Mamou Man Arrested For Allegedly Setting House On Fire 999ktdy.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 999ktdy.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mamou Man Arrested For Allegedly Setting House On Fire
A Mamou man s bond has been set at almost a million dollars after he allegedly set fires at home and in a car early this morning. A woman and her children were in this home.
According to a press release from the State Fire Marshal s Office, 33-year-old James N. Rozas was arrested for allegedly announcing that he had set the house on fire. Fortunately, the woman and her children, one of which was an infant were able to escape the home before it was engulfed in flames. Rozas was armed with a gun, and he ran away wearing only a hoodie sweatshirt.
Who Was Arrested In Lafayette? kpel965.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kpel965.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
UPDATE: Lafayette Police are giving more details about Wednesday morning s gas leak on Johnston Street.
Officers have closed off Johnston Street between Aqueduct Drive and West Broussard Road after construction crews working on the busy roadway accidentally hit a 3 high pressure natural gas line while digging.
There are no evacuations at this time as Lafayette Fire Hazmat is on the scene, as well as CenterPoint Energy who is working to repair the broken line.
The repairs are expected to last at least 4 hours.
Lafayette police say they are blocking traffic at the intersection of Johnston Street and E. Broussard Road while hazmat crews respond to a gas leak.
Lafayette Councilman Questions Lack Of Summer Day Camps
Lafayette Consolidated Government doesn’t have any children s summer day camp programs planned yet.
Mayor-President Josh Guillory said this during last night’s meeting in response to a question from District 5 councilman Glenn Lazard. Guillory says the city is looking for more public-private partnerships to develop summer programming for the parks and recreation department. Lazard says he’s fine with public-private partnerships, but he feels it’s need that should have been addressed.
“The fact that here we are talking about not having any kind of scheduled or programmed summer recreation programs, and if we’re talking about COVID, that’s fully understandable, Lazard said. But if we’re talking about not having any because of ‘lack of funding,’ then that’s a whole other story altogether.”