2:30 LRN Newscast

The 16-count indictment against Attorney General Liz Murrill has been put on hold less than 24 hours after it was first passed down by an Orleans Parish Grand Jury. Loyola University Law Professor Dane Ciolino says the Louisiana Supreme Court granted Murrill’s motion for a stay of the indictment.

Cut 28 (13) “…district court.”

Murrill faces eight counts of both of public intimidation and malfeasance in office after she sent letters to New Orleans elected officials that said they could lose their jobs if they continued actions that went against a new state law.

That law consolidated the Orleans Parish civil and criminal courts and established one clerk of both. Local officials tried holding a special election to fill the position, but the act already placed the prior clerk of civil court, Chelsey Richard Napoleon, in the position. The state’s highest court sided with Murrill and blocked that election.

Murrill called the grand jury investigation a “political witch hunt.”

Law enforcement is urging you to be responsible this Fourth of July weekend if you’ve had too much to drink. Another “Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over” campaign is underway and runs through Monday. Greg Fischer with the Louisiana Highway Safety Commission says law enforcement is out in full force looking for impaired drivers.

Cut 10 (14) “…for impaired drivers.”

Construction is underway on a new 43-million-dollar Health Education Campus at LSU-Alexandria. Dr. Ryan Riche (REE-shay), the dean of the College of Health and Human Services at LSU-A, says the new campus will support about 700 additional healthcare positions throughout central Louisiana while providing a huge economic boost to the region.

Cut 15 (06) “…annual economic activity.”

The 78-thousand-square-foot facility will include active-learning classrooms and advanced simulation laboratories.