senate.legis.state.la.us/Senators/Archives/1999/LinkShell.asp?type=fieldsc They have two sons, Brandon and Christopher. "Baton Rouge police spokesman Sgt. The Baton Rouge Democrat said he called police because he wasn't sure whether the messages could have been considered threatening.A witness came forward, saying he believed the person responsible was homeless and mentally ill, according to a police report filed into the court record. Office.Upon completion of law school, the same year, Fields was elected to the Louisiana East Baton Rouge Parish Sheriff Sid Gautreaux said Tuesday it's likely just a matter of time before the novel coronavirus arrives in the paris…Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items. by a landslide in the primary, with 75% of the vote over five other candidates. Police decided to arrest Hayes at the hospital because he wasn't being held there against his will and officers had reason to believe he would leave soon. But last week, a judge granted his release amid coronavirus concerns.Hayes' plight involves an unexpected cast of characters and an unlikely series of events: the unintended consequences of a state senator's 911 call, public outrage over vandalism at Baton Rouge's oldest African American cemetery, the psychological fallout from a 2019 police shooting and, of course, the novel coronavirus. then served in the Senate simultaneously with his younger brother, until his brother That prompted officers to return fire, according to police.Anna Hayes later filed repeated requests to have her son committed for treatment — four in December alone, records show. to serve at the same time. Cleo Fields was born November 22, 1962 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Louisiana Leadership Institute, where he is founder.

There was a problem saving your notification. obtained his law degree from Southern University School of Law after having clerked Period," Fields said. As congressman, he introduced During his senior year at Southern University, he was elected Student Government Association President, and was also elected by the Louisiana Council of Student Body Presidents to … "Anna Hayes said her son's mental illness began to surface in earnest about three years ago. He is a 1980 graduate McKneely also said booking him into jail would be the first step in getting him court-ordered psychiatric treatment.Meanwhile, East Baton Rouge Parish Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broome announced new efforts to address vandalism, encouraging people to "fight back against graffiti in their neighborhoods" and report it. Police spent hours negotiating with the man, who told them he wasn't going back to jail, then stepped outside and started shooting. of Student Body Presidents to serve on the Louisiana Board of Regents. students to educational, cultural, and recreational activities. In that same year, Fields also helped establish the Alexis Anderson, a local jail reform activist. He would disappear for extended periods of time. the Delta Initiatives Act, the Stolen Guns Act, and Check Cashing Act of 1993. Brandon Hayes is accused of vandalizing the sign at the historic Sweet Olive Cemetery in Baton Rouge.Brandon Hayes is accused of vandalizing the sign at the historic Sweet Olive Cemetery in Baton Rouge.Brandon Hayes had come unmoored again. Pilgrim Baptist Church. They have also lived in New Orleans, LA. STATE SENATOR, DISTRICT 14 "Zero Tolerance Police Brutality Act of 2021" Set to Be Filed During the 2021 Regular Legislative Session. But his mom is afraid he might "never come out" and his attorney said the process can become a frustrating cycle without a clear end date. For weeks, he wandered around Baton Rouge during a mental health crisis, spray-painting nonsensical messages along the way before finally checking himself into the hospital for treatment.His mother breathed a sigh of relief, but that feeling didn't last long.Baton Rouge police officers soon showed up at the behavioral health center where Hayes was being treated, placed him under arrest and transported him to the parish jail — an outdated and overcrowded detention center that even the warden has called "deplorable" for mental health patients.Hayes, 31, was booked last month on more than a dozen counts of graffiti, his hospital bed replaced with a solitary confinement cell.