XPost: or.politics, ca.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
http://nytimes.com
Mayor LaToya Cantrell of New Orleans Is Indicted on Corruption Charges
Rick Rojas, Pooja Salhotra
Aug. 15, 2025
Mayor LaToya Cantrell of New Orleans was charged on Friday with going to criminal lengths to carry out and cover up a romantic relationship with a
city police officer who had been assigned to protect her, prosecutors
said.
The indictment emerged from a lengthy federal investigation into
corruption that has cast a shadow over Ms. Cantrell's second and final
term as mayor, which ends in January. She and her former bodyguard,
Jeffrey Vappie, face a combined 18 felony counts, including making false statements, obstruction of justice and conspiracy.
The indictment "reflects the prosecution of two public officials alleged
to have engaged in a yearslong continuing fraud scheme that used public
money for personal ends," Michael M. Simpson, the acting U.S. attorney for
the Eastern District of Louisiana, said in a news conference on Friday afternoon.
"They perpetuated that fraud scheme," he added, "by taking steps to keep individuals silent, to deceive subordinates and to obstruct investigations
into their relationship, including one conducted by a federal grand jury."
Ms. Cantrell's lawyer, Edward Castaing, confirmed the indictment but
declined to address its specifics, saying in a text message, "It will take
me too much time to study the indictment and make an appropriate comment."
In a statement on Friday evening, the mayor's office said it would not
comment until Mr. Castaing had finished "thoroughly reviewing" the
indictment. But Ms. Cantrell has in the past aggressively denied having a romantic relationship with Mr. Vappie.
Mr. Vappie's lawyer, Harry Rosenberg, also declined to comment on Friday afternoon.
Ms. Cantrell has been dogged throughout much of her second term by
persistent claims that she has abused the privileges of her office - and
by rampant speculation about her relationship with Mr. Vappie.
Mr. Vappie, 52, was already charged over a year ago, when prosecutors
accused him of defrauding taxpayers when he was paid more than $7,000 for appearing to be on duty while he was spending personal time with a public official. The indictment identified the official as the mayor of New
Orleans. Mr. Vappie pleaded not guilty. In divorce proceedings, Mr.
Vappie's wife accused him of having an affair with someone whose initials
were "L.C."
A local television station, WWL-TV, had staked out a city-owned apartment
in the French Quarter, documenting the hours that Ms. Cantrell spent there
with Mr. Vappie. The apartment had historically been reserved for official business but Ms. Cantrell, 53, treated it as a personal residence.
The charges against Ms. Cantrell add fresh turbulence to what has been a
busy and complicated year for New Orleans that began with a deadly
terrorist attack on New Year's Day. The city also successfully hosted a
Super Bowl for the first time in a decade, and has experienced a
continuing decline in its murder rate. The case against Ms. Cantrell, a Democrat, also comes deep into the campaign to replace her, with a mayoral election scheduled for October.
The indictment unfurls how the relationship between Ms. Cantrell and Mr.
Vappie developed, about five months after Mr. Vappie, a longtime officer
with New Orleans Police Department, was assigned to the team protecting
the mayor in May 2021.
They exchanged thousands of messages on WhatsApp, according to the
indictment. They described the affection they had for each other, sent photographs and shared mundane details of their days. In one message, Mr. Vappie sent Ms. Cantrell a photo showing a pen in his hand and a drink in
front of him. "I'm writing in the book as I partake in an Old fashion," he said.
The two of them traveled to Los Angeles, Orlando and Scotland, among other destinations, all while Mr. Vappie was also technically on duty as Ms. Cantrell's bodyguard. His travel cost the city more than $70,000 in
airfare, meals and salary, prosecutors said.
During a business trip to San Francisco, Mr. Vappie and Ms. Cantrell
decided to stay an extra day to visit wineries in Napa Valley, according
to the indictment. Mr. Vappie was paid for working 15 hours, it says, on a
day that he was wine tasting.
In private text messages, Ms. Cantrell described these trips as "times
when we are truly alone" and what "spoils me the most."
As the relationship began attracting scrutiny, prosecutors contend that
Ms. Cantrell abused her influence and resorted to illegal measures to
obfuscate efforts to investigate it.
Mr. Vappie was reassigned by his police superiors after the TV reports
showing their time alone in the French Quarter apartment. But Ms. Cantrell directed the interim police chief at the time to reinstate Mr. Vappie as
her bodyguard. That chief was later passed over for the permanent job.
When someone took photos of the two of them, dining and drinking outdoors, while Mr. Vappie claimed to be on duty, Ms. Cantrell sought out private information about the person, filed a police report and sought a
restraining order against the person, prosecutors said.
To hide the relationship, prosecutors said, the pair deleted evidence,
lied to F.B.I. agents and gave a grand jury an affidavit signed under oath
that included false statements. They are also accused of lying and
withholding information from a grand jury.
Despite Louisiana's colorful past of malfeasance at virtually every level
of government, Ms. Cantrell is just the second mayor in recent New Orleans history to be charged with engaging in corruption while in office.
Former Mayor C. Ray Nagin, who attracted both international recognition
and scorn for his leadership after Hurricane Katrina, was charged in 2013
with 21 counts that included conspiracy, bribery and money laundering for
his part in a sprawling plot of kickbacks and pay-for-play schemes. He was convicted and spent years in prison and under house arrest.
The charges against Ms. Cantrell, in many ways, represent the culmination
of the turmoil that has come to define much of her tenure.
Ms. Cantrell, who moved to New Orleans in 1990 for college, led a
nonprofit overseeing the redevelopment of her Uptown neighborhood after Hurricane Katrina. She then served on the City Council before becoming the first Black woman to lead the majority Black city in 2018.
Her approach struck some as curt and even abrasive, particularly toward powerful figures in the city. But she won many over as she eagerly engaged
with residents who felt their neighborhoods had been neglected. Her steely response to the coronavirus pandemic as Mardi Gras became a superspreader
event in 2020 further improved her reputation.
But perceptions of the mayor began to turn after she was re-elected in
2021.
First, New Orleans faced a magnified version of the woes that afflicted
many American cities during the pandemic: The city's murder rate soared to become the nation's highest. Morale within the Police Department sagged
and its ranks thinned. Many in the city grew increasingly exasperated with runaway utility bills, streets with crumbling pavement and boil-water
notices that became almost routine.
At the same time, Ms. Cantrell was being scrutinized over how she spent taxpayer money, used city resources and carried out her work. The
circumstances prompted an unsuccessful recall effort to push her from
office.
The pressure on Ms. Cantrell - and the months of conjecture about whether
she would be face criminal charges - intensified as others in her orbit
were ensnared in the sprawling federal investigation, including a local businessman accused of perpetrating a bribery scheme.
Prosecutors said the businessman, Randy Farrell, had given gifts to Ms. Cantrell, including New Orleans Saints tickets worth thousands of dollars
and an iPhone. He is accused of trying to interfere in a city
investigation into one of his businesses. He has denied any wrongdoing, as
has Ms. Cantrell.
In recent months, Ms. Cantrell has had diminished visibility. She has
abandoned regular news conferences. And she has ceded some of the
spotlight to Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, and other officials at
moments when the city has drawn outsize national interest, including after
the New Year's Day attack in which an armed man plowed a truck into a
Bourbon Street crowd, killing over a dozen people.
Rick Rojas is the Atlanta bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of
the South.
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