Jessel Ourso
Jessel Mitchell Ourso, Sr. | |
---|---|
Sheriff of Iberville Parish, Louisiana | |
In office May 1, 1964 (suspended 1968-1972) – August 28, 1978 | |
Preceded by | Charles A. Griffon, Jr. |
Succeeded by | Freddie H. Pitre |
Personal details | |
Born | Plaquemine Iberville Parish Louisiana | March 28, 1932
Died | August 28, 1978 Houston, Texas | (aged 46)
Resting place | Grace Memorial Park in Plaquemine |
Nationality | American |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Eula May Ourso |
Children | Jessel Mitchell "Mitch" Ourso, Jr. Blane Michael Ourso |
Parent(s) | Rudolph Vectorenu Ourso Ida Mae Acostaand Ourso |
Occupation | Law-enforcement officer |
Military service | |
Branch/service | United States Army |
Battles/wars | Korean War |
Jessel Mitchell Ourso, Sr. (March 28, 1932 – August 28, 1978),[1] was from 1964 to 1968 and from 1972 until his death in office, a popular, colorful Democratic sheriff of Iberville Parish, located near the capital city of Baton Rouge in South Louisiana. He is thus far the youngest person elected sheriff in Louisiana.
Background
Ourso was the youngest of eleven children born to a Cajun couple, Rudolph and Ida Ourso of Plaquemine, Louisiana, the Iberville parish seat. He was a boxer at Plaquemine Senior High School, as were his friends and later political allies, state representative and then Lieutenant Governor Robert "Bobby" Freeman, school superintendent Sam Distefano, and District Attorney Sam Cashio. After high school graduation, Ourso served in the United States Army from 1952 to 1954, including fifteen months in combat in the Korean War. All seven of his brothers engaged in military service, a point which he emphasized in his political races.[2]
Ourso was sometimes called "The Black Stallion", the name of the family trucking company.[3][4] Ourso and his wife, the former Eula Mae Leblanc (1933-1996),[5] had six children, Jessel M. Ourso, Jr. (born 1953), Blane Michael Ourso (born 1955),[6] Vesta Ourso Falcon, Jessica A. Ourso (born 1958), Lisa Jo Ourso (born 1959), and Shannon Paul Ourso (born 1964).[2]
Political life
Ourso worked for the Baton Rouge municipal police department and the Louisiana State Police before he was elected Iberville Parish sheriff at the age of thirty-one.[4] He unseated the 16-year incumbent, Charles A. Griffon, Jr., of Plaquemine, the paternal grandfather of the statewide radio talk show host, Moon Griffon of Monroe in northeastern Louisiana. Ourso claimed that he had won the Democratic primary election held on December 7, 1963, because he led by a plurality. A third candidate who had withdrawn from the race still received enough scattering of votes to prevent an Ourso majority. Louisiana Attorney General Jack P. F. Gremillion ruled that the votes for the withdrawn candidate still counted for purposes of determining if a candidate had a primary majority. Louisiana State District Judge G. R. Kearney ruled that the third candidate's votes would still be counted and that the runoff election between Ouro and Griffon must proceed on January 11, 1964, along with the gubernatorial contest between the successful John McKeithen and former New Orleans Mayor DeLesseps Story Morrison.[7]
As sheriff, Ourso established the Iberville Parish "Junior Deputy" and prison work-release programs. He organized a sheriff's flotilla to cover swamplands and waterways. He introduced the psychological stress evaluator in the investigation of crimes. He established the first ambulance service in Iberville Parish and was the first Iberville Parish sheriff to use a helicopter. He built a firing range for deputies and opened it to the public. Ourso established sheriff's sub-stations with deputies on duty around the clock. He constructed a new $2 million jail, completed in 1977, the year before his death.[2]
Despite his accomplishments, Ourso is also remembered for many controversies. The Louisiana Legislative Auditor accused him of failure to account for funds received from construction and engineering firms as payment of guard and security services that the sheriff's department had provided to the companies. Then state Attorney General Gremillion charged Ourso with ninety-six allegations of wrongdoing. Governor McKeithen suspended Ourso from office and refused his signature to the commission for Ourso to take office for his second term in the summer of 1968. From 1968 to 1971, Ourso fought federal charges of extortion and thirty-three state criminal allegations.[2] He was either acquitted or benefited from hung juries in all of the cases.[1]
Ouro was elected sheriff again in 1971 with the slogan that U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona had employed in the 1964 U.S. presidential election: "In Your Heart, You Know He's Right." While continuing as sheriff, Ourso in 1972 was elected to the nonpartisan position of delegate to the 1973 Louisiana Constitutional Convention.[2] Others elected to the convention were future Governor Buddy Roemer and subsequent Louisiana Secretary of State James H. "Jim" Brown.
On November 1, 1975, at the age of forty-three, Ourso defeated five challengers to win his last abbreviated term as sheriff in the first-ever nonpartisan blanket primary held in Louisiana.[2]
Legacy
Known for his public speaking, Ourso was described by Gary J. Hebert, the late publisher of the Post/South newspaper in Plaquemine, as "unequaled in color, startling in analogies, disarmingly devious in approach, and at times, just downright funny to the point of tears.”[2]
Ourso died in Houston, Texas, at the age of forty-six. According to the former Iberville South,[8] four thousand mourners visited the funeral home where Ourso's body lay in state, two thousand came to St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church for the funeral mass, hundreds of others lined the route of the funeral procession, and eight hundred witnessed the burial at Grace Memorial Park in Plaquemine.[2] Ourso was succeeded by his chief criminal deputy, Freddie H. Pitre (1929-2002), the sheriff from 1978 to 2000.[9]
Ourso's older son, Jessel Mitchell Ourso, Jr., known as Mitch Ourso, is the first and still serving President of Iberville Parish, having been initially elected to a two-year term in 1997.[3] Mitch Ourso said that his mother had asked all of her children to avoid politics, and he did so until a year after her death when he "still rode my dad's political coattails into office as parish president. He was one popular politician in Iberville Parish."[4]
In 2009, Ourso was inducted posthumously into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield. Only four other sheriffs have been so designated, Cat Doucet, Charles Fuselier, Leonard R. "Pop" Hataway, and Harry Lee.[4] In 2010, he was inducted into the Louisiana Justice Hall of Fame by the Louisiana State Penitentiary Museum Foundation.[2]
References
- ^ a b "Jessel M. Ourso, Sr". findagrave. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Diedre Cruse, Sheriff Jessel Ourso named to Louisiana Justice Hall of Fame, July 28, 2010". postsouth.com. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
- ^ a b "J. Mitchell Ourso, Jr". ibervilleparish.com. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
- ^ a b c d "James Ronald Skains, Political "Hall" honors eight, 2009". The Piney Woods Journal. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
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(help) - ^ "Social Security Death Master List". ssdmf.info. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
- ^ Coincidentally, Sheriff Charles A. Griffon, Jr., had a grandson named "Blain Michael" (Moon Griffon), and Sheriff Jessel Ourso's second son is named "Blane Michael".
- ^ Lake Charles American Press, December 19, 1963, p. 23
- ^ The Iberville South and the Plaquemine Post/South merged in 1982.
- ^ "Notes for Freddie Pitre". homepage.ntlworld.com. Retrieved October 5, 2013.