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Edwards calls AP report on his knowledge of Ronald Greene’s death ‘false’

7th February 2022   ·   0 Comments

By JC Canicosa
Contributing Writer

(lailluminator.com) — Gov. John Bel Edwards said insinuations in an Associated Press report that he kept quiet after learning about Ronald Greene’s death in May 2019 following a car chase with Louisiana State Police are “simply and categorically false.”

Police body camera video of the incident, which happened outside Monroe, was released more than a year later and showed troopers beating and using stun guns on Greene, a Black man. Although state police initially attributed Greene’s death to the car accident that ended the chase, an autopsy would later refute that claim. The governor did not challenge the state police version before the video was made public by the AP.

Edwards, who had been in Washington, D.C., over the weekend, called a press conference last Tuesday afternoon to answer questions about the AP report. Just before, he met with members of the Legislative Black Caucus to discuss the case.

The governor said the AP report was baseless in fact and inaccurately implied that he or his staff members purposefully tried to cover up the cause of Greene’s death to protect his reelection chances that year.

“I wouldn’t even know how to begin to go about it, to ask somebody to delay a criminal investigation in order to try to gain an advantage,” Edwards told reporters.

“I don’t even have the words – my command of the English language is insufficient to convey to you just how totally utterly false and without any basis” the claims in the AP report are, Edwards said.

Edwards confirmed he did receive Reeves’ text, but the message only informed him of the death of an unnamed individual. It was not until September 2020 when Edwards first learned of the “serious allegations against Louisiana State Police surrounding the arrest and death of Mr. Ronald Greene,” according to a statement from the governor’s office.

Edwards also had access to videos of the incident but said he was asked by the U.S. Department of Justice not to release them or disclose their content because the DOJ was investigating the incident and didn’t want Edwards to interfere.

“I think the governor did give us a good explanation.” said Rep. Vincent Pierre (D-Lafayette), new head of the Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus. “Of course, we felt that more should have been done.”

Pierre said Black lawmakers told the governor that he should have followed up more with state troopers after receiving a text that indicated a man had died in state police custody. They want communication with state police improved.

But after the AP report was published Friday, Louisiana House Speaker Clay Schexnayder, R-Gonzales, issued a statement calling its findings “greatly disturbing.”

Schexnayder said the governor told him there was no need for further legislative action last summer because “Greene died in a wreck,” not the violent struggle with state troopers afterwards.

In response, Edwards said Tuesday he never said Greene died in the wreck and called Schexnayder’s statement “absolutely wrong.” The governor added that his relationship with the speaker has been “strained” since the Louisiana Legislature failed to override any of the governor’s vetoes following the 2021 session.

Schexnayder, who had just convened the House for a special session on redistricting, told reporters he stands by his comments.

“The truth is right now we don’t know what the truth is,” Schexnayder said.

Greene’s family is suing the state for a wrongful death in his case. Mona Hardin, Greene’s mother, has said Edwards should resign based on the AP report. The governor said he has not been in touch with Hardin since the story was published but planned to reach out to her.

When asked about reaction from the Legislative Black Caucus, Edwards said its members are concerned about policy changes that Louisiana State Police still need to make after Greene’s death.

Pierre says that the Black Caucus asked Edwards to treat texts from the state police superintendent that imply that someone died in police custody with more urgency.

“There is a long way to go. That is painfully obvious to me,” Edwards said.

Louisiana Illuminator (www.lailluminator.com) is an independent, nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization. Reporter Julie O’Donoghue contributed to this report.

This article originally published in the February 7, 2022 print edition of The Louisiana Weekly newspaper.

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