Cazayoux: 15 indicted in crime-fighting effort

Program leads to indictments

Law enforcement officials credited the indictment of 15 repeat offenders to the collaboration they have formed through the Baton Rouge Area Violence Elimination program.

Although not directly tied to BRAVE, which focuses on crime in the 70805 ZIP code, East Baton Rouge Parish District Attorney Hillar Moore III said this operation was a “byproduct” of the program.

Eight of the 15 people recently indicted had direct ties to the 70805 ZIP code, U.S. Attorney Donald Cazayoux said at a Friday news conference.

“They’re repeat offenders and we believe they need to be off the street,” Cazayoux said.

Moore said BRAVE has helped streamline the process of referring gun and felony arrests to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. It used to take the federal office one to two months to review the cases, but because of the relationships developed through BRAVE, that process is much quicker, he said.

Moore said the BRAVE initiative has highlighted the gun problem that has led to violence in the 70805 ZIP code, and the arrests made Thursday night were part of a wider operation that involved BRAVE officers.

Of the 15 people who were indicted, nine of them were already incarcerated. The other six were arrested Thursday night.

Kevin Harrison, U.S. marshal for the Middle District of Louisiana, said the news conference Friday sends a message to potential criminals because it shows a united front.

“Our gang’s big and our gang’s bad,” Harrison said.

Joining Cazayoux at the news conference, including some involved in the BRAVE initiative, were the East Baton Rouge Parish District Attorney’s Office, U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, U.S. Marshal’s Service, East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff’s Office, Baton Rouge Police Department, Louisiana State Police and Louisiana Division of Probation and Parole.

“It definitely shows everybody’s commitment to this,” East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff Sid Gautreaux said.

State Police Superintendent Mike Edmonson added that the arrests show what can be seen around the state and the country, that 85 percent of violent crime is tied to illegal weapons and narcotics.

“The public just wants to see results,” Edmonson said. “And we are making a difference right here in our community.”

Baton Rouge Police Chief Dewayne White said when the three-year, $1.5 million grant for the BRAVE program was first announced, there were a lot of naysayers.

However, he said, the team showed by the announcement Friday that the program is moving forward. The bulk of the federal grant will go toward research on identifying violent offenders in 70805. That information is still being collected.

During the operation, law enforcement officers also arrested 11 people on outstanding warrants.

BRAVE is an effort to reduce violence via the cooperation between law enforcement, residents and social service programs. The program has similarities to the Operation Ceasefire programs in other areas of the country.

The 70805 ZIP code, generally bordered by Airline Highway to the north and east, Choctaw Drive to the south and the Mississippi River to the west, has been targeted because of the high number of homicides in the area.

The following people were indicted by in federal court:

  • Michael T. Early, 20, Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Gerald Johnson, 24, Baker, one count possession of a firearm of a convicted felon and one count of possession of marijuana.
  • Keonne Taylor, 24, Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Lazaar Alexis, 29, of Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Adrian K. Thompson, 35, Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, one count possession with the intent to distribute marijuana and one count possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.
  • Kevin Brown, 41, Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Byron Carter, 29, of Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Francisco Javier Yanez-Muniz, 21, one count possession of a firearm by an alien illegally and unlawfully in the United States.
  • Damion L. Alexander, 23, Zachary, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and one count possession of a stolen firearm.
  • Desmond J. Raby, 28, Baton Rouge, two counts possession with intent to distribute marijuana, alprazolam and hydrocodone, two counts possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime and two counts possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Antoine Montreal Brown, 28, Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm while subject to a court order.
  • Christopher Foster, 23, Baton Rouge, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Derrick Pitcher, 42, Baton Rouge, one count possession with the intent to distribute marijuana, lisdexamfetamine and morphine, one count possession of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime and one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Jeremy D. Banks, 32, Baton Rouge, one count possession with the intent to distribute cocaine base and one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
  • Johnny Lynn Robertson Jr., 24, one count possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

Please log in to comment on this story

Comments (11)


1) Comment by Duckyluve - 13/10/2012

Mem.....in order to be charged as a convicted felon in possession of a firearm you first must be a convicted felon!!!!!! These are not choir boys. These are leaches on society and they need to be locked up

2) Comment by Duckyluve - 13/10/2012

Mem.....in order to be charged as a convicted felon in possession of a firearm you first must be a convicted felon!!!!!! These are not choir boys. These are leaches on society and they need to be locked up

3) Comment by squiggly - 13/10/2012

It's good that they caught people who should not have them in possession of firearms, but what about the people who supplied them with the firearms? Where exactly did these firearms come from? Until you go after the illegal suppliers of the firearms, you are only spinning your wheels.

4) Comment by TommyRucker - 13/10/2012

The really sad part is (1) not seeing people who live in the areas where these criminals live leading the charge to put them in jail and (2) hearing people who live in the areas where these criminals hang out actually SUPPORTING them (until the people who live among these criminals start speaking out and ACTING to stop this sort of activity, it is going to be difficult to stop it. It is time for people who live among these criminals to take whatever action is necessary to stop it and show the courage to do it. Appeasement and defending these criminals is only going to make the problem at the local level worse as these criminals determined to OWN these local areas and everyone in them. What are people in these areas rationalizing this form of domination, yet fight against it (this slavery) in other circumstances-slavery is slavery rather its being a slave on a planation or being a slave to some criminal in your neighborhood. It is not going to end until the locals take action to end it as outsiders can only do so much.

5) Comment by TommyRucker - 13/10/2012

If the community is not safe and when criminals dictate by intimidation, etc. we do not have a community ruled by law but one governed by the MOB. The mayor of Chicago has the philosophy that criminals need to go into alleys and do their 'thing' and they will be left alone if they leave innocent people alone. This man fails to see the effect of this criminal behavior on the entire community and is trying to appease criminals. The result-Chicago leads the country in murders in spite of a very restricted gun control law. This mayor is the poster child for the principles of the democratic party mob. Is that what we want in our community, the Chicago style government????

6) Comment by KC5DXT - 13/10/2012

MEM, when was the last time you made a police report?

7) Comment by TommyRucker - 13/10/2012

This is way overdue. These people are causing violence toward everyone in the community and they need to be stopped. I am sick of these politically correct arguments that these people are not hurting other people with their behaviors. This is the type of thing that has gotten thousands of people harmed and the harm is ongoing as it goes on from generation to generation. We either have a rule of law or a rule of the mob, there is no gray zone. We are going to turn our city over to the criminals and their advocates who say 'leave them alone if they are only hurting themselves'. The truth is their behavior, like our behavior, affects everyone and their behavior is having a negative impact on thousands of people.

8) Comment by MrVPP - 13/10/2012

Has everyone remotely involved in BRAVE had a chance to spike the football over this? Can we move on now? Call me cranky, but I remember a time when officials did their jobs without taking press conferences where everyone involved took credit, no matter how small or remote their involvement. This is good work, but it is nothing more than the job Cazeyoux and crew are paid to do. And how the sheriff and the DA can spike the football here I don't see it.

9) Comment by Hello Baton Rouge - 13/10/2012

Marchifava, maybe you should undergo your mental evaluation before speaking. If that doesn't work, maybe you should buy a tract of land big enough to hold 100 graves. You obviously didnt watch the video on the other news channel. Oh and http://goo.gl/GjMpq

10) Comment by markedwardmarchiafava - 13/10/2012

Read all of these charges carefully. Does anyone see a crime involving violence toward another?

11) Comment by Chucky - 13/10/2012

“BRAVE has helped streamline the process of referring gun and felony arrests to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. “ Seems like a lot of paper work that a clerk could do. The six arrested on Thursday “were part of a wider operation that involved BRAVE officers.” What 'wider operation' ? I find that very ambiguous. It seems to me that the U.S. marshal Service is doing a bang up job with BRAVE being invited along. I do hope BRAVE works, for a million plus $ and for Baton Rouge.