If we needed any confirmation of why Democrats have fallen from any meaningful power in Louisiana, we need only observe the intervention of the base upon which it dominated state politics into the congressional campaign of Prisoner #03128-095, the microcosm of the old Louisiana political culture, in the guise of Juror 68.
His given name being Victor Durand,
he gained notoriety when during the 2000 racketeering trial of the Democrat ex-governor
formerly known as Edwin Edwards he managed to get himself removed for repeated
violations of juror standards, such as potential telegraphing of his presence
on the jury to Edwards, refusing to participate in deliberations, bringing in
study aids such as a dictionary to jury deliberations, and leaving these with
notes, and then initially lying about it. He claims he had said aloud he
thought Edwards likely was innocent and was subjected to intimidation as a
result, and this he charged was why he got removed.
Had he carried through on his
alleged stated intention, that would have thrown the case into a mistrial and,
as in 1986 on a related influence-peddling case, Edwards could have been tried
again (in that instance, he skated), or not. But as was confirmed both at the
appellate level and at the Supreme Court, where judges (unanimously at a panel
at the circuit
level and the Court turning down hearing an appeal) noted the district
court had acted properly in the matter, this did not detract from Edwards’
guilt. While Edwards may have made claims since then that he was railroaded by
political enemies, it seems extremely far-fetched that circuit court judges and
justices of the Supreme Court were out to get him as well. He merited his
felony conviction that landed him in the klink.