#Clarence Burford
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The non-capital execution of James Coburn. No, not that one.
Executing Americans for crimes other than murder was once standard practice. Robbery, armed robbery, house-breaking, burglary and rape could all earn a death sentence in a number of States. Under Federal law, bank robbery was once a capital crime even without a shot being fired. The death penalty for rape, particularly in the South, was undoubtedly used along racial lines with far more…
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#Alabama#Arthur Bremer#Arthur Lee Jones#Bill Baxley#Clarence Burford#crime and punishment#death penalty#George Wallace#Horace DeVaughn#James Coburn#John Louis Evans#Kenneth Smith#Kilby Prison#Linda Lyon Block#murder#nitrogen hypoxia#true crime#William Bowen#Yellow Mama
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If anyone was wondering those are Clarence Court Burford Brown eggs and they're like £6 for 10 and honestly worth it.
Wouldn't use them as an ingredient, however, the yolk is great on its own.
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Spring 2019 Honor List
NATCHITOCHES – One thousand forty-three undergraduates were named to Northwestern State University’s Honor List for the Spring 2019 semester. Students on the Honor List must be enrolled full-time and have a grade point average of between 3.0 and 3.49. Students listed by hometown are as follows.
Abbeville – Annemarie Broussard, MaKayla Lewis, Zabrinia Spates;
Aimwell – Jonathan Poole;
Alexandria – Markeyla Anderson, Gavin Arabie, Sharenthia Chew, Angel Christophe, Josyf Das Neves, Joshua Dorsey, Alexis Flowers, Kelvina Ford, Zuleika Fountain, Vanity Givens, Kyle Guillory, Khloe Jasper, Whitney Joffrion, Gustov Johnson, Martavius King, Ashley Koestler, Kasey Lacombe, Taylar Lee, Kelli Leone, Jimmie Magee, Dean Mayeux, Jason McDaniel, Jalyn Mcneal, Ashley Mitchell, John O’Dell, Madison Ogorek, Tiffany Ore, Sadae Polk, Alyssa Rivers, Mart Sampson, Brandy Sayer, Shakera Shorts, Kizzy Slaughter, Kiaijah Thomas, Hailey Urena, Jenna Wade, Alysha Walker, Aalyiah Williams;
Amelia – Renwick McPherson;
Anacoco – Rachel Fournier, Angela Guy, Andrea Halladay, Tristan Harvey, Madeleine Hensley, Aaron Norris, Jason Ortiz, Ireland Slocum, Amanda Sorg, Tyler Stephens, Emily Williams, Rhonda Perry,
Arlington, Texas -- Mariah Denson, Devin Gipson, O’Shea Jackson;
Arnaudville – Macey Boyd, Bailey Dautreuil, Maddison Janice;
Athens – Jacob Ellis;
Atlanta – Ashley Mitchell, Jackson Teal, Jamie Wagley;
Aurora, Colorado – William Mccullough;
Avondale – Mikala Clark;
Bastrop – Alisha Bolton;
Baton Rouge – Jordan Hall, Melvin Hudson;
Belcher – Loriann Long;
Boyce – Lane Robinson
Baker – Devante George, Cherish Netter;
Ball – Angel Chavez, Christopher Constance, Bryan Sayes, Vanessa Toney, Alice Wilson;
Bastrop – Allenicia Arbet;
Baton Rouge – Mark Alexander, Chloe Castello, Ricky Chatman, Shelby Christian, Briyonna Collins, Madison Harris, Mckane Kinchen, Griffin Lundin, Cydni Millican, Rachel Monsour, Katie Pham, James Steelman, Jharon Whitfield;
Beacon Falls, Connecticut – Stacey Brown;
Bedford, Texas – Katina Booker;
Belle Chasse – Hayley Barbazon, Denim Reeves;
Belmont – Kelly Bass, Ashley Hill;
Bentley – Heather Jones,
Benton – Bryanna Cooper, Steven Gardner, Milla Gonzales, Grayson Isom, Colby Ponder, Blaine Reeder, Hannah Schott, Jackson Mathews, Megan Russell;
Bermuda – Michael Vienne;
Bienville – Sarah Macynski;
Big Spring, Texas – Kristin Wilson;
Birmingham, Alabama – Emma Wallace;
Bogalusa – Amanda Crawford, Taylor Johnson;
Bossier City – Yetunde Adegbovega, Austin Averitt, Abigail Castillo, Kendall Corkern, Cameron Davis, Daniel Dial, Kimberly Eloby, Ri’Kaela England, Khairig Frost, Hannah Gaspard, Margaret Gates, Jacob Guest, Tangy Heilbling, Ashlynn Henderson, Jordan Hunter, Shane Kaiser, Alyssa Kidd, Seth Lowery, Jordan Markle, Rebecca Markle, Jennifer Martinez, Rance Mason, Coby McGee, Alexa Montgomery, Yuridia Olea, Sabri Parks, Shelby Peebles, Brittani Phillips, Rachael Pierce, Cierra Rachal, Litzy Rivera, Gabriela Rodriguez, Madison Rowland, Rheagan Rowland, Dakota Schudalla, Makayla Strother, Trevor Tackett, Kellie Toms, Bobby Trichel, Madalyn Watson, Pamula Whicker, Elizabeth Zanca, Nour Zeidan;
Boutte – Jose Del Rio;
Boyce – Savanna Budnik, Timothy Glass, Kaitlyn Miller, Jessie Turner, Julia Watson;
Brownsboro, Texas – Brice Borgeson;
Buffalo, New York – LeTerrance Reed;
Bunkie – Izola Williams;
Bush – Serena Bonnette;
Calhoun – Marissa Barentine;
Campti – Paige Cason, Damarte Fisher, Kourtney Horton, Malachi Lester, Pepper Lloyd, Madison McLaren;
Canton, Texas – Tiffany Cayson, Jack Dyre;
Cape Coral, Florida – Karleigh Acosta;
Carencro – Malik Babin, Chaney Dodge, Harold Williams;
Cartagena, Colombia – Samantha Arellano Chavz, Edwin Castro Frias, Jalima Dias, Miledys Jiminez Vasquez, Daniel Racero Rocha, Gabriela Forero Salcedo, Sadoc Silva Calderon;
Cartagena Bolivar, Colombia – Alejandro Dager Carrasquilla;
Castor – Loxlie Dodd, Hogan Nealy;
Center, Texas – John Harrington;
Chalmette – Isaiah Carpenter, Gabriel Ernest, Sara Mendoza;
Chatham – Jonathan Gill;
Cincinnati, Ohio – Terry Brewer;
Clarence – Quintarous Coleman, Kimberly Reliford;
Clinton – Arianna Parrish;
Cloutierville – Alexia Gistarb;
Colfax – Camren Bell, Kensey Knight, Paidin Luneau, Kaitlyn Slalyter, Ontavius Williams;
Colorado Springs, Colorado – Sarah Wagner;
Columbia – Jackson McCann;
Columbus, Mississippi – William Taylor;
Converse – Zachary Faircloth, Nicolas Farmer, Victoria Gasper, Wade Hicks, Jared Jagneaux, Skyler Laroux, Ashley Sims, Delia Smith, Triston Waldon;
Coppell, Texas – Jada Freeman;
Cottonport – Jacob Harris, Joneshia Jacobs, Christine Lemoine;
Coushatta – Journi Brown, Faith Cason, La’Zaria Clark, Jon Hester, Tawanda Johnson, Amey Sepulvado;
Covington – Madison Blanks, Sarah Shiflett, Jennifer Vo;
Coyolilla Veracruz, Mexico – Guadalupe de Jesus Mendez Zaragoza;
Crowley – Mc’Kayleen Milson;
Cullen – D’Agurelle Epps;
Cut Off – Zachary Breaux, Kaelyn Musgrave;
Dallas – Nadia Carney;
De Berry, Texas – Sarah Britt;
DeQuincy – Hayden Robertson;
DeRidder – Carson Brown, Lauren Callis, Maygin Chesson, Sheridan Douglas, Sarah Fulford, Katherine Goodman, Michelle Green, Alexis Holland, Elliott Jones, Ethel Jones, Jordan Mack-McNair, Presley Phelps, Richard-Jayson Puzon, Morgan Smith, Heather Sorton, Madison Tilley, Tyler Wright, Airiuna Satchell;
Delhi – KeDiejah Cooper;
Denham Springs – Samantha Burgess, Joni Burlew, Caleb Callender, Zyneshia Jennings;
Deville – Emily Bonial, Courtney DeVille, Amy Henderson, Ashtyn Knapp, Karlee Littleton, Morgan McCrory, Caleb Rhodes, Marcia Rogers, Garrett Sellers;
Dodson – Nolan Griffin, Brendan Thomas;
Donaldsonville – Jermaine Collier, Natalie Landry;
Doyle – Mackensie Ulrich;
Doyline – Carmesia Russell;
Dry Prong – Ethan Lewis, Shian Murrell, Lindsey Weatherford, Ashley Webb;
Dubach – Oilvia Hancock, Kayla Loyd;
Dubberly – Audrie Dison;
Duson – Alexandra Broussard, Desmond Prejean;
Edmond, Oklahoma – Ravon Nero;
Elizabeth – Hannah LaCaze;
Elmer – Victoria Coleman
Elton – Maia Lacomb;
Eunice – Tanner Thibodeaux, Emily Deshotel;
Falfurrias, Texas – Marco Arevalo;
Farmerville – Adrianna Loyd, Jalissa Loyd;
Fayetteville, Arkansas – Cody Coleman;
Ferriday – Dalenesha Wimley;
Fisher – Hayden Courtney;
Flatwoods – Lindsey Willis;
Florien – Katelynn Alford, Danielle Anthony, Gabrielle Bryant, Braelyn Calhoun, Magon Lester, Ashton Remedies, Jordan Weldon;
Flower Mound, Texas – Randall Ruffner;
Folsom – Monique Basse, Shaylee Laird;
Forest Hill – Adrianne Dore;
Forney, Texas – Kaymi Wheeler;
Fort Polk – Brittany Chadwick, Mara Eifolla, Jayla Hart, Andrea Marquez, Madison Popp, Amanda. Ridenhour, Shiela May Tabonares, Whitney Tipton, Kiara Turner, TeKweena Wilson, Alexie Sarabia;
Fort Riley, Kansas – Breanna Bryan;
Fort Worth, Texas – Charles Gregory Meade;
Franklin – Zachary McEndree;
Franklinton – Randy Garza, Brittany Sanders;
Frierson – Mason Barnes;
Frisco, Texas – Hallie McCarroll;
Geisman – Rylee Leglue;
Guin, Alabama – Taylor Porter;
Garland, Texas – Joseph Goodson, Kobe Poole, Nia Randall;
Geismar – Elijah John-Baptiste;
Georgetown – Kaleb Hudson;
Glenmora – Reagan Humphries, Abbie Johnson, Kerstyn Johnson;
Gloster – Caitlyn Burford, Paris Gillum;
Goldonna – Brianna Calhoun;
Gonzales – Julie Breaux, Chaquera Caldwell, Ashlyn Chenevert;
Grand Cane – Sandra Kimble, Ciana Mcintyre, Emily Miller;
Grand Isle – Abigail Frazier;
Grand Prairie, Texas – Stephen Garrett;
Greenwell Springs – Morgan Bellot;
Greenwood – Leah Evans, Tamera Harris, Trenton Starks;
Gretna – Braxton Brown, Leroy Holmes, Nadia Johnson, Michael Wilson;
Gueydan – Hannah Sedatol;
Hackberry – Lexie Stine;
Hahnville – Cierra Puryear, Colin Vedros;
Hammond – Kaylon Wiloughby;
Harlengen – Frances Knight;
Harvey – Destiny Johnson;
Haughton – Deitric Alexander, Shakayla Bell, Katelynn Edwards, Anitra Fayad, Camry Heath, Kylee Jackson, Timothy Newell, Angie Nguyen, Makenezie Rains, Licentra Randolph, Bailee Rattanachai, Kaylee Sanford, Joshua Steele, Megan Tilley, Laura Waldroup, Katherine Weeks, Kacie Wilkinson, Chases Woltz, India Wright;
Haynesville – Jmarquiez Robinson, Sabrina Sowell, Michael Turner, Allysa Dodds;
Heflin – Kendall Brunson, Simiuna Cook, Kyle Smith;
Henderson – Andrew Blackmon;
Hessmer – Daren Dauzat;
Hineston – Victoria Carroll;
Homer – Francene Ferguson, Keyana Mccoy, Mariah West;
Hornbeck – Lane Alford, Ariel Rodgers;
Houma -- Courtney Chancellor, Rhiannon Dean, Venessa McKinley;
Houston – Rafael Bonilla, Jennifer Hitt, Casey Irvin, Natashia Jackson;
Humble, Texas – Toiquisha Johnson, Furquan Shorts;
Independence – Maria Thomas-Alfaro, Chloe Whiddon;
Iowa – Keiona Guy;
Jasper, Texas – Linsey Guthrie;
Jeanerette – David Blakesley;
Jefferson – Emily Ricalde;
Jena – Tiara Brown, Braegan Burlew, Candace Decker, Madison Erwin, Jasmine Furlow, Chelsea Redd, Tyler Thomas;
Jennings – Destiny Brown, Anayah Joseph;
Jonesboro – Ashlyn Gaines, JaVonna Lawrence, Alex Toms;
Kaplan – Chris Hebert;
Katy, Texas – Brittnay Cecil, Floyd Turner;
Keatchie – Sarah Plaisance;
Keithville – Germany Jones, Shelby Loftin, Cara Lorenen, Maya Porter;
Kenner – Emily Bennett, Willie Soniat, Parul Sharma;
Kentwood – Iris Travis;
Kernen – Antonia Blattner;
Kinder – Teralyn Plumber;
Konarskie, Poland – Elzbieta Iwaniuk;
Labadieville – Jacellynn LeBlanc, Logan Simoneaux;
Lacombe – Amy Schneider;
Lafayette – Taylor Aucoin, Ashanti Alfred, LaToya Bellard, Emma Burlet, Jared Dore, Reagan Guillory, Jacob Hawkins, Qualantre Jackson, Michele Kramer, JaKayle Lee, Paul Martin, Skylar Mccoy, Robert Middleton, Sarah Palmintier, Aishwarya Patel, Tylar Senegal, John Touchet, Ireland Williams, China Young;
Lafitte – Helen Kassahun;
Lake Charles – Landon Dore, Camren Green, Joel Moreaux, Jordan Mulsow, Destany Washington;
LaPlace – Caitlyn Turnbull;
Las Vegas, Nevada – Caitlin Schweighart;
Le Mars, Iowa – Shannon Smith;
League City, Texas – Lacee Savage, Blake Tessitore;
Leander – Karissa Boswell;
Lebeau – Sharissa Tanner;
Lecompte – Logan Cheek;
Leesville – Dakota Abrams, Cecilia Alfaya, Kimberly Alwell, Jebediah Barrett, Hailey Brantley, Kaylee Buby, Victoria Butler, Anthony Cantrell, Charlotte Cassin, Joseph Cryer, Cameron Davis, Marlee Dowden, Payton Gordy, Caleb Hillman, Hanna Johnson, Zachary Keeton, Lauren Kreyenbuhl, Mahala Lewis, Christina Lluvera, Gerard Lord, Brianna Maricle, Billy McGhee, Amy McKellar, Ashley McKellar, Kaitlyn Pajinag, Chloe Rouleau, Destiny Sanders, Cesar Santos, Dalton Schulte, Erin Schwartz, Megan Trask, Tabitha Vasquez, Marissa Weldon, Lana West, Cheyene Wise, Mikayla Zills;
Lena – Dillon Guin, Courtnee Hamberlin, Cortland Smith;
Lettsworth – Landon Benton;
Little Elm, Texas – Daniel Larin;
Little Rock, Arkansas – Whitney Jinks;
Livingston – Jay Gentry-Pace;
Livonia – Ryann Bizette, Shanyia Haynes;
Lockport – Malaina Falgout;
Logansport – Rebecca Tomlin, Shelby Woods, Kendoyle Cox;
Loranger – Cambree Bailey;
Lubbock, Texas – Miranda Stroud;
Mansfield – Tremeon Allen, Latyeauna Goodwin, Nicolette Hogan, Canessia Johnson, Demetric Preston, Madylin Sullivan, Kyah Wilson,
Madisonville – Zoe Almaraz, Bailey Perrilloux;
Mandeville -- Mya Holmes, Jalen Willis;
Many – Jocelyn Cannon, Patrick Colston, Sarah Cross, Timothy Early, Sydni Easley, Kyle Elliott, Tiarra Frazier, Brittney Garcie, Moses Gonzales, Jessie Johnson, Clayton Kelley, Lathan Meyers, Darion Miller, Matthew Peace, Andrew Penfield, Tanner Rains, Madison Rutherford, Aubrey Sepulvado, Mallary Veuleman;
Maringouin – Laura Scronce;
Marksville – Regan Balius, Nichole Dauzat, Leah Dupuy, Kayle Gaspard, Olivia Johnson, Victoria Lucas;
Marrero – Kelsey Brooks, Lius Escobar;
Marshall, Texas – Alexis Balbuena, Abagale Godrey;
Marthaville – Dylan Daniels, Veronica James, Thomas Lirette;
Meraux – Sophie Stechmann;
Merryville – Kyleah Franks;
Mesquite, Texas – Eric Renova, Curtis Williams;
Metairie – Kathryn Bancroft, Madysen Norra;
Midland, Texas – Channing Burleson;
Minden – Erin Dotson, Layla Easley, Abby Greene, Karasha Harris, Kiara Jenkins, Donna Law, Asata Sylvas, Jorge Zaldivar;
Missouri City, Texas – Cayla Jones;
Monroe – Demonta Brown, Kennedy Butler, Jansen Chisley, Kiara Drumgo, Taylor Edwards, Jaronda Griffin, Prettyunje Hunter, Diamond Knox-Jackson, Ashley Murphy, Keldrick Ward;
Montegut – Stephanie Cohen;
Monterey – Rebecca Womack;
Montgomery – Tabatha Bowlin, Payton Carroll, Gerald Chelette, Hailee Skains, Laryn Graves;
Monticello, Arkansas – Kamilah Kelley;
Mora – Gracy Rowell;
Moreauville – Reginea Alexander, Ashley Dunnam;
Natchitoches – Jeremy Aaron, Cass Arnold, Aaron Averett, Thomas Balthazar, Adam Barnes, Blake Bechtel, Terrius Bell, Kacy Bonds, Matthew Brown, Charles Bouchie, Santaurus Burr,Ladiamond Burrell, Dominitra Charles, Kaleb Chesser, Lane Clevenger, Jessica Coleman, Kaia Collins, Christian Cunningham, Sean Day, Moises Florez-Perez, Hannah Forsythe, Eric Fredieu, Abbie Garner, Peyton Graham, Denetria Green, Pamela Gross, Thomas Hadzeriga, Jalen Hall, Jasmine Hall, Samantha Hall, Deshon Hayes, Jett Hayes, Saul Hernandez, David Holmes, Jasmine Howard, Kanika Irchirl, Rachel Jeane, Emily Johnson, Karlee Laurence, Robert Lee, Emily Leone, Christopher Lewis, Helen-Lois Mancil, Wesley Manuel, Savannah Maricle, Brooklyn Martin, Tyler McCain, Lamarr McGaskey, Kristin McQuillin, Joshua Minor, Jair Morelos Castilla, Jakori Morris, Katelyn Murphy, Tori Neitte, Matthew Nelson, Donovan Ohnoutka, Christian Owens, Leilani Padilla, Kenneth Penrod, Eryn Percle, Veronica Pikes, Kenneth Poleman, Katherine Rachal, Michael Raymond, Jeffrey Remo, Devin Reyes, Kayla Rokett, Taylor Rutledge, Shelbi Ryan, Jalon Sangster, Chandler Sarpy, Gabrielle Scarborough, Natalie Sers, Anna Sibley, Athena Smith, Blake Teekell, Joseph Thibodaux, Margaret Thompson, Lantz Vercher, Elizabeth Vienne, Garrett Vienne, Huey Virece, Laurin Waldrip, Jacob Ware, Brianna Watermolen, Anna Waxley, Emma-Leigh Webster, Ellen Wells, Deondra White, Nicholas Wiggins, Leah Wilkins, Shavon Williams,
Natchez – Victoria Bradford, James Rougeou, Lauren Seawood;
Navasota, Texas – Shelton Eppler;
New Iberia – Mia Bashay, Dainell Ledet, Alex Romero;
New Llano – Deja Castille, Laura Cowell, Kendra Jones, Earnesta Riggins, Gabriel Vargas, Caden Wheeler;
New Milford, Connecticut – Lisa Rosenberg;
New Orleans – Demetrius Boulieu, Nyasha Brown, Damon Carter, Jeron Duplantier, Darlene Fairley, Matthew Gonzales, Omar Hall, RyShaneka Kirsh, Maxwell Martello, Phallon Robinson, Jonae Skinner, Rishard Winford;
Newellton – Chasity Glasspoole;
Noble – Shelby Etheridge, Tiffany McMillion, Krista Rivers, Thomas Rivers;
North Richland Hills, Texas – Cody Germany;
North York, Ontario – Alexander Comanita;
Oak Ridge – Kelly Futch;
Oakdale – Clayton Ashworth, JaQuanda Evins, Dylan Hamblin, Destani Johnson;
Olla – Morgan Barbo, Amanda Fenoli, Savannah Kirl;
Omro, Wisconsin – Jason Kralovetz;
Opelousas – Keylee Boone, Jordan Brisco, Kenya Gradnigo, Kayla Pitre, Lashante Richard, Kallie Zeringue;
Paris, Texas – Cody Vorwerk;
Pelican – Tyler Howard;
Pensacola, Florida – Mallory McClain;
Pierre Part – Blaise Crochet;
Pineville – Savannah Hope Andries, Melissa Barnhill, April Cain, Erika Carter, Korey Cleveland, Luke Conway, Sydney Duhon, Selena Ferguson, Ameera Ghannam, Ollie Gossett, Leia Graham, Megan Jacks, Trey Joseph, Ethan Lachney, Brooke Leger, Rodney Lonix, Sierra Matney, Sonya McClellan, Autumn McSwain, Abby Nichols, James Perry, Hannah Pusateri, Christina Rachal, Amaria Sapp, Elizabeth Shuler, Laikyn Slusher, Robert Tabor, Emily Wiley, Sarah-Elizabeth Wilkes;
Pitkin – Braydon Doyle, Jayce Doyle, Jessica Jones;
Plain Dealing – Nicholas Cason;
Plano, Texas – Asher Van Meter;
Plaucheville – Alexis Casarez;
Pleasant Hill – Makenzi Patrik;
Pollock – Krystal Bennett, Sarah Hunt, Dalton Kopp, Allyssa Zemp;
Ponchatoula – Keyadda Brim, Kaitlyn Hawkins;
Pontotoc, Mississippi – Elizabeth Murrah;
Port Allen – Evan Daigle, Kaleb Gauthier;
Port Barre – Danielle Schexnayder, Kristen Sonnier;
Prairieville – Hannah Beason, Donesha Blount, Lauren Breaux, Claire Credeur, Kristen Prettelt, Lysia Varisco, Elllise Vice, Brady Wilson, Faith Wilson;
Pride – Ashlyn Johnson;
Princeton – Katelyn Nattin, Ariell Shield;
Provencal – Taylor Craft;
Puyallup, Washington – Aine Oh;
Quitman – Cindy Crawford;
Raceland – Emily Adams;
Ragley – Katherine Greenmun;
Rayne – Bishop Breaux;
Reno, Nevada – Sydney Oren;
Richardson, Texas – Riley Cantrell;
Richfield, Minnesota – Leah Barnes;
Richmond, Texas – Ebonie Francis;
Ridgecrest – Melissa Kelly;
Ringgold – McKenzie Davidson, Autumn McCoy, Olivia Prado;
River Ridge – Rachel Chimeno;
Robeline – Chad Berly, Patricia Goodwin, Hannah Hennigan, Kristal Lachney, Kacy Morae, Ember O’Bannon, Laura Olguin, Morgan Rachal, Hannah Schoth;
Rosepine -- Emilee Johnson;
Ruston – Paul Bryant, Tekiren Evans, Jalen Garrison, Seth Hartsfield, Christopher Letendre, Aujani Richburg;
St. Amant – Larson Fontenot;
St. Bernard – Ashlie Kieff, Emily Snyder;
St. Francisville – Emeria Jones;
St. Martinville – Belinda Alexander, Jacoby Fontenette, Destiny Simon, Maleik White, Cassandra Zenon;
St. Rose – Crystal Jones;
Saline – Makayla Jackson, Isabella Jones, Malayna Poche, Aaron Savell;
San Antonio, Texas – Matthew Aguilera, Anthony Renteria;
Sarepta – Katie Ingle;
Scott – Hannah Durgin, Tayla Soileau;
Shreveport – Aubrey Allen, Katelynn Benge, Frances Boggs, Leta Broome, Makayla Bryant, Shatericka Christor, Kesherion Collins, Naterria Davis, Reonia Davis, Hailey Deaton, Miya Douglas, Daja Easter, Deadrian Egans, Meghan Fry, Cassidy Giddens, Savon Gipson, Ellen Grappe, MIzzani Grigsby, Lindsey Hagan, Adrianne Hampton, Katelyn Householder, Shelby Hunter, Jazzmine Jackson, John Jefferson, Drake Johnson, Korynthia Johnson, Zachary Johnson, Nathan Jones, Summer Jones, Alicia King, Lauren Lee, Samantha Lyons, Tiffany Mack, Caitlyn Malloy, Christopher Markham, Andria Mason, Ashley Mason, Tifphany McClinton, Rici McDonald, Claire McMillan, Samantha Metoyer, Najah Mitchell, Brittney Nicleso-Rayfus, Megan Osborn, Tara Pair, Tierry Perry, Christina Peterson, Kalyn Phillips, Hayden Pilcher, Sierra Prelow, Shelby Reddy, Grayson Roberts, Jalisa Roberts, Savonya Robinson, Madelyn Ruiz, Amanda Rushing, Breanna Samuel, Angelica Satcher, Shermaine Shorter, Jackiesha Simmons, Ciara Sipes, Richard Sloan, Kendria Smith, Jessica Sowers, Jamie Stewart, Somer Stratton, Lindsey Stroud, Khalil Sumlin, Destini Sweet, Hailey Thomas, Anne Tibbit, Katerina Vargas, Khamaria Vaughn, De’Andra Washington, Lakayla Whitaker, Gaylin White, Jamisa Williams, Lajayda Williams, Tre’Darius Williams, Kristy Wilson, India Wright;
Sibley – Madison Mouser;
Sieper – Emily George;
Simmesport – Lexi Gremillion, Elise Normand;
Simpson – Katelynn Martin;
Slidell – Terran Cole, Noah Glass, Tristan Johnson, Rachel Reed, Maci Walgamotte, Thomas Garner;
Sondheimer – Anna Marsh;
Springfield – Tyler Pigott;
Sterlington – Catherine Trichell;
Stonewall – Bessie Cable, Dawson Cranford, Emma Delafield, Emmy Hinds, Robert McAllen, Mackenzie Panther, Maguire Parker, Heather Schiller, Tehya McDonald, Chassidy Sutton;
Sugar Land, Texas – Jake Gore;
Sulphur – Andrew Stephens;
Sunset – Zachary Linville, Lauren Pope;
Tallahassee, Florida – Edward Clarke;
Tallulah – Anna Boney;
Taylor, Texas – Jake English;
Texarkana, Texas – Daphne Hammett, Kristin McDuffie, Jasmine Neal;
Thibodaux – Beth Olin, Cierra Winch
Tobyhanna, Pennsylvania – Brianna Morosco;
Tomball, Texas – Natalee Henry;
Toms River, New Jersey – Jacqueline Manza;
Toronto, Ontario – Rhea Verma;
Trout – Makayla King, Haley Lisenby, Kalee Mcguffee, Andrea Walters;
Troy, New York – Kasey Whitmore;
Tupelo, Mississippi – Bailey Griffin;
Ville Platte – Gabrielle Chapman, Nicholas Blood, Andrea Bradley;
Vinton – Shae Cramer, Toby Stanley, Alayna Zaunbrecher;
Violet – Callie Maschmeyer;
Vivian – Kaylee Scott, Chase Lewis;
Vossburg, Mississippi – Chequira Bonner;
Walker – Madison Arnold;
Walworth, New York – Devonne Seelig;
Washington – Kyeishia Evans, Catherine Stevens;
Waskom, Texas – Blakely Canfield, Zink Kiper, Laken Thompson;
Welsh – Autumn Hanks;
West Helena, Arkansas – Brittani Arana;
West Monroe – Abigail Beck, Austin Dodson, Brianna Fife, Kennedy Ford, Allison Freeman, Aubrey Gamble, Jasmyn Johnson, Eva Sanford, Madison Shidiskis, Melissa Taylor, Christopher Wynn;
Westwego – Tja’h Edwards;
Wilmington, Delaware – Amy Bourett;
Winnfield – Annalise Austin, Harli Austin, Rhonda Duff, Kara Grantadams, Rakeen Williams, Caroline Womack;
Winnsboro – A’Lexus Johnson;
Woodworth – Lexus Weston;
Youngsville – Devin Forestier, Devyn Shores, Sophia Toranto;
Zachary – Laney Davis;
Zwolle – Kierstyn Cartinez, Dayton Craig, Trenton Malmay, Ariana Martinez, Treveon Perry, Autumn Wyatt.
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What have we been doing in our downtime ? 🥣 Feeding a totally different clientele of course ! 🥑Clarence court burford browns with smashed avocado toast 🤤 (at Wales) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cdu78_Pob0i/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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#ad I’m currently loving the process of creating beautiful, well balanced meals for myself & my loved ones. It’s so therapeutic & I love to be able to make a recipe from start to finish & share it. It’s the best feeling! @waitroseandpartners have been really helping me on my quest to both easily shop & then cook delicious & super quick meals too! Their #beautifullysimple recipes are all available in the ‘Beautifully Simple’ chiller in store - this has a fab variety of different recipe cards for you to choose from & all the ingredients which you will need to then rustle up the dishes are conveniently right beside the cards, so you can choose your favourites, then gather the ingredients in a matter of moments. It’s so handy! Each of the recipes uses fresh, great quality ingredients which make up a delicious, fresh meal which is super quick to make. I’ve been making the absolutely delicious vegetarian Chargrilled Vegetable & Asparagus Salad & it is so flavourful yet light, it’s going to be one of my favourite summer dishes to make! With Clarence Court Burford Browns Free Range eggs, rice, quinoa & vegetable stir fry, dill & tender asparagus, it is an absolutely wonderful dinner which only takes 5 minutes to prepare & only 10 minutes to cook! This is how I made it: 1. Boil the 2 Clarence Court Burford Browns Free Range eggs for 3 minutes. Make sure the water is boiling before carefully placing them in to it. Using a steamer with a lid, steam the asparagus for 3 more minutes over the eggs. Cool the asparagus briefly under cold water & drain. Leave the eggs in the cold water until later. 2. Cut the chargrilled vegetables into smaller pieces. Put into a frying pan, add the rice, quinoa and vegetable stir fry pouch contents and 2 tbspoons of water & cook for 3-4 minutes. Whisk the mustard & oil into the reserved juices from the chargrilled vegetables & gently stir into the grains and remove from the heat. 3. Stir in the asparagus and dill & then season. Peel the eggs, quarter them and season. Top the salad with the eggs & enjoy warm! Rustle this up for you & your other half & you’ll put a smile on their face! Have you tried any of the #BeautifullySimple recipes? https://www.instagram.com/p/BwudBw6FU_B/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1d5asi0jt96fb
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Okay so I am very excited to share this Buttery Rhubarb, White Chocolate and Custard Blondies recipe with you as it is one of my all time favourites. Blondies are THE THING at the moment (and to be honest, really should be for the rest of time). They are gooey, buttery and darn right delicious and something you just can’t not enjoy, especially with a cup of tea.
WHAT ARE THESE BLONDIES?
I first had a Blondie in Canada and it was divine. They are very rich, sweet and made up of the basics – flour, butter, eggs, sugar (usually brown) and whatever added extra you want to use. They are a ‘cousin’ of the brownie but the main difference is that they don’t have cocoa powder in them which means the sugar has its chance to pack more of a punch. For me, the best blondies use white chocolate but you can mix it up with whatever you would like.
The texture should be VERY gooey, very soft and melty in the middle. I also use custard in my brownies as it really helps give that cheesecake soft centre we all know and love. Plus, who doesn’t love custard?
STORING BLONDIES!
Unlike brownies which do fine in the fridge, I prefer to keep blondies in an air tight container on the side as I prefer the white chocolate to stay as soft as possible but they will last longer (up to a week) if put in the fridge. If you like yours very dense then this is the way forward for you but equally, if you like them fresh, warm and gooey – stick in the microwave for 10 seconds to relive that gooey heavenly moment. You can also freeze them for up to 3/4 months.
Buttery Custard, Rhubarb, White Chocolate Blondies
Dive into a pile of absolute buttery YUM.
3 Burford Brown Eggs (Clarence Court)
200 g White Chocolate
250 g Olive Oil Butter
150 g Caster Sugar
200 g Brown Sugar
2 Sticks Rhubarb ((sliced and roasted))
130 g Plain Flour
1/2 tsp Baking Powder
Half a packet Alpro Custard
1 tsp Vanilla Extract
2 tbsp Granulated Sugar (For the rhubarb)
1/2 tsp Sea Salt
Turn your oven to 180c and line a brownie tray with baking parchment, mine is from @lakelanduk and is 10×8.
In a saucepan, pour in your diced rhubarb and sugar and two tbsp of water and stew on a low heat for around 7 minutes. On another pan, melt your butter and sugars until you have a smooth and glossy texture and leave to cool.
In another bowl, mix your dry ingredients together and when your butter mixture is cool, add in your eggs, vanilla extract, 4 tbsp of custard and mix fully until creamy and even in texture. Chop up your white chocolate last and stir it in.
Pour into you brownie tray and then dot in your rhubarb and remaining custard and use a fork to swirl it around. Bake in the oven for 35-40 minutes until just cooked. The middle should be buttery and melty but should hold its own. I sprinkle mine with some powdered sugar and crushed dried raspberries! Enjoy
If you like my Buttery Rhubarb, White Chocolate and Custard Blondies, please check out my social media for more!
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Please tag me at @thehumblepescatatian and use the hashtag #TheHumbleP if you make any of my recipes. I would love to see your takes! Thank you for reading my Recipe.
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You cannot go wrong with Blondies!!! New Recipe alert!!! Buttery Rhubarb, White Chocolate and Custard Blondies #Blondies Okay so I am very excited to share this Buttery Rhubarb, White Chocolate and Custard Blondies recipe with you as it is one of my all time favourites.
#Blondies#Buttery Rhubarb#dessert#pudding#Rhubarb#Rhubarb and Custard#White Chocolate and Custard Blondies
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Facts about Justice Neil Gorsuch and the Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch is the youngest Supreme Court nominee in a quarter-century. Some facts about Gorsuch and the court:-At 49, he is the youngest nominee since Clarence Thomas, who was 43 when confirmed in 1991.-The Colorado native went to high school in Washington while his mother served as EPA administrator in the Reagan administration.-He's the sixth member of the court who attended Harvard Law School; the other three got their law degrees from Yale.-His parents, David Gorsuch and Anne Gorsuch Burford, became lawyers.-Gorsuch credits a nun with teaching him how to write.
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Gorsuch is right about Chevron deference
WASHINGTON, DC – MARCH 01: Supreme Court nominee Judge Neil Gorsuch (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images).
Perhaps the most distinctive aspect of Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch’s jurisprudence is his opposition to “Chevron deference”: the doctrine (first imposed by a 1984 Supreme Court decision) that requires judges to defer to administrative agencies’ interpretations of federal law in most cases where the law may be “ambiguous” and the agency’s position seems “reasonable.” In what is probably his best-known opinion, Judge Gorsuch denounced Chevron deference as “a judge-made doctrine for the abdication of the judicial duty.” He’s absolutely right about that.
I. How Chevron Deference Violates the Text of the Constitution.
Article III of the Constitution gives the judiciary the power to decide “all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority.” Nowhere does the Constitution indicate that federal judges are allowed to delegate that power to the president or to the bureaucrats that work for him in the executive branch. Indeed, a major part of the purpose of separation of powers is to ensure that the branch that enforces the law is separate from the one that has the final say over its interpretation. That is what enables the judiciary to serve as an effective check on the power of the other branches of government.
Moreover, it’s fairly clear that the Founding generation did not envision that the executive branch would have a vast bureaucracy of the sort that exists today. Still less did they empower that bureaucracy to be able to dictate the meaning of the laws they are supposed to enforce. Some scholars argue that in many situations, agencies are not so much interpreting law, but actually making it by issuing regulations that often have only a tenuous basis in congressional enactments. When that happens, Chevron deference allows the executive to usurp the power of Congress as well as that of the judiciary. Only the legislature is supposed to have the power to make law under our constitutional system. Under the text and original meaning of the Constitution, Gorsuch’s position is extremely compelling.
II. Living Constitutionalists Should Oppose Chevron Too.
Not everyone is a textualist or an originalist. But even if you are a living constitutionalist whose main focus is the practical impact of legal doctrine today, you still have good reason to reject Chevron. As Gorsuch points out, judicial deference to agencies allows the latter to “reverse its current view 180 degrees anytime based merely on the shift of political winds and still prevail [in court].” When the meaning of federal law changes with the political winds and the partisan agendas of succeeding administrations, that undermines the rule of law and the stability that businesses, state and local governments, and ordinary citizens need to be able to organize their affairs. A new administration should not be able to make major changes in law simply by having its agency appointees reinterpret it. That state of affairs is even more undesirable in an age of severe polarization and widespread partisan hatred and bias. By contrast, Gorsuch emphasizes, nondeferential “judicial review of the law’s meaning would limit the ability of an agency to alter and amend existing law.”
Judges, of course, are not immune to ideological and partisan bias themselves. But they are much more removed from partisan conflict than executive branch officials are. Moreover, because judges serve for life and appointments turn over only very gradually, the judiciary will almost always be far more ideologically diverse than than the administration in power. That makes it hard for the judiciary to impose a strong partisan bias in favor of one side, even if judges wanted to.
III. If You Fear Trump, You Should Fear Chevron too.
If you believe – as I do – that Trump is a dangerous menace to liberal values, then you have an additional reason to want judges who won’t defer to executive agencies’ interpretations of the law. Under Trump, those agencies will mostly be headed by people who support his agenda. You have even more reason to reject Chevron if you think the problem is not limited to Trump, and that the GOP as a whole is untrustworthy. In a two party system like ours, both major parties will hold the White House some large fraction of the time. Even if Trump flames out, Republicans will be in power again soon enough.
Similar considerations apply if you – like many Republicans – fear and distrust the modern Democratic Party and believe its bureaucrats will bend the law to their own nefarious ends if given a chance. Eliminating Chevron can help constrain such abuses. Like constitutional federalism, judicial control over legal interpretation is a form of insurance that protects us against the dangers that arise when our partisan enemies are in power.
Some liberals support Chevron because they believe that agency bureaucrats are, as a general rule, more likely to promote progressive policies than judges. That is to some extent true. For obvious reasons, people who work for federal regulatory agencies tend to be fans of the type of regulation the agency does, and that often coheres with liberal policy priorities. But, especially in an era where much of the GOP has moved away from small-government conservatism towards Trumpian big-government nationalism. That is clearly true on such issues as immigration, the War on Drugs, and restricting international trade, where Republicans now often promote a more activist government than Democrats.
Gorsuch’s now-famous opinion criticizing Chevron itself exemplifies the sort of case where deference to administrative agencies could easily promote a Trumpian nationalist agenda. In that case, Gorsuch and two fellow Tenth Circuit judges overruled an agency decision denying undocumented immigrants applications for “lawful residency” status.
As a general rule, deference to agencies tends to promote a pro-regulatory agenda, whether of the right or of the left. But there are notable cases where it might instead promote deregulation. It is worth remembering that Chevron itself deferred to a Reagan-era agency EPA policy that liberals thought did not regulate industry stringently enough. The plaintiff challenging the agency was the Natural Resources Defense Council, a prominent liberal environmentalist group. Ironically, Neil Gorsuch’s mother, Anne Gorsuch Burford, was the EPA administrator at the time the lawsuit began. The fact that his mother’s agency ultimately won the case evidently has not prevented Gorsuch from wanting to overrule it.
If, as seems likely, Gorsuch is confirmed, it will be a long time, if ever, before he could get the Supreme Court to overrule Chevron completely. Of the current justices, only Clarence Thomas seems willing to go so far. But a Justice Gorsuch would surely give the anti-Chevron cause new momentum, and might succeed in imposing new limits on deference, even if it is not eliminated completely.
Ultimately, Chevron deference is less a tool of a specific ideological agenda than a weapon for whatever administration happens to be in power. Reversing it will not eliminate all agency discretion or destroy the administrative state. Gorsuch notes, correctly, that in a post-Chevron world, “Congress could and would continue to pass statutes for executive agencies to enforce. And just as surely agencies could and would continue to offer guidance on how they intend to enforce those statutes.” Judges would still often rule the agency’s way, and many exercises of agency discretion would be difficult to contest in court at all. Still, reversing Chevron would help restore the proper role of judges in interpreting the law, and also curb agency intrusion on congressional authority. It would also serve to limit the dangerous overconcentration of power in the hands of the executive.
Chevron deference is far from the only issue at stake in the fight over Gorsuch’s nomination. I have some reservations about his positions on other questions myself. But Gorsuch’s critique of Chevron should at the very least count in his favor, especially for those who fear and distrust Trump or believe that the “imperial presidency” should be more tightly constrained generally.
Originally Found On: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2017/03/25/gorsuch-is-right-about-chevron-deference/
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Gorsuch is right about Chevron deference
WASHINGTON, DC – MARCH 01: Supreme Court nominee Judge Neil Gorsuch (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images).
Perhaps the most distinctive aspect of Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch’s jurisprudence is his opposition to “Chevron deference”: the doctrine (first imposed by a 1984 Supreme Court decision) that requires judges to defer to administrative agencies’ interpretations of federal law in most cases where the law may be “ambiguous” and the agency’s position seems “reasonable.” In what is probably his best-known opinion, Judge Gorsuch denounced Chevron deference as “a judge-made doctrine for the abdication of the judicial duty.” He’s absolutely right about that.
I. How Chevron Deference Violates the Text of the Constitution.
Article III of the Constitution gives the judiciary the power to decide “all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority.” Nowhere does the Constitution indicate that federal judges are allowed to delegate that power to the president or to the bureaucrats that work for him in the executive branch. Indeed, a major part of the purpose of separation of powers is to ensure that the branch that enforces the law is separate from the one that has the final say over its interpretation. That is what enables the judiciary to serve as an effective check on the power of the other branches of government.
Moreover, it’s fairly clear that the Founding generation did not envision that the executive branch would have a vast bureaucracy of the sort that exists today. Still less did they empower that bureaucracy to be able to dictate the meaning of the laws they are supposed to enforce. Some scholars argue that in many situations, agencies are not so much interpreting law, but actually making it by issuing regulations that often have only a tenuous basis in congressional enactments. When that happens, Chevron deference allows the executive to usurp the power of Congress as well as that of the judiciary. Only the legislature is supposed to have the power to make law under our constitutional system. Under the text and original meaning of the Constitution, Gorsuch’s position is extremely compelling.
II. Living Constitutionalists Should Oppose Chevron Too.
Not everyone is a textualist or an originalist. But even if you are a living constitutionalist whose main focus is the practical impact of legal doctrine today, you still have good reason to reject Chevron. As Gorsuch points out, judicial deference to agencies allows the latter to “reverse its current view 180 degrees anytime based merely on the shift of political winds and still prevail [in court].” When the meaning of federal law changes with the political winds and the partisan agendas of succeeding administrations, that undermines the rule of law and the stability that businesses, state and local governments, and ordinary citizens need to be able to organize their affairs. A new administration should not be able to make major changes in law simply by having its agency appointees reinterpret it. That state of affairs is even more undesirable in an age of severe polarization and widespread partisan hatred and bias. By contrast, Gorsuch emphasizes, nondeferential “judicial review of the law’s meaning would limit the ability of an agency to alter and amend existing law.”
Judges, of course, are not immune to ideological and partisan bias themselves. But they are much more removed from partisan conflict than executive branch officials are. Moreover, because judges serve for life and appointments turn over only very gradually, the judiciary will almost always be far more ideologically diverse than than the administration in power. That makes it hard for the judiciary to impose a strong partisan bias in favor of one side, even if judges wanted to.
III. If You Fear Trump, You Should Fear Chevron too.
If you believe – as I do – that Trump is a dangerous menace to liberal values, then you have an additional reason to want judges who won’t defer to executive agencies’ interpretations of the law. Under Trump, those agencies will mostly be headed by people who support his agenda. You have even more reason to reject Chevron if you think the problem is not limited to Trump, and that the GOP as a whole is untrustworthy. In a two party system like ours, both major parties will hold the White House some large fraction of the time. Even if Trump flames out, Republicans will be in power again soon enough.
Similar considerations apply if you – like many Republicans – fear and distrust the modern Democratic Party and believe its bureaucrats will bend the law to their own nefarious ends if given a chance. Eliminating Chevron can help constrain such abuses. Like constitutional federalism, judicial control over legal interpretation is a form of insurance that protects us against the dangers that arise when our partisan enemies are in power.
Some liberals support Chevron because they believe that agency bureaucrats are, as a general rule, more likely to promote progressive policies than judges. That is to some extent true. For obvious reasons, people who work for federal regulatory agencies tend to be fans of the type of regulation the agency does, and that often coheres with liberal policy priorities. But, especially in an era where much of the GOP has moved away from small-government conservatism towards Trumpian big-government nationalism. That is clearly true on such issues as immigration, the War on Drugs, and restricting international trade, where Republicans now often promote a more activist government than Democrats.
Gorsuch’s now-famous opinion criticizing Chevron itself exemplifies the sort of case where deference to administrative agencies could easily promote a Trumpian nationalist agenda. In that case, Gorsuch and two fellow Tenth Circuit judges overruled an agency decision denying undocumented immigrants applications for “lawful residency” status.
As a general rule, deference to agencies tends to promote a pro-regulatory agenda, whether of the right or of the left. But there are notable cases where it might instead promote deregulation. It is worth remembering that Chevron itself deferred to a Reagan-era agency EPA policy that liberals thought did not regulate industry stringently enough. The plaintiff challenging the agency was the Natural Resources Defense Council, a prominent liberal environmentalist group. Ironically, Neil Gorsuch’s mother, Anne Gorsuch Burford, was the EPA administrator at the time the lawsuit began. The fact that his mother’s agency ultimately won the case evidently has not prevented Gorsuch from wanting to overrule it.
If, as seems likely, Gorsuch is confirmed, it will be a long time, if ever, before he could get the Supreme Court to overrule Chevron completely. Of the current justices, only Clarence Thomas seems willing to go so far. But a Justice Gorsuch would surely give the anti-Chevron cause new momentum, and might succeed in imposing new limits on deference, even if it is not eliminated completely.
Ultimately, Chevron deference is less a tool of a specific ideological agenda than a weapon for whatever administration happens to be in power. Reversing it will not eliminate all agency discretion or destroy the administrative state. Gorsuch notes, correctly, that in a post-Chevron world, “Congress could and would continue to pass statutes for executive agencies to enforce. And just as surely agencies could and would continue to offer guidance on how they intend to enforce those statutes.” Judges would still often rule the agency’s way, and many exercises of agency discretion would be difficult to contest in court at all. Still, reversing Chevron would help restore the proper role of judges in interpreting the law, and also curb agency intrusion on congressional authority. It would also serve to limit the dangerous overconcentration of power in the hands of the executive.
Chevron deference is far from the only issue at stake in the fight over Gorsuch’s nomination. I have some reservations about his positions on other questions myself. But Gorsuch’s critique of Chevron should at the very least count in his favor, especially for those who fear and distrust Trump or believe that the “imperial presidency” should be more tightly constrained generally.
Originally Found On: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2017/03/25/gorsuch-is-right-about-chevron-deference/
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‘You saw this pick cheered among the business community’: What Neil Gorsuch’s Supreme Court nod could mean for the business world
Neil Gorsuch, the 10th Circuit judge nominated by President Donald Trump to fill the vacant seat on the US Supreme Court, is widely expected to favor big business should he be confirmed by the Senate.
“The [Chief Justice John] Roberts court has been the most pro-business Supreme Court in the history of the court,” Michael Burg, founder of the Denver-based law firm Burg, Simpson, Eldredge, Hersh & Jardine, told Business Insider.
“When I look at Judge Gorsuch, do I think he is pro-business? The answer is yes,” he added. “Does he match up with Justice Scalia in terms of his view of the Constitution and that you have to go back and look at the Constitution in terms of how the framers and the founders meant it to be in 1789? Yes.”
Carter Phillips, a Washington, DC, lawyer who has argued before the Supreme Court more than any other attorney in private practice, said a Gorsuch appointment to the court would, in all likelihood, keep with the “status quo.”
“It will be pretty much how the court was prior to Justice Scalia’s death,” he said, later adding, “[It] will largely be the path the court will continue [on] in a way that is fundamentally different than the way it would’ve if Judge [Merrick] Garland’s nomination had not died on the vine the way it did.”
But, both said they believe the door is open to some change.
The expectation Gorsuch will rule on the side of big business has been drawn from the opinions he authored while serving on the 10th Circuit court’s bench. In that role, he was not able to rule on many big business-related cases, due to the court’s locale.
As a result, how he would rule on several major business issues almost certain to hit the court within the next few years is not fully known.
“I don’t view Judge Gorsuch as a clone of Justice Scalia,” Phillips said. “I’m sure he may have places where he differences with [Scalia] on particular nuances.”
One of the biggest upcoming areas where Gorsuch could potentially make a difference is in his interpretation of what’s known as “Chevron deference,” named for a 1984 case in which the court ruled the interpretation of a government agency should be deferred to when a law or statute it administers is under question. It quite predictably has a major affect on the regulatory state, and critics say it provides such agencies with vast power not permitted to other sectors of the government.
It’s one of several business-related areas where those watching the court have a sense of where Gorsuch would come down, as Gorsuch is an avowed textualist and originalist.
In a concurring opinion last August, Gorsuch said “Chevron deference” allows the executive branch to “swallow huge amounts of power” from the judicial and legislative branches, which “seems more than a little difficult to square with the Constitution of the framers’ design,” as CNN reported. Scalia had spoken out in favor of the Chevron ruling.
Phillips said to watch for cases related to “Chevron deference” should Gorsuch be confirmed.
“That issue, the extent to which the agency interprets its own authority and can kind of bootstrap itself into kind of expanding its decision making beyond what you would think the statute would allow, and whether the courts have to divert that and say ‘no, no, no, you can’t go that far’ is a huge issue,” Phillips said. “But again, that will probably take two or three cases before it’s settled down and it may not be settled down, because it’s a 5-4 court and it’s still not clear how far any of the five conservatives would be willing to go on Chevron.”
He added that, while “a lot of people” will say Gorsuch’s view is “a big change from Scalia,” the late justice was beginning to move in the direction of Gorsuch in his later decisions on the matter.
“I know it wasn’t [Scalia’s] perspective once upon a time, but I do think there’s been a fair amount of movement,” he said. “Obviously, Justice [Clarence] Thomas staked out a really aggressive opinion on that two terms ago. And, I don’t see a majority of the justices adopting his view, but I certainly think it will be a big ticket item. That goes beyond the business community, because obviously agencies are ubiquitous at this point. Agencies can decide thousands and thousands of things.”
Another business-related issue Gorsuch has staked out a position on is class actions. As was reported in The Wall Street Journal, a December ruling Gorsuch was a part of “made it easier for defendant companies to transfer class actions from state to federal court in some instances.”
Phillips said he expects “another round of class action issues” to come around to the Supreme Court soon, adding Gorsuch as “expressed some misgivings about more modern interpretations” on those issues.
The Journal also reported that Gorsuch’s history shows a mixed record on cases related to labor and employment, while he has ruled in business’s favor on a case related to arbitration.
In terms of what areas are less of a sure thing with Gorsuch, Phillips said he’s curious to see where the judge stands on due process limits on punitive damages, the dormant commerce clause, and intellectual property rights.
On the controversial 2010 Citizens United decision related to campaign finance, which ruled corporations and labor unions could donate freely to politicians as people would, Burg said Gorsuch’s stance would likely be “consistent with the ruling that would already come down” should a case related to it come before the court
“But I would have some reservation,” he said. “Because my experience with him is that he’s not a justice who says this is the result I want, now let me justify it.”
Still, the consensus is Gorsuch will rule alongside his fellow conservative justices on the bench in areas where it is not as well known where he will come down.
Travis Lenkner, a managing director at Burford Capital who once clerked for Justice Anthony Kennedy, told Business Insider that’s why he believed “you saw this pick cheered among the business community.”
“This is not swapping like for like,” he said. “But Judge Gorsuch is easily someone who can swap in and occupy the seat that Justice Scalia occupied and do so ably and not really change the mix of outlooks or votes that’s been present on the court for more than a decade now.”
SEE ALSO: Mark Cuban digs in on combating Trump and tells Democrats they are ‘blowing it’
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NSU awards 948 degrees at Spring Commencement
NATCHITOCHES – Northwestern State University awarded 948 degrees to 942 graduates during spring commencement Friday, May 10. Spring 2019 graduates listed by hometown are as follows.
Auburn, Washington – Selina Cho, Bachelor of Science in Nursing;
Abbeville – Samantha Richard, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Abita Springs – Rachel Strain, Associate of General Studies;
Alexandria – Justin Dupree, Jessica Griffin, John O'Dell, Associate of Science in Nursing; Antoinette Baker, Meagan Braud, Jasmine Brown, Ashley Colson, Laindia Howard, Donald Johnson, Sidnethia Starks, Associate of General Studies; Steven Bryant, Selena Elmore, Bachelor of General Studies; Allison McCloud, Bachelor of Music; Iris Barrera, Kristan Cascio, Maeghan George, Chelsea Jones, Jimmie Magee, Madeline Pharis, Robin Scott, Tiffany Townley, William Welch, Samantha Wynn, Bachelor of Science; Marquita Benjamin, Decoste, ShaKiyla Lindsey, Tashiana Whitehead, Bachelor of Social Work; Nancy Robinson, Master of Arts; Shaundreca Love, Jocelyn Mabrey, Christopher Reimer, Master of Science in Nursing;
Anacoco – Tristan Harvey, Associate of General Studies; Jacob Bennett, Bachelor of Arts; Kenneth Cochran, Caitlin McKee, Jason Ortiz, Cassandra Osborne, Brooke Phillips, Cayla Roberts, Emily Williams, Bachelor of Science; Karington Hood, Kayla Stephens, Bachelor of Social Work;
Angola – Ursula Poarch, Bachelor of Arts;
Arlington, Texas – Reginald Lars, Associate of General Studies; Samantha Bell, Bachelor of Science;
Arnaudville – Bliss Leblanc, Bachelor of General Studies; Dianna Davis, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Atlanta, Georgia – Tremayne Flagler, Bachelor of General Studies;
Aurora, Colorado – Lindsey Torres, Master of Arts;
Austin, Texas – Wyona Crenshaw, Carson Goldsmith, Associate of General Studies, Ysmina Smith, Bachelor of Science;
Avondale – James Brown, Bachelor of Science;
Barksdale AFB – Priscilla Molina, Associate of Science in Nursing;
Ball – Kelsey Walters, Associate of General Studies; Brittani Billingsley, Master of Science in Nursing;
Baltimore, Maryland – Shatera Walters, Bachelor of Science;
Baskin – Ashli Gandy, Master of Science in Nursing;
Bastrop – Anna Akins, Kayla Bonner, Kimberly Robinson, Bachelor of Science;
Baton Rouge – Barbara Friedrichs, Bachelor of General Studies; Jenna Baldwin, Teressa Calligan, Rosa Campbell, Maisyn Guillory, Jordan Hall, Madison Harris, Bethany Lee, Rachel Monsour, Madalyn Mullins, Emma Rivet, Ashleigh Rumby, Bachelor of Science, Laura Vance, Megan Vernon,Master of Education;
Belle Chasse – Natalie Wilson, Associate of General Studies, Bachelor of Arts; Annie Wright, Bachelor of Science;
Belmont – Kelly Bass, Associate of Science in Nursing;
Belton, Texas – Rachel Hall, Master of Music
Bentley – Byron Walters, Master of Music;
Benton – Mark Foy, Bachelor of Applied Science; Tamara Korner, Bachelor of General Studies; Jessica O’Neal, Bachelor of Science; Emily Maddox, Craig Martin, Master of Science in Nursing;
Blairstown, New Jersey, Patrick Garie, Master of Science;
Boaz, Alabama – Taylor Wilkes, Master of Science;
Bogalusa – Taylor Johnson, Bachelor of Science; Laura McFarlain, Bachelor of Social Work;
Bossier City – Lauryn Bakalis, Kaytlin Clark, Austin Coffey, Brandi Ervin, Kenesha Joiner, Regena Juneau, Brittney Malmay, Niesha Marks, Melissa Murphy, Kortney Nattin, Shelby Peebles, Lindsey Rathel, Jerdine Robinson, Associate of Science in Nursing; Brittney Blechl, Lena Harrell, Lytrisha Scott, Associate of General Studies; Casi Martin, Bachelor of Applied Science; Samantha Maiette, Bachelor of Arts, Nicholas Jones, Bachelor of General Studies; Colby Cranford, DeMontre Evans, Daijonni Ferguson, Kelsey Gallman, Candace Guillory, Dejaney Jackson, Rance Mason, Andrea Parks, Katherine Parson, Kennedy Parson, Brittani Phillips, Colby Ponder, Taylor Powell, Madison Rowland, Dakota Schudalla, Sydney Shannon, Danielle Toney, Madeline Webb, Nour Zeidan, Bachelor of Science; Azita Naderi, Reid Rogers, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Timothy Osteen, Master of Arts; Kimberly Perez, Master of Arts in Teaching; Tarcariyunn Caldwell, Emily Green, Mary Inman, Amita Patel, Elizabeth Robinson, Ashley Viviano, Stephanie Whitman, Master of Science in Nursing;
Boyce – Timothy Glass,Bachelor of General Studies; Sonya Hill, Lane Robinson, Julia Watson, Bachelor of Science; Kristen Ducote, Lisa Lee, Master of Science in Nursing; Kayla Tanner, Educational Specialist;
Breaux Bridge – Blanche Trahan, Associate of General Studies;
Broken Arrow, Oklahoma – Madeline Drake, Bachelor of Science;
Broussard – Matthew Buteau, Bachelor of Science;
Brownsboro, Texas – Brice Borgeson, Bachelor of Science;
Byram, Mississippi – Rachel Elkins, Master of Science;
Bunkie – Chelsea Villemarette, Associate of Science in Nursing;
Burleson, Texas – Addison Pellegrino, Bachelor of Music Education;
Calvin – Erin Price, Bachelor of Science;
Campbell – Caidon Campbell, Bachelor of Science;
Campti – LaTrice Telsee, Associate of General Studies, Damarte Fisher, Bachelor of Arts; Kortney Greer, Dorianna Telsee, Donta' Turner, Bachelor of Science
Canon City, Colorado, Kimberly Rupp, Bachelor of Science;
Carencro – Harold Williams, Bachelor of Arts, Britney Bonnet, Olivia Tolliver, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Cartagena, Colombia – Jair Morelos Castilla, Bachelor of Music; Hassik Vasquez Narvaez, Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Science; Daniel Racero Rocha, Bachelor of Science;
Castor – Hogan Nealy, Bachelor of General Studies;
Castor – Kaycee Collinsworth, Bachelor of General Studies;
Champaign, Illinois – Titi Joerres, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Charlotte, North Carolina – Alyssa Collins, Master of Arts;
Chauvin – Randy Savoie, Master of Arts;
Chicago, Illinois – Ona Giles, Bachelor of General Studies
Clarence – Malik Metoyer, Bachelor of General Studies;
Clayton – Glendalyn Boothe, Bachelor of Arts;
Clermont, Florida – Jacob Manning, Master of Science;
Colfax – Kaneedra Harrison, Associate of General Studies, Dalton Jones, Associate of Science; Alison Churchman, Bachelor of General Studies;
Colorado Springs, Colorado – Rossana Potempa, Bachelor of Arts;
Columbia – Tyler Duchesne, Bachelor of Applied Science;
Columbus, Georgia – Teresa Sandusky, Bachelor of Science;
Conroe, Texas – Zachary Krolczyk, Bachelor of Arts;
Converse – Wade Hicks, Associate of Science in Nursing; Ricki Sepulvado, Master of Arts; Dorothy McCrocklin, Master of Arts in Teaching; Ashley Asbell, Master of Education;
Cottonport – Zachary Gauthier, Bachelor of Science;
Coushatta – Destiney Coatney, Bachelor of Arts, Sydney Anderson, Emily King, William Lee, Aston Lester, Sh'Kea Sibley, Mikailah Smith, Caroline Wren, Bachelor of Science;
Covington – Kelsey Cassidy, Brian Pickett, Bachelor of Science; Leslie Hoffman, Master of Education;
Covington – Casey McKinnerney, Master of Music;
Dallas, Texas – Rose Obiora, Bachelor of Science;
Delhi – Jasmine Poe, Bachelor of Social Work
Denham Springs – Matthew Broussard, Associate of General Studies; Stephanie Ryals, Bachelor of General Studies; Jenson Wall, Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Music Education, Caitlyn Cutrer, Bachelor of Science; Emily Falcon, Master of Arts in Teaching;
DeQuincy – Valarie Clark, Casie Kellogg, Master of Science in Nursing
DeRidder – Taylor Gill, Associate of General Studies; Amie Ashworth, Brandy Bryant, Lauren Callis, Rebekah Frantz, Bobby Guichet, Lakaybra Purdy, Julie Ramos, Morgan Smith, Associate of Science in Nursing; John Ham, Bachelor of Arts; Eriq Carver, Karli Kennedy, Crystal Mccollough, Rebecca Richmond, Summer Thomas, Tyler Wright, Bachelor of Science, Kaylyn Cooley, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Shynikia Roberson, Bachelor of Social Work;
De Soto, Illinois – Jayci Deaton, Bachelor of Science;
Deville – Amber Kreideweis, Associate of Science in Nursing; Hannah Siebeneicher, Bachelor of Arts; Kealee Anderson,
Mikayla Brown, Amanda Slayter, Bachelor of Science; Susan Littleton, Master of Education;
Dodson – Melanie Thomas, Bachelor of Science;
Double Oak, Texas – Alexsis Cable, Master of Science;
Downsville – Abby Fordham, Bachelor of Applied Science;
Dubberly – Joni Nelson, Master of Art;
Edmond, Oklahoma -- Jayzen Boger, Payton Hartwick, Jiyoon Lee, Bachelor of Science;
Elizabeth -- Kolby Friday, Bachelor of Arts; Sadie Perkins, Bachelor of Science;
Elmer -- Brennan Mays, Bachelor of Science;
Euless, Texas -- Brooke Payton, Associate of General Studies;
Eunice -- Jeremy Ortego, Associate of General Studies; Mary Pitre, Bachelor of Applied Science;
FPO, AP, CA -- Amber Travis, Bachelor of Social Work;
Franklinton -- Douglas Goss, Associate of Science, Bachelor of Science;
Ferriday -- Shanequa Tyler, Associate of General Studies;
Florien -- Chelci Scott, Associate of Science in Nursing; Danielle Anthony, Associate of General Studies; Kristopher Dees, Tyler Johnson, Emma Ray, Kaitlin Sepulvado, Megan Wagley, Bachelor of Science; Amanda McFarlain, Master of Education;
Forest Hill -- Anna Doherty, Rachel Humphries, Bachelor of Science;
Forney, Texas -- Jared Walker, Bachelor of Music;
Fort Myers, Florida -- Andrea Smarsh, Bachelor of Social Work;
Fort Polk -- Jamie Curtis, Cynthia Schwartz, Associate of Science in Nursing; Leo Banaszak, Charlotte Rivara, Associate of General Studies; Jessica Ramirez, Shiela May Tabonares, Sasha Trevino, Bachelor of General Studies; Genesis Rondon Torres, Bachelor of Science;
Fort Worth, Texas -- Corban James, Bachelor of Science; Darius Williams, Master of Music;
Franklin -- Alison Guidroz, Bachelor of Science;
Fuquay Varina, North Carolina -- Craig Vickers, Bachelor of General Studies;
Garland, Texas -- Joseph Goodson, Bachelor of Science;
Gilbert -- Sarah Calhoun, Bachelor of General Studies;
Glenmora -- Eric Baker, Kristopher Devore, Bachelor of Science; Tiara Baker, Bachelor of Arts;
Gloster -- Caitlin Burford, Associate of Science in Nursing; Jennifer Simmons, Bachelor of Science;
Gonzales -- Keanna Bolding, Associate of General Studies; Rebecca Marchand, Bachelor of Music Education; Julie Breaux, Jordan Enloe, Bachelor of Science;
Grand Cane -- Nathan Graham, Associate of General Studies; Kayden Booker, Bachelor of General Studies; Catie Griffith, Master of Science in Nursing;
Greenwell Springs -- Katherine Langlois, Bachelor of Science;
Greenwood – Lyn Belida, Associate of Science in Nursing; Branden Savell, Bachelor of Science;
Gretna -- Janelle Montalvo, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Hallandale Beach, Florida -- Ralph Boereau Bachelor of Arts;
Hammond -- Angela Davis, Educational Specialist; Brittany Johnson, Master of Science in Nursing;
Hamtramck, Michigan -- Mary Cotter, Bachelor of Science;
Harrisonburg -- Brandi Bordelon, Master of Science in Nursing;
Harvey -- Tyrone Johnson, Associate of General Studies; Kelly Maldonado, Bachelor of Science;
Haughton -- Shakayla Bell, Bachelor of General Studies; Stephen Bundrick, Bachelor of Music Education; Bethanie Couch, Brittony Cole, Alexis Hoeltje, Angie Nguyen, Jamie Phillips, Licentra Randolph, Hannah Robertson, Logan Turner, Kacie Wilkinson, Dawn Young, Bachelor of Science; Amanda Hathorn, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Chelsea Dunlop, Keith Sellers, Master of Arts in Teaching; Jerry Williford, Master of Science in Nursing;
Henderson Texas -- John Floyd, Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Music of Education;
Hessmer – Aslyn Dennie, Associate of General Studies; Mckinley Greenhouse, Dana Lala Bachelor of General Studies; Daren Dauzat, Bachelor of Science;
Hornbeck – Tricia Ceballos, Associate of Science in Nursing; Sarah Ceballos, Bachelor of Science; Shaina Neal, Master of Arts;
Houma -- Kelsey Chauvin, Bachelor of Applied Science; Rhiannon Dean, Sarah Lajaunie, Bachelor of Science; Richard Jones, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Houston, Texas -- Oai Lee Huynh, Bachelor of Science; Jordan Rains, Master of Science;
Humble, Texas -- Toiquisha Johnson, Bachelor of General Studies;
Hyden, Kentucky -- Zachary Sparks, Master of Science;
Iota -- Katie Latiola, Bachelor of General Studies;
Iowa -- Marvette Williams, Bachelor of Arts;
Jefferson -- Ariann Knox, Master of Arts;
Jena -- Mercedes Farris, Bachelor of Science; Kathy Lambeth, Master of Science in Nursing;
Jennings -- Rachelle Edwards, Bachelor of Music Education; Destany Brown, Rachel Edwards, Lydia Williams, Bachelor of Science;
Jonesboro -- Destini Mathews, Bachelor of Science; Carson Robinson, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Jonesville – Rachel Powell, JaMarcus Wilkerson, Bachelor of Science; Cydnie Plaisance, Master of Science in Nursing;
Kinder –Kelsey Frank, Bachelor of Social Work;
Kansas City, Missouri – Myleesa France, Associate of General Studies;
Katy, Texas – Clayton Holgorsen, Bachelor of Science; Jennifer Weittenhiller, Master of Arts;
Keatchie -- Brittany Miller, Bachelor of Science;
Keithville -- Tabitha Boldings, Robert Hays, Associate of General Studies; Felicia Flint, Associate of Science in Nursing; Jeniffer Campbell, Bachelor of General Studies;
Keller, Texas -- Deby Woodard, Bachelor of Applied Science;
Kenner -- Willie Soniat, Bachelor of Arts;
Kentwood -- Kevin McDaniel, Master of Education;
Kerrville, Texas -- Kristy Harris, Bachelor of Arts;
Killeen, Texas -- Sara Bishop, Associate of Science in Nursing; Kierra Poole, Bachelor of Social Work;
Kinder -- Lacey Weldon, Associate of Science in Nursing; Jonathon Villareal, Bachelor of Science;
Lacombe -- Amy Schneider, Bachelor of General Studies;
Lafayette – Claire Broussard, Anthony Paris, Associate of General Studies; Ashanti Alfred, Jeffrey Blossom, Bachelor of Applied Science; Rachael Bryant, Bachelor of Music Education; Laci Bruno, Ashley Guidry, Hannah Travis, Bachelor of Science; Brandy Burrell, Megan Sistrunk, Master of Arts; Atia Garrett, Master of Education;
Laplace -- Tiffanie Bourgeois, Master of Science in Nursing;
Lake Arthur -- Tuesdi Stipek, Bachelor of General Studies; Nicole Andrews, Bachelor of Science;
Lake Charles -- Lynell Broussard, Ashlynn Smart, Associate of General Studies; Landon Dore, Ashtyn Hare, Richard Jimney, Rebekah Nicholas, Bachelor of Science; Jacqueline Clark, Master of Arts; Daren Reed, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Lake Providence -- Brandy Chapman, Lakarven Pitts, Bachelor of Science;
Lansing, Michigan – Angelica Ortega, Master of Arts;
Lauderhill, Florida -- Daeshon Gordon, Associate of General Studies; Tamara Style, Bachelor of Arts;
Lawtell -- Karoline Guidry, Bachelor of Science;
Lawton, Oklahoma -- Jennifer Davis, Master of Science in Nursing;
Leander -- Karissa Boswell, Bachelor of Science;
Lecompte -- Linzey Evans, Bachelor of Science; Ikeia Johnson, Bachelor of Social Work;
Leesville -- Diana Cassels, Jessica Herring, Leigha Jackson, Mahala Lewis, Shermeka Rogers, Danielle Smyth, Joyce Stevick, Associate of Science in Nursing; Cecilia Alfaya, Diana Cassels, Leigha Jackson, Julia Park, Krystal Todd, Associate of General Studies; Wendy Bartlett, Damion Brown, Raegan Dotson, Jessica Gray, Matthew Ward, Bachelor of Arts; Joseph Cryer, Britney Harvey, Bachelor of General Studies; Rachal Brown, Jonathan Bruce, Miranda Fulks, Payton Gordy, Sydnee Haag, Taylor Helton, Haley Hood, Karl Marzahl, Amy McKellar, Linsey Preddy, Heather Snell, Megan Tucker, Bachelor of Science; Sabrina Coffman, Kayla Wells, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Brittany French, Bachelor of Social Work; Samantha Thomas, Master of Science;
Lena -- Kardaria Lajaunie – Associate of General Studies;
Lewisville, Texas -- Jasmine Frazier, Bachelor of Arts; Erin Knox, Bachelor of Science; Venus Par, Bachelor of Science in Nursing;
Little Elm, Texas -- Jasmine Ealy, Bachelor of Arts;
Little Rock, Arkansas -- Whitney Jinks, Bachelor of Science;
Logansport -- Charles Mclintock, Bachelor of Science;
Longview, Texas – Kelsey Hall, Associate of General Studies; Kelli Hickerson, Bachelor of Arts;
Loranger -- Laurie Lassalle, Associate of General Studies;
Loreauville -- Tiffany Trahan, Bachelor of Science;
Luling -- Macie Barrios, Bachelor of Science;
Lumberton, Texas -- Joshua Terry, Bachelor of Science;
Machesney Park, Illinois – Alicia Teran, Bachelor of Science;
Madisonville – Bailey Garfield, Bachelor of Science;
Mandeville – Carrie Maxwell, Bachelor of Science;
Mangham – Rebekah Aultman, Bachelor of Arts;
Mansfield – Ladarius Ealy, Bachelor of General Studies; Whitney Jackson, Autumn Laffitte, Master of Science in Nursing;
Mansura – Magen Hegger, Bachelor of Science; Rebecca Holcomb, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Many – Maegan Burkett, Sydni Easley, Ashley Lafitte, Bachelor of General Studies; Heidi Knight, Bachelor of Science; Samantha Simmons, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Science; Krisha Williams, Bachelor of Science; Brittany Founds, Emmy Jeane, Valarie Williams, Master of Education;
Marble Falls, Texas – Sarah Lewis, Bachelor of Science;
Maringouin – Rineshia Adams, Bachelor of Science;
Marksville – Morgan Hughes, Associate of Science in Nursing; Tanner Nugent, Bachelor of Applied Science; Andre Boyer, Madeleine Morrow, Bachelor of Science; Jennifer Spivey Mayes, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Shelby Lemoine, Bachelor of Social Work;
Marrero – Ajeahnell Dempsey, Bachelor of Fine Arts; Luis Escobar, Bachelor of General Studies; Tara Brown, Bachelor of Science;
Marshall, Texas – Serdalyer Darden, Bachelor of Science;
Marthaville – Melinda Powell, Bachelor of General Studies; Dillon Hagan, Bachelor of Science; Daniel Rachal-Glaspill, Bachelor of Science;
Memphis, Tennessee – Tristan Joynes, Master of Science;
Meridian, Mississippi – Reed Michel, Bachelor of General Studies;
Metairie – Jaime Waguespack, Associate of General Studies; Christian Frost, Bachelor of Arts; Kathryn Bancroft, Anna Birbiglia, Cameron Duhe, Bachelor of Science;
Minden – Angelina Carlin, Associate of Science in Nursing; Asata Sylvas, Bachelor of General Studies; Amanda Rogers, Bachelor of Science; Special Crawford, Bachelor of Social Work; Shonesty Kinsey, Association of General Studies; Abby Greene, Bachelor of Science;
Minneapolis, Minnesota – Jenna Carlson, Bachelor of General Studies;
Mobile, Alabama – Major Deacon, Master of Science;
Monroe – Stephanie Elliott, Associate of General Studies; Jansen Chisley, Jaquita Davis, Aaron Hunt, Ashley Jackson Franklin, Ashley Murphy, Orlandan Williams, Bachelor of Science; Debra Coenen, Master of Science in Nursing;
Montegut – Megan Pellegrin, Bachelor of Science;
Monterey – Tara Dale, Master of Education;
Monterey, Tennessee – Roy Gentry, Bachelor of Science;
Montgomery – Heather Wehunt, Associate of General Studies; Miranda Bartlett, Bachelor of Science; Morgan Bartlet, Bachelor of Social Work;
Mooringsport – Bruce Schimmel, Bachelor of Science; Jo Anna Fisher, Bachelor of Social Work;
Morgan City – Jeremy Orgeron, Bachelor of Arts; Kelly Terrebonne, Master of Arts;
Moss Bluff – Bayleigh Smith, Bachelor of Science;
Mount Pleasant, South Carolina – William Martin, Associate of General Studies;
Mt. Hermon – Warren McFarlain, Bachelor of Science;
Murcia, Spain – Cristina Gonzalez Corchon, Bachelor of Science;
Natchitoches – Micion Aaron, Danielle Anthony, Aaron Berry, Santaurus Burr, Endesha Davis, Joises Florez-Perez, Courtnye Franklin, Eyvette Harris, Charizma Hill, Leigh Martin, Hannah Robertson, Tracy Wilridge, Richard Ziegler, Associate of General Studies; Paula Sanchez Luna, Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Science; Rachel Jeane, Ricky Lacour, Christopher Lewis, Ja’Lesia Mims, Kevin Price, Meghan Richard, Kayla Rockett, Jacob Ware, Bachelor of Arts; Robert Carrier, David Holmes, William Rogers, Taylor Rutledge, Jalon Sangster, Bachelor of General Studies; Luis Gallo Quintero, Aura Hernandez Canedo, Daniela Salas Ricardo, Jason Smith, Ricardo Ventura, Bachelor of Music; Jeremy Aaron, Kayla Arnold, Adam Barnes, Blake Bechtel, Terrius Bell, Keaton Booker, Brooks Bryan, John Byone, Dominitra Charles, Kaleb Chesser, Jessica Coleman, Haley Dahlhoff, Jacob Dahlhoff, Kara Davis, Logan DeOre, Chasity Dupree, Virginia Falgoust, Kaihe Fisher, Moises Florez-Perez, Luis Gallo Quintero, Haley Genovese, Laura Guzman Rodriguez, Thomas Hadzeriga, Hannah Haigh, Deshon Hayes, Aura Hernandez Cadedo, Saul Hernandez, Jasmyn Hunter, Hannah Jones, Kelsey Jordan, Lyndon Kneuppel, Colby Koontz, John Lindsay, Alexis Moses, Trevor O’Bannon, Anthony Pastorello, Jarrot Remo, Shelby Riedel, Taylor Robverts, Skyler Speer, Patrick Sprung, Cierra Stephens, April Trowbridge, Kaleb Usleton, Fierra Vaughn, Ricardo Ventura, Naloni Walker, Brianna Watermolen, Madysen Watts, Sarah Kay Whitehead, Bachelor of Science; Maria Rushing Bachelor of Social Work; Caron Coleman, Education Specialist; Amy Hooks, Master of Arts; Jeffrey Nieman, Steven Miette, Vashaun South, Master of Arts; Macy Coleman, Master of Arts in Teaching; Emilie King, Alexis Rice, Faith Stanfield, Master of Education; Kaitlin Champagne, Spencer Goodwin, Aaron Patrick, Kayla Velasquez, Master of Science; Susanna Squyres, Master of Science in Nursing; Kelsey Jordan, Bachelor of Science; Savannah Bynog, Associate of General Studies;
Natalbany – Shawanda Robinson, Bachelor of Arts;
Natchez – Courtney Sarpy, Associate of General Studies; Brandi Carpenter, Bachelor of Science;
Natchez, Mississippi – Victoria Bradford, Bachelor of Science;
New Iberia – Mia Bashay, Tara Bonvillain, Natalie Ortego, Bachelor of Science; Theodore Turluck, Master of Arts in Teaching;
New Orleans – Jaime Hendrickson, Diane Nguyen, Iceyuniek Oliney, Amy Thomas, Bachelor of Science; Sally Cragin, Master of Arts in Teaching; Allison Curtis, Master of Education; Frenisha Allen, Associate of General Studies; Jared West, Bachelor of Science;
New Roads – Landry Davis, Bachelor of Science; Sharon Dunnehoo, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Noble – Savannah Anderson, Shelby Etheridge, Thomas Rivers, Bachelor of General Studies;
North Richland Hills, Texas – Cody Germany, Gregory Germany, Bachelor of Science;
Northville, Michigan – Kelly Wright, Master of Science;
Oak Grove – Tonya Creech, Bachelor of Science; Heidi Stephens, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Oakdale – Kelli Morgan, Associate of General Studies; Katelyn Johnson, Kristy Lowe, James Obrien, Magan Soileau, Mary Wharton, Bachelor of Science; Courtney Thompson, Bachelor of Science in Nursing;
Oberlin – Deanna Villareal, Bachelor of Social Work; Jennifer Trombatore, Master of Science in Nursing;
Olla – Cierra Evans, Bachelor of Arts; Danielle Veuleman, Master of Education;
Opelousas – Jordan Brisco, Kayla Pitre, Bachelor of Science;
Otis – Sabrian Thiels, Bachelor of Science;
Palestine, Texas – Bethany Hubbard, Master of Science;
Paris, Texas – Zachary Hevron, Bachelor of Science;
Pearl River – Joseph Lagreco, Bachelor of General Studies;
Pelican – Justin Allen, Associate of General Studies;
Pineville – Sydney Duhon, Autumn McSwain, Stacey Ramsey, Associate of Science in Nursing; Jasmine Clark, James Wenzig, Associate of General Studies; Cedrick Lott, Bachelor of Arts; Taylor Campbell, Rodney Lonix, Bachelor of General Studies; Katlin Ernst, Hannah Pusateri, Micah St. Andre, David Veal, Emily Wiley, Bachelor of Science; Stacy York, Associate of Science in Nursing; Katie Rayburn, Master of Arts; Kenneth rushing, Master of Arts in Teaching; Mary Huff, Jennifer Kees, Elizabeth Wiggins, Master of Education; Wakanda Mason, Tatjana Mimes, Arwa Mohammed, Rebecca Sigler, Master of Science in Nursing;
Plain Dealing – Camille Watkins, Bachelor of General Studies; Nicholas Cason, Bachelor of Science; Cheryl Cook, Associate of Science in Nursing;
Plano, Texas – Asher Van Meter, Bachelor of Science;
Plaquemine – Kameron Landry, Bachelor of Science;
Plaucheville – Hailey Brouillette, Associate of Science in Nursing, Associate of General Studies; Matthew Armand, Bachelor of Music;
Pleasant Hill – Makenzi Patrick, Bachelor of Science;
Pollock – Kari Taffi, Bachelor of Arts;
Pollock, Texas – Katelyn Boles, Bachelor of Science;
Port Allen – Ishmael Lane, Bachelor of Arts;
Port Barre – Skylar Guidroz, Bachelor of Arts;
Prairieville – Hannah Beason, Dwight Robinette, Bachelor of Science; Melissa Bailey, Master of Education;
Princeton – Amie Bowen, Tricia Malone, Associate of Science in Nursing; Jacorious Jeter, Bachelor of Arts; Micah Larkins, Ariell Shield, Bachelor of Science;
Provencal – Taylor Craft, Bailey Scarbrough, Bachelor of Science;
Quitman – Kristopher Cash, Master of Education;
Raceland – Melissa Duet, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Rayville --- Emily Rawls, Bachelor of Science; Melissa Duckworth, Master of Arts in Teaching; Mallory Middleton, Master of Science in Nursing;
Reeves – Dominique Aymond, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Richfield, Minnesota – Leah Barnes, Bachelr of Science;
Richmond, Texas – Ebonie Francis, Bachelor of Science;
Richton, Mississippi – Kalen Meggs, Bachelor of Arts;
River Ridge – Taylor Young, Bachelor of Science;
Roanoke – Leah Moore, Master of Science in Nursing;
Robeline – Patricia Goodwin, Laura Olguin, Associate of Science in Nursing; Angela Mitchell, Bachelor of Arts; Kacy Morace, Bachelor of General Studies; Arin Ammons, Bergen Oge, Bachelor of Science;
Rochester, New York – Jackie Fritz, Master of Science;
Rosharon, Texas – Whitney Washington, Bachelor of Science;
Ruston – Ragen Hanson, Associate of General Studies; Heather Beckwith, Phynecha Richard, Bachelor of Science; Meghan Kavanaugh, Elyse Mills, Rachel Moore, Master of Science in Nursing;
St. Francisville – Ryan Reed, Bachelor of Science; Diana Weller, Master of Arts in Teaching;
St. Martinville – Malik Anthony, Blake Blanchard, Destiny Simon, Bachelor of Arts;
Salado, Texas – Reagan Rogers, Bachelor of Science;
Salem, Oregon – Stephen Kim, Master of Science;
Saline – Aaron Savell, Bachelor of Science;
San Antonio – Anthony Renteria, Bachelor of Science;
San Pedro Sula, Honduras – Jonathan Andino Matrid, Bachelor of Music;
Scott – Tayla Soileau, Bachelor of Science; Hollie Touchet, Master of Science in Nursing;
Seabrook, Texas – Amy Whitecotton, Bachelor of Science;
Shreveport – Ashley Brokenberry, Associate of General Studies; Tiffany Allen, Loree Daws, Jessica Hill, Jolene Mateo, Tara McMullen-Turner, Joseph Michael, Robert Mottet, Kaitlin Rawlinson, Misty Roe, Ivana Skocibusic, Tonya Steele, Pamela Stroughter, Laken Thompson, Associate of Science in Nursing; Jessica Adams, Azhani Bennett, Divina Ann Cinco, Angela Coleman, Jasmine Crowe, Tabitha Dabney, Luke Hill, RaTonya Howard, Jared Husley, Qunika Kinsey, Jacinta Lewis, Paula Monsanto, Sarah Starr-Nech, Cory Thomas, Ly-Shaquala Williams, Angela Wills, Associate of General Studies; Jessica Adams, Jessica Bourne, Bachelor of Applied Science; Reagan Escuyde, Chatoria Pace, Katherine Sawyer, Jade Williams, Bachelor of Arts; Mackita Brown, Zandrai Douglas, Jazzmine Jackson, Bachelor of General Studies; Yasmeen Bader, Xavier Daughtery, Rebekah Evans, Samantha Freeman, Jamie French, Elaina Guerror, Caitlin Johnson, Damion Johnson, Drake Johnson, Nathan Jones, William Mahoney, Kelly Moody, Michael Phelps, Taylor Poleman, Shelby Reddy, Kristen Reutlinger, Angelica Satcher, Catherine Shaw, Jackiesha Simmons, Richard Sloan, Curt Story, Rodnisha Terry, Gabrielle Thomas, Kayla Waller, Dillion Wilkerson, Lana Williams, Shamolia William, Bachelor of Science; Shequita Brown, Sarah Starr-Neth, DeAndre Stevenson, Joyce Turner, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Rakeisha Brown, Bachelor of Social Work; Shamela Freeman, Eiyana Middleton, Tiffany Sandifer, Master of Arts; Sadie Pearson, Master of Arts in Teaching; Cara Lamb, Master of Music; Nicholas Campbell, Master of Science; Elizabeth Bright, Julie Brown, Kayla Bryant, Shimekia Evans, Dannette Furgerson, Elizabeth Hunter, Brandi Jaison, Ema-Chanel Johnson, Lori Phillips, Christina Simpkins, Sara Vergis, Hannah Williams, Master of Science in Nursing; Victoria Bradford, Associate of General Studies; Savonya Robinson, Bachelor of Arts; Breyonna Thompson, Bachelor of Science; Shreka Ellis, Bachelor of Science in Nursing; Diedra Emerson, Associate of General Studies; Alexis Mason, Bachelor of Science;
Silverlake, Washington – Veronica Umiker, Associate of General Studies;
Simpson -- David Marquis, Bachelor of Science;
Slagle – Rachel Holten, Bachelor of Science in Nursing;
Slidell – Erica Brumfield, Associate of General Studies; Jacqueline Coleman, Theresa Sharp, Bachelor of Music Education; Claire Harvey, Ariel Johnson, Bachelor of Science; Kelly McNeese, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Spring, Texas – Victoria Harris, Bachelor of Science; Anastasia DiFrancesco, Master of Science;
Springhill – Reagan Tilley, Associate of Science in Nursing;
Sterlington – Jody Boatright, Master of Arts in Teaching; Kaitlyn Johnston, Jessica Smith, Master of Science in Nursing;
Stonewall – Derrick Hamon, Associate of General Studies; Chase Slater, Bachelor of Arts; Alexa Barron, Mallory McConathy, Heather Schiller, Bachelor of Science; Kristi Bass, Mastet of Arts in Teaching; Shelby Bickham, Melanie Matthews, Master of Education;
Sulphur – Derek Henry, Bachelor of Arts; Elisabeth Perez, Bachelor of Science; Kayla Gaspard, Master of Science in Nursing;
Thibodaux -- Terrance Johnson, Bachelor of Arts; Katelyn DeLaune, Samantha Eroche, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Tomball, Texas -- Aliona Salter, Bachelor of Science;
Toms River, New Jersey -- Jacqueline Manza, Bachelor of Science;
Trout -- Amber Morphis, Kaitlyn Roark, Associate of Science in Nursing; Andrea Walters, Bachelor of Science;
Tullos -- Danielle McCartney-Brown, Master of Arts in Teaching;
Ventress -- Racheal Gaudé, Bachelor of Fine Arts;
Vidalia – Christopher Wells, Associate of Science in Nursing; Charles Johnson, Evandria King, Bachelor of Science; Savannah Anderson, Master of Arts in Teaching; Dawn Moss, Summer Powell, Jenny Watson, Master of Science in Nursing;
Vinton -- Toby Stanley, Madison Zaunbrecher, Bachelor of Science; Kelsie Rayon, Bachelor of Social Work;
Vivian -- Cynthia Dixon, Associate of Science in Nursing; Chase Lewis, Associate Degree, Bachelor of Science;
Walker -- David Kolb, Bachelor of Arts; Johnny Brister, Brittany Marten, Bachelor of Science;
Washington -- Halie Briley, Bachelor of Science;
Wayneville, Missouri -- Molly Fields, Bachelor of General Studies;
Welsh -- Jordan Durio, Bachelor of Arts; Katherine Salassi, Bachelor of Social Work;
West Monroe -- Allison Freeman, Associate Degree, Bachelor of Science; Jaimie Hankins, Master of Education; Marbie Becton, Nicholas Fisher, Lacey Kennon, Brooke Sutton, Jennifer Williams, Master of Science in Nursing;
Whitehouse, Texas -- Jackson Allen, Bachelor of Arts;
Wilmington, Delaware -- Amy Bourett, Associate of Science in Nursing;
Wilmington, North Carolina -- Noelle Cox, Associate of General Studies;
Winnfield -- Shannon Drake, Melissa Mixon, Zachary Perot, Associate of General Studies; Lori Spangler, Bachelor of General Studies; Fabian Correa Guette, Alonso Restrepo Cardozo, Bachelor of Music, Bachelor of Science; Bachelor of Music; Jermesia Anderson, Derek Ball, John Collins, Polina Mutel, Rebecca Reine, Anna Sibley, Bachelor of Science;
Winnipeg, Manitoba -- Tyra Duma, Bachelor of Science;
Winston Salem, North Carolina -- Ulric Aristide, Master of Arts;
Woodworth -- Kaitlyn Albert, Associate of Science in Nursing, Associate of General Studies;
Youngsville -- Noel Bourgeois, Brian Horton, Bachelor of Applied Science; Brandon Granger, Bachelor of Arts;
Ypsilanti, Michigan -- Anthony Enos, Bachelor of Science;
Zachary – Nekia Richardson, Associate of General Studies, Darryl Anderson, Bachelor of Fine Arts, Brooke Melancon, Master of Science in Nursing;
Zwolle – Holly Laroux, Bachelor of Applied Science, Samantha Rivers, Bachelor of General Studies; Rylea Sepulvado, Bachelor of Science.
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‘You saw this pick cheered among the business community’: What Neil Gorsuch’s Supreme Court nod could mean for the business world
Neil Gorsuch, the 10th Circuit judge nominated by President Donald Trump to fill the vacant seat on the US Supreme Court, is widely expected to favor big business should he be confirmed by the Senate.
“The [Chief Justice John] Roberts court has been the most pro-business Supreme Court in the history of the court,” Michael Burg, founder of the Denver-based law firm Burg, Simpson, Eldredge, Hersh & Jardine, told Business Insider.
“When I look at Judge Gorsuch, do I think he is pro-business? The answer is yes,” he added. “Does he match up with Justice Scalia in terms of his view of the Constitution and that you have to go back and look at the Constitution in terms of how the framers and the founders meant it to be in 1789? Yes.”
Carter Phillips, a Washington, DC, lawyer who has argued before the Supreme Court more than any other attorney in private practice, said a Gorsuch appointment to the court would, in all likelihood, keep with the “status quo.”
“It will be pretty much how the court was prior to Justice Scalia’s death,” he said, later adding, “[It] will largely be the path the court will continue [on] in a way that is fundamentally different than the way it would’ve if Judge [Merrick] Garland’s nomination had not died on the vine the way it did.”
But, both said they believe the door is open to some change.
The expectation Gorsuch will rule on the side of big business has been drawn from the opinions he authored while serving on the 10th Circuit court’s bench. In that role, he was not able to rule on many big business-related cases, due to the court’s locale.
As a result, how he would rule on several major business issues almost certain to hit the court within the next few years is not fully known.
“I don’t view Judge Gorsuch as a clone of Justice Scalia,” Phillips said. “I’m sure he may have places where he differences with [Scalia] on particular nuances.”
One of the biggest upcoming areas where Gorsuch could potentially make a difference is in his interpretation of what’s known as “Chevron deference,” named for a 1984 case in which the court ruled the interpretation of a government agency should be deferred to when a law or statute it administers is under question. It quite predictably has a major affect on the regulatory state, and critics say it provides such agencies with vast power not permitted to other sectors of the government.
It’s one of several business-related areas where those watching the court have a sense of where Gorsuch would come down, as Gorsuch is an avowed textualist and originalist.
In a concurring opinion last August, Gorsuch said “Chevron deference” allows the executive branch to “swallow huge amounts of power” from the judicial and legislative branches, which “seems more than a little difficult to square with the Constitution of the framers’ design,” as CNN reported. Scalia had spoken out in favor of the Chevron ruling.
Phillips said to watch for cases related to “Chevron deference” should Gorsuch be confirmed.
“That issue, the extent to which the agency interprets its own authority and can kind of bootstrap itself into kind of expanding its decision making beyond what you would think the statute would allow, and whether the courts have to divert that and say ‘no, no, no, you can’t go that far’ is a huge issue,” Phillips said. “But again, that will probably take two or three cases before it’s settled down and it may not be settled down, because it’s a 5-4 court and it’s still not clear how far any of the five conservatives would be willing to go on Chevron.”
He added that, while “a lot of people” will say Gorsuch’s view is “a big change from Scalia,” the late justice was beginning to move in the direction of Gorsuch in his later decisions on the matter.
“I know it wasn’t [Scalia’s] perspective once upon a time, but I do think there’s been a fair amount of movement,” he said. “Obviously, Justice [Clarence] Thomas staked out a really aggressive opinion on that two terms ago. And, I don’t see a majority of the justices adopting his view, but I certainly think it will be a big ticket item. That goes beyond the business community, because obviously agencies are ubiquitous at this point. Agencies can decide thousands and thousands of things.”
Another business-related issue Gorsuch has staked out a position on is class actions. As was reported in The Wall Street Journal, a December ruling Gorsuch was a part of “made it easier for defendant companies to transfer class actions from state to federal court in some instances.”
Phillips said he expects “another round of class action issues” to come around to the Supreme Court soon, adding Gorsuch as “expressed some misgivings about more modern interpretations” on those issues.
The Journal also reported that Gorsuch’s history shows a mixed record on cases related to labor and employment, while he has ruled in business’s favor on a case related to arbitration.
In terms of what areas are less of a sure thing with Gorsuch, Phillips said he’s curious to see where the judge stands on due process limits on punitive damages, the dormant commerce clause, and intellectual property rights.
On the controversial 2010 Citizens United decision related to campaign finance, which ruled corporations and labor unions could donate freely to politicians as people would, Burg said Gorsuch’s stance would likely be “consistent with the ruling that would already come down” should a case related to it come before the court
“But I would have some reservation,” he said. “Because my experience with him is that he’s not a justice who says this is the result I want, now let me justify it.”
Still, the consensus is Gorsuch will rule alongside his fellow conservative justices on the bench in areas where it is not as well known where he will come down.
Travis Lenkner, a managing director at Burford Capital who once clerked for Justice Anthony Kennedy, told Business Insider that’s why he believed “you saw this pick cheered among the business community.”
“This is not swapping like for like,” he said. “But Judge Gorsuch is easily someone who can swap in and occupy the seat that Justice Scalia occupied and do so ably and not really change the mix of outlooks or votes that’s been present on the court for more than a decade now.”
SEE ALSO: Mark Cuban digs in on combating Trump and tells Democrats they are ‘blowing it’
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