced to create art that is antisemitic?”

Or, imagine the outrage on the Left if a court or a law mandated that a liberal Democrat web designer produce a website for Trump’s recent birthday that read, “Happy Birthday President Trump—the Greatest President in American History;” Or a website that celebrated the one-year anniversary of the Dobbs decision that read, “Dobbs Prevented the Painful Slaughter of 10,000 Innocent Unborn Human Beings.”

Nevertheless, the fact that the Court’s ruling will benefit every citizen who finds themselves in a similar situation is not enough for the lunatic Left, which has smeared Miss Smith and viciously attacked the Court’s decision.

This case is very important because it underscores the great constitutional principle not only of free speech but of freedom of conscience.

It’s why Thomas Jefferson in 1777 “drafted a bill to establish religious liberty on the basis of the natural, inalienable right to freedom of conscience.” (Nat. Constitution Ctr).

It is, no doubt, why Jefferson expressed his view that “no provision in our constitution ought to be dearer to man, than that which protects the rights of conscience against the enterprises of the civil authority.” (Ltr. to Richard Douglas, 2-4-1809).  It’s also, no doubt, the motivation for Jefferson’s declaration to Benjamin Rush that “I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”

The Supreme Court itself, in an earlier case involving compelled speech—West VA. Board of Educ. v. Barnette—eloquently reaffirmed this principle holding that state authorities had “transcended constitutional limitations on their powers” when their dictates “invaded the sphere of intellect and spirit which is the purpose of the First Amendment … ”

That is what the state law of Colorado was attempting to do here, and its action cannot be reconciled with our Constitution.


Gumbo Cookoff

The Louisiana Gumbo Cook-Off is returning to the Natchitoches-NSU Folk Festival on Saturday July 22, in air-conditioned Prather Coliseum located at 220 South Jefferson Street on the Northwestern State University campus in Natchitoches. In honor of this year’s festival theme, Celebrating Louisiana’s Cultural Gumbo, the festival will see the long-awaited return of the Gumbo Cookoff, in which professionals and hobbyists alike can compete in any of three categories and demonstrate their cooking skills.

Registration and the Cooks’ Meeting will take place at 8:00 am. Tasting and judging will begin at 12:30 pm with winners be announced at 2:30 pm. There is no fee to compete in the Cookoff. Gumbo must be cooked on-site outside of Prather Coliseum.

The Gumbo Cook-Off is the Louisiana Folklife Center’s way of celebrating the state’s unique and storied foodways, as well as the rich culture behind the cooking of gumbo. The ways of preparing gumbo and the ingredients used are as varied as the people who cook it, so there is no better way to embody this year’s festival theme of Celebrating Louisiana’s Cultural Gumbo.


Into the Final Stretch

The 2023 season is coming into the home stretch at Anderson’s Produce.  The selection of fresh grown on the farm fruits and vegetables is still great.  There are tomatoes, corn, peppers of all varieties, squash, potatoes and a whole lot more.  Anderson’s also has a good selection of Cason meats.

These are really the final days.  Your last opportunity to get fresh produce for the summer of 2023. 

Anderson’s Produce is located on Catfish Bend Road, halfway between LA 1 and I-49 on LA 149.  Give them a call at 318-932-1432.  See how much there is at Anderson’s.


Weekly Arrest Report

Report from the Red River Sheriff’s Office for July 7-13,  2023

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.


Remembering Margie Elizabeth Dupree

Margie Elizabeth Dupree, 91, of Keithville, Louisiana entered into eternal rest on July 14, 2023. She was born on October 23, 1931 in Coushatta, Louisiana to Willie Lockett Allen and Bertha Tuleter Teekell Allen.

A visitation was held on Monday, July 17, 2023 at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive in Shreveport, Louisiana. Graveside services honoring the life of Margie were on Tuesday, July 18, 2023 at Forest Park West Cemetery in Shreveport.  Officiating the service was Pastor Chris Willcutt.

Margie graduated from Coushatta High School in 1949. She married Hilton Ray Dupree on September 22, 1951. Together they had one daughter, Martha Jean Dupree, on February 1, 1953. Margie began working at Lucent Technologies in 1970 and retired after 26 years. She enjoyed hobbies such as sewing, cooking, and reading. She was a God-fearing woman who loved attending church, helping others, sharing her faith with others, and praying for them. Margie cherished all of the times she spent with her family and friends. She was always smiling when you would see her. She was known to be exceptionally patient, kindhearted, loving, and could always see the good in people. She went above and beyond in everything she did throughout her life. Margie was a devoted wife and mother that will be missed by many.

Margie was preceded in death by her parents; Willie and Bertha Allen; husband, Hilton Ray Dupree; and sister, Edith May Sanders. Those left behind to cherish her memory include her daughter, Martha Rogers and husband Jerry; granddaughters, Robin McGill and Kaylin Bagby; and great-grandsons, Remington McGill and Michael P. McGill, III.

Honoring Margie as pallbearers will be Remington McGill, Michael Paul McGill, III, Jerry Rogers, and Kaylin Bagby.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorials be made to Grawood Baptist Church.


Remembering Mattie Lavern Mayes

A graveside funeral for Mattie Lavern Mayes, 87, will be held at 10:00 am on Wednesday, July 19, 2023 at Mt. Zion Cemetery in Hall Summit, Louisiana. Officiating the service will be Bro. Steve Slaughter.

Mattie was born on December 9, 1935 in Converse, Louisiana to George T. and Mattie Pugh and passed away on July 14, 2023 in Shreveport, Louisiana.

Mattie was the mother of three wonderful children: Regina Beatty, Kevin Mayes, and Shane Mayes. She loved the Lord, her family and flowers. She will be terribly missed by her family and friends.

Mattie is preceded in death by her parents; and husband, Henry Levene Mayes. Left to cherish her memory are her children, Regina Beatty and husband, Bruce Beatty, Kevin Mayes and significant other, Debbie Upton, Shane Mayes and wife, Jeanine Mayes; grandchildren, Matthew Haynes, Ashley Temple, Zion Mayes, Hannah Guffin, David Mayes, William Mayes, Rachel Mayes and Joshua Mayes; along with 13 great-grandchildren.


Notice of Death – July 19, 2023

Mattie Lavern Mayes

December 9, 1935 — July 19, 2023

A graveside funeral will be held at 10:00 am on Wednesday, July 19, 2023 at Mt. Zion Cemetery in Hall Summit, Louisiana.

Margie Elizabeth Dupree

October 23, 1931 — July 14, 2023

Graveside services were held at 10:00 am on Tuesday, July 18, 2023 at Forest Park West Cemetery in Shreveport.

The Red River Parish Journal publishes “Remembrances” – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $70. The obituary will be included in the emails sent to subscribers.  Contact your funeral provider or RedRiverParishJournal@gmail.com. Must be paid in advance of publication.


ETC… For Wednesday July 19, 2023

The 2023 Red River Crusade concludes this evening.  Pastor Tommy Eason will deliver the inspiring message.  There is a free meal served prior to the Crusade program.  It happens at the Red River High Gym.

The school apparel spirit store is open at Red River Academic Academy until August 7, 2023.  The school said, “Any item bought from the store may be worn at school.”

Red River Elementary’s school online store is also open.  The last day to order new Bulldog gear for the 2023-2024 school year will be Sunday, July 23 at 11:59 pm.

Northwestern State University alumni and friends should mark their calendars for 2023 Homecoming festivities set to take place Friday, Nov. 3 and Saturday, Nov. 4.  


Remembering Margie Elizabeth Dupree

Margie Elizabeth Dupree, 91, of Keithville, Louisiana entered into eternal rest on July 14, 2023. She was born on October 23, 1931 in Coushatta, Louisiana to Willie Lockett Allen and Bertha Tuleter Teekell Allen.

A visitation will be held from 5:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. on Monday, July 17, 2023 at Rose-Neath Funeral Home, 2500 Southside Drive in Shreveport, Louisiana. Graveside services honoring the life of Margie will be held at 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, July 18, 2023 at Forest Park West Cemetery in Shreveport.  Officiating the service will be Pastor Chris Willcutt.

Margie graduated from Coushatta High School in 1949. She married Hilton Ray Dupree on September 22, 1951. Together they had one daughter, Martha Jean Dupree, on February 1, 1953. Margie began working at Lucent Technologies in 1970 and retired after 26 years. She enjoyed hobbies such as sewing, cooking, and reading. She was a God-fearing woman who loved attending church, helping others, sharing her faith with others, and praying for them. Margie cherished all of the times she spent with her family and friends. She was always smiling when you would see her. She was known to be exceptionally patient, kindhearted, loving, and could always see the good in people. She went above and beyond in everything she did throughout her life. Margie was a devoted wife and mother that will be missed by many.

Margie was preceded in death by her parents; Willie and Bertha Allen; husband, Hilton Ray Dupree; and sister, Edith May Sanders. Those left behind to cherish her memory include her daughter, Martha Rogers and husband Jerry; granddaughters, Robin McGill and Kaylin Bagby; and great-grandsons, Remington McGill and Michael P. McGill, III.

Honoring Margie as pallbearers will be Remington McGill, Michael Paul McGill, III, Jerry Rogers, and Kaylin Bagby.

In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorials be made to Grawood Baptist Church.


A graveside funeral for Mattie Lavern Mayes, 87, will be held at 10:00 a.m. on Wednesday, July 19, 2023 at Mt. Zion Cemetery in Hall Summit, Louisiana. Officiating the service will be Bro. Steve Slaughter.

Mattie was born on December 9, 1935 in Converse, Louisiana to George T. and Mattie Pugh and passed away on July 14, 2023 in Shreveport, Louisiana.

Mattie was the mother of three wonderful children: Regina Beatty, Kevin Mayes, and Shane Mayes. She loved the Lord, her family and flowers. She will be terribly missed by her family and friends.

Mattie is preceded in death by her parents; and husband, Henry Levene Mayes. Left to cherish her memory are her children, Regina Beatty and husband, Bruce Beatty, Kevin Mayes and significant other, Debbie Upton, Shane Mayes and wife, Jeanine Mayes; grandchildren, Matthew Haynes, Ashley Temple, Zion Mayes, Hannah Guffin, David Mayes, William Mayes, Rachel Mayes and Joshua Mayes; along with 13 great-grandchildren.


Weekly Arrest Report

Report from the Red River Sheriff’s Office for July 7-13,  2023

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.


Boil Advisory – Coushatta Water System

The Town of Coushatta Water system has experienced problems with our water supply system due to a Water Main Break which caused low pressure below 20 PSI.  Because of these problems, the water produced by our water supply system is of questionable microbiological quality.  An earlier advisory was issued on July 8th and rescinded two days later.

Therefore, as a precaution, the Coushatta Water System is issuing a BOIL ADVISORY for the entire system effective immediately.  The BOIL ADVISORY is to remain in effect until rescinded by the Water System.

It Is recommended that all consumers disinfect their water before consuming it (including fountain drinks). Making ice, brushing teeth, or using it for food preparation or rinsing of foods by the following means:

Boil water for one (1) full minute in a clean container.  The one-minute starts after the water has been brought to a rolling boil.  (The flat taste can be eliminated by shaking the water in a clean bottle, pouring it from one clean container to another, or by adding a small pinch of salt to each quart of water that is boiled.)

Again, please be sure to disinfect your own water prior to consumption until you have been advised otherwise.

The Coushatta Water System will rescind this Boil Advisory upon notification from the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals- Office of Public Health that additional water samples collected from our water supply system have shown our water to be safe.


There is Wild World in Coushatta

The Red River Parish Library reports that children had a great visit from Wild World. Among the animals they brought were Zoe the kangaroo, Henry the tortoise, assorted snakes, Sailor the cockatoo, sugar gliders and tenrecs.

Wild World was one of the Monday features at the Library during July.  Next Monday there will be a presentation by Sci-Port at 2:00 pm.


VBS Next Week

First Baptist Vacation Bible School is a week away.  It begins Sunday, July 23rd with a Family Fun Night from 5:00 to 7:00 pm featuring inflatables, registration for VBS, hotdogs, and snoballs.

The Monday through Friday schedule July 24-28 will be from 5:30 to 8:00pm. VBS will include dinner for the participants.

On Sunday, July 30th at 11:00 am Family Worship will conclude VBS. Registration and t-shirt purchase information is on the church’s social media sites.


The Hippie Lawyer

By Brad Dison

Ronald Hughes was a novice California attorney whose first trial was approaching quickly.  He was defending a woman named Leslie Van Houten in a multiple murder trial.  Three other defendants had their own attorneys.  Ronald needed a good suit for the trial.  In May of 1970, Hollywood movie studio MGM decided to auction off movie props, many from the golden age of Hollywood, which they figured they would not need for future films.  The props had been kept in climate-controlled storage for decades.  Ronald watched as noteworthy items brought high prices and probably questioned whether he would be able to afford anything at all.  Finally, the lone item he had been waiting for was on the auction block.  It was a man’s suit worn by Spencer Tracy in the 1960 film Inherit the Wind.  The auctioneer opened the bids on the suit and the room fell silent.  As the auctioneer peered around the room, only one person in the audience seemed interested.  Ronald bid $5.00 on the suit and won it.  Ronald was uninterested that the suit was worn in a film, he was interested because the suit was cheap and in his size.

On July 15, 1970, the trial for which Ronald bought the $5 suit began.  The trial was fraught with disruptions from members of Leslie’s family, many of whom were eventually banned from the courtroom.  Due to Ronald’s flamboyant courtroom demeanor, his long hair, long beard, the admission of his squalid living conditions (Ronald lived in a garage with holes in the roof and slept on a mattress on the floor), admission that he wore a $5 suit he purchased at an auction, and his admission to having used hallucinogenic drugs in the past, the press nicknamed him the “Hippie Lawyer.”  The trial dragged on for months.  Finally, on November 16, 1970, after 23 weeks of presenting evidence, the State of California rested its case against Leslie.  It was time for the defense attorneys to present their evidence.

On November 19, the defense attorneys filed motions for the acquittal of the defendants on the grounds that the state had not presented sufficient evidence to convict them.  The state had presented more than 250 individual pieces of evidence, 73 photographs of the victims, and eyewitness testimony.    The judge rejected the motions for acquittal.  To everyone’s surprise, each of the defendant’s attorneys, including Ronald, stood in turn, and said, “the defense rests.”  The attorneys rested their case without calling a single witness in their defense.  Leslie and other members of her family yelled that they wanted to testify.  The prosecution and defense agreed to recess over the week of Thanksgiving to give both sides a chance to prepare closing arguments.  The trial was set to resume on Monday, November 30th.

When the trial resumed on that Monday morning, Ronald failed to show up.  After waiting an hour, the trial continued without Ronald.  He had been late before because he lacked proper transportation and was once arrested for outstanding traffic tickets.  When he failed to appear for court the following day, the judge ordered deputies to use all possible means to find Ronald and bring him to court.  The trial continued without him.  Deputies learned that Ronald had hitchhiked to the Los Padres National Forest for a Thanksgiving week camping trip.  Search parties scoured the area but found no trace of Ronald.  The defendants, including Ronald’s client Leslie, were eventually convicted of murder.  On March 29, the jury returned death penalty verdicts against Leslie and the other defendants.  On the same day, two trout fishermen found Ronald’s body in a knee-deep creek.  His head was wedged between two large rocks.  Conspiracy theorists and even some of Leslie’s family members concluded that the father of the family had Ronald killed although a cause of death was never determined.  Investigators speculated that Ronald drowned during a rainstorm which caused flash flooding.  However, the possibility that members of Leslie’s family had killed Ronald was not beyond the realm of belief.  You see, the family who disrupted the courtroom proceedings was referred to as the Manson family.  The father of the family was Charles Manson.        

Sources:

The Los Angeles Times, May 4, 1970, p.4.

The Sacramento Bee, November 17, 1970, p.6.

Santa Cruz Sentinel, November 18, 1970, p.7.

The Peninsula Times Tribune, November 19, 1970, p.1.

Concord Transcript, November 30, 1970, p.2.

The Hanford Sentinel, December 2, 1970, p.1.

The Los Angeles Times, March 30, 1971, p.3.

The Sacramento Bee, April 1, 1971, p.77.

Hollywood-memorabilia.com/mgm-auction-1970-costumes-props/