Regular readers of this space already
have seen how the vague parameters to this elective office, designed to be
part-time in nature, can be used to create a tidy income stream for a holder of
it. What’s new here is how Jefferson Parish 2nd Justice District
Constable Antoine “Tony” Thomassie has taken it to a whole new level.
Louisiana Revised Statutes 13:5807
gives a good idea of what constables may do, which generally is to serve
processes from whichever Justice of the Peace court to which they are attached
in their district. They also may collect suit costs
and seize and
sell movable and immovable property under orders of their courts. New
Orleans has some special considerations for its constables, and some parishes
allow their constables to appoint one or more deputies. Jefferson with East
Baton Rouge allow an unlimited number of these. Constables are elected with
six-year terms; the next round of elections for them is later this year.
By way of example, in Caddo
Parish’s 5th District (Greenwood), with about 18,000 residents,
there in calendar year 2012
Constable Don Majure made, in addition to his salary (these are set by the
parish governing authority) of about $1,900, another roughly $15,600 in fees.
He also spent nearly $12,000 in performing his duties, which include (known
only because he volunteered this information; it’s not required on the simple
affidavits the state uses) about two-thirds on use of a car equipped for patrol
(which is not required for performance of the job) and a computer, with the
remainder spent on office expenses and vehicle expenses (expressed as mileage
reimbursement for the most part). In all, he made a little over $5,600. As most
constables do, the excess was paid out as additional salary, although it may be
kept in a fund to use on expenses in future years. Majure is retired from the
Caddo Parish Sheriff’s Office.
Undoubtedly some money collected by
him was spent on things not really necessary to perform the job, but it was not
entirely unreasonable. Contrast this with Thomassie in his district (Marrero)
of 59,000 people. In 2012,
he got a salary of over $21,000 from the parish. This is supposed to be a
part-time position, yet for a location about three times larger in population
than the example above (and more compact in geography), he gets paid over 10
times as much by the parish. This is the fault of parish elected officials that
give such generous salaries.
But the nearly $69,000 in fees he
got is on him, and one wonders where a constable could make that kind of money
on the fee schedule above (for example, that’s the equivalent of attempting to
serve – they don’t actually have to succeed – 6,900 subpoenas or one less than
every two minutes working 2,000 hours a year). It’s not like JPs actually get a
lot of business, as defined in R.S. 13:2586. They have
limited jurisdiction and all concurrent with district courts, although parishes
may broaden it to include some other matters that could significantly increase
their duties, except that these are not supposed to be, unlike district courts,
full-time positions. Yet somehow this court, that of Justice of the Peace
Patrick DeJean, in 2012
collected over $137,000, half of which was paid out to Thomassie. (DeJean paid
himself, including his $21,700 salary set by the parish, $35,000, but oddly did
not account for the remaining amount, after expenses, of $48,820, which if not
paid out to him should have gone into a fund. Despite the limited jurisdiction of
the court, he also got some brand
new quarters for it in recent years courtesy of the parish.)
Thomissee also removed nearly
$49,000 in expenses (no other constable in the parish went above $2,000), most
of which were related to “travel and other charges for yourself.” It boggles
the mind that this could be for mileage; at 50 cents a mile and 250 work days
of 8 hours a year, it would mean he drove about 470 miles a day, or almost 60
miles an hour, which implies he went up and down the Westbank Expressway (and
only on the Marrero portion) constantly around the speed limit with no time left
over to stop, or to do paperwork, or to hang around bars. The $43,000 or so
left he treated as straight salary for this part-time job; keep in mind he has
been employed during his constable tenure (over two decades) additionally by
Jefferson Parish (including apparently being
overpaid in a position he didn’t merit).
Besides dubious spending
possibilities, Thomassie also is said to have taken advantage of the extra
deputy opportunity to raise some more revenue. Some
media outlets claim he sells the right to be a deputy constable for $20 a
month. Legally, any expenditures to support deputies must be acknowledged, but
in 2012 he reported no such expenses. So either a bunch of “deputies” are
working for him free, or there’s some unusual arrangement going on where he pockets
money for some unspecified benefits going to the “deputies.”
Regardless of the (lack of) propriety
here, the larger issue is, even if all of this is above board, part-timers
should not be in a position legally to make full-time pay off the taxpayer. The
intent of justice of the peace courts was to settle small claims, and if there
are so many issues out there that create such volume and bring in so many
resources, then they should be handled by courts of general jurisdiction with
full time staff and with access to police and/or sheriff’s departments to carry
out their directives, and surely could accomplish the duties of a constable
costing much less.
But as long as statute provides
little in the way of checks or supervision on constables, this can happen, to
the taxpayers’ detriment. And since statute regulates the office, the
Legislature easily could write statute to provide that control (some apply to
Orleans constables, for example), or to get rid of this archaic office that in
most instances (according to their affidavits) find its occupants barely
performing any functions at all. There’s no reason this can’t happen this
session prior to scheduled elections for this office this fall.
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