Sworn & Protected: An examination of Louisiana's failure to rein in abusive police
1
In about 1 in 7 cases, the newspaper found police in Louisiana had disciplinary actions overturned through a special protection they would not have been offered in any other state.
2
More than 200 law enforcement officers in Louisiana were fired or convicted over serious offenses in the last decade. The vast majority flew below the radar of state oversight officials.
3
The newspaper identified officers in 39 parishes who were convicted of serious crimes but have not had their licenses revoked.
4
Georgia gives state oversight officials the authority to investigate police on their own and hand down permanent bans for a wide range of offenses.
5
Officer Marvin Martin was hired by Rayne police after he resigned in Lafayette. He was indicted last year on excessive force charges.
6
Five officers were convicted in the Danziger Bridge shootings and cover-up in 2016. Another six were convicted years earlier, but haven't been decertified.
7
Officer Travis Depew has kept his job in law enforcement despite a criminal conviction. He was previously accused of using department equipment to stalk an ex.
8
State oversight officials say Louisiana law doesn't allow them to decertify Officer Travis "Clay" Depew.?
9
Former Marksville Officer Norris Greenhouse, Jr., was one of 15 officers permanently decertified Thursday by Louisiana's police oversight board.
10
Louisiana's police licensing board banned former St. Bernard Parish Sheriff’s Office Deputy Brandon Licciardi, who pled guilty to second-degree rape, along with drug and human trafficking charges, in 2016.