Cosmetology Board’s Pitre calls for rescinding of “threatening” two-instructor letter sent to schools, and we have a feeling Nelda Dural and others would echo his sentiments.

Nelda Dural, former owner of the New Iberia Cosmetology Institute, shares her concerns about the Louisiana State Board of Cosmetology (LSBC) with former Speaker of the Louisiana House of Representatives (now Gov. Landry’s Commissioner of Administration), Taylor Barras.  Dural was specifically concerned about the LSBC’s arbitrary and selective enforcement of a 2010 statute calling for a cosmetology school to have a minimum of two (2) instructors regardless of class size.  The LSBC relied extensively upon that two-instructor requirement to close Dural’s school in 2016.

In our ongoing series of matters discussed at the May 4, 2026 LSBC meeting, a week after the meeting, on May 11, 2026, we published this feature in which Board Member Jean Pitre conveyed a sense of emergency and near panic that the addition of an “earnings accountability” provision of President Trump’s  One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA, enacted 2025), if not removed, may cause “up to 92 percent” of for-profit cosmetology schools across the nation to close.

That was not the only matter Pitre voiced frustration over, to wit:

He also voiced concern over a “threatening” letter sent out by the Board to the schools it regulates and called for the letter to be rescinded; furthermore, his action, in the form of a Motion, created discord among some other Board Members, most especially with Member C. Nicole Gaudin:

5/4/26:  Pitre voices his sentiments that the letter sent out, which he formally read into the record, was “threatening,” and he sought for the Board to rescind the letter.

Pitre repeatedly stated that the rule calls for “one teacher per twenty (20) students.”  We are about to demonstrate in a very authoritative manner that Pitre’s statement is NOT (repeat NOT) historically how the “two-instructor rule” has been viewed by LSBC Legal Counsel Sheri Morris, nor is that how the rule has been enforced.  One of the benefits of following the LSBC as long as we have is that it enables us to know more than many Board Members, and this is one such instance of us having superior knowledge on the two-instructor rule and its parameters and (sometimes selective) enforcement

The LSBC has enforced a statutory two-instructor requirement for cosmetology schools which was enacted in 2010. This rule, unlike what Pitre states in the above video, mandates a minimum of two instructors regardless of how small a school’s enrollment may be!  That 2010 statute replaced a prior threshold which indeed did function as Pitre indicated in the above video.  

We have extensively reported upon this two-instructor requirement as a key factor in actions against smaller or public-school programs, which appear to us to be nothing short of direct efforts to limit competition for larger, established cosmetology schools operated by some board members and/or their associates.

Key Cases:

  • Nelda Dural Case (circa 2015–2016): Dural, a former cosmetology instructor and school operator in New Iberia, faced enforcement leading to a Cease and Desist order and revocation of her school license. The LSBC cited noncompliance with the two-instructor rule. Critics, and that included Dural, noted that the Board had granted an exception to the very same rule the LSBC was utilizing to shut her school down for another school (L.B. Landry/Walker High School) just mere weeks earlier, in its April 2015 minutes. Dural incurred substantial costs (which were assessed against her as expenses the Board incurred in its relentless efforts to shut her school down), including nearly $43,000–$56,000 in administrative expenses, fines, and legal fees, ultimately leading her to have little choice but to file for personal bankruptcy. The case involved multi-day hearings which we attended, filmed, and bluntly described as a “kangaroo court;” furthermore, it was apparent to us from that episode that the LSBC is fraught with instances of selective enforcement, blackballing by LSBC staff, and outright cronyism.
  • Raynetta Frazier Case (2016): A public-school cosmetology instructor faced similar pressure to comply with the two-instructor mandate, which threatened closure of her lower-cost program. Frazier pleaded with the Board to avoid shutdown. Unlike Dural’s case, her program did manage to continue operating notwithstanding the LSBC’s full-court press to shut her public school down over failing to have two instructors in her classroom.

Our Broader Context:

Our coverage of the two-instructor rule and its (often selective) enforcement has, in our firm opinion, contributed to higher barriers for affordable training options (e.g., Dural’s $8,000 tuition versus $20,000+ at larger schools reliant on federal grants).  We have been very blunt in our assessment and ongoing critiques of the LSBC entailing its selective application and/or enforcement of statutes, protection of larger operators, and impacts on small businesses and aspiring cosmetologists. While Board attorney Sheri Morris has emphasized the statutory nature of the two-instructor requirement, she has failed miserably to explain why, as the attorney, she permitted one or more exceptions to be granted during Board meeting(s) for which she served as legal counsel for the Board.  Morris is smart enough to know that a statute is a statute (and it was Morris herself, which we have captured on video, who emphasized that the minimum two-instructor requirement is a statute)!  During the ongoing Dural matter, Sound Off Louisiana’s Burns admonished Morris and the then-Members of the Board that a statute is a statute and that the Board had no authority whatsoever to grant “exceptions” as it had done, even documenting the granting of at least one “exception” in its own minutes (which we’ll publish shortly).

Okay.  That is the quick overview of the two-instructor matter but, as everyone knows, this is a video blog, and the beauty of videos is that their content is irrefutable and they are forever.  So, with that, here are links to features, links to documents, and video clips to substantiate what we have indicated above:

  1. Short video clip of a portion of an administrative hearing on October 3, 2016 (the hearing actually lasted several days, and we filmed it all) showing just how emphatic the LSBC and its attorney, Sheri Morris, were about enforcing the two-instructor rule as a means to shut Dural’s School down:

As Morris and the LSBC Members are emphatic that they are going to enforce the two-instructor mandate against Dural, Dural challenges Morris and the Board on why they permitted an exception in April of 2015 to that same two-instructor requirement.

2.  Here is the excerpt from the April 13, 2015 LSBC Minutes memorializing the exception Dural references.  From those minutes:

L.B. LandrylWalker High School
Addition of an Instructor

Lora Moreau made the motion to accept LB Landry to use only one instructor as long as a substitute is available on standby provided that there are no more than 20 students in one class and they must send a letter from the substitute teacher to the Board. Michelle Hays seconded, motion carried by unanimous voice vote.

Dural openly asks Morris near the end of the video, regarding the Board using a very different standard for her vis-a-vis the school referenced above, “What’s really going on in here?”

Well, let us explain it in very simple terms.  Dural was charging a mere $8,000 in tuition for her school, and the larger schools simply were not going to tolerate any undercutting of their pricing in such an authoritative manner.

The LSBC has an extensive (and we do mean extensive) past history of targeting schools for closure simply because they impede market share for larger schools which often have direct representation on the LSBC.  Want another prime example?  How about this October 1, 2018 Sound Off Louisiana feature in which the owners of the now-defunct D’Jay’s Cosmetology School in Baton Rouge flatly stated on camera that former long-time LSBC Chairman Francis Hand sought to drive their school right out of business (which, as we state above is “now defunct”).  From that feature:

Regarding the issue of the timing of when the alleged harassment began, as the above video depicts, Ed and Paul contend there was a direct correlation to the timing of them moving their school, which used to be located on Government Street in Baton Rouge, to its present location which, according to Mapquest, is a mere 8.8 miles and estimated 16-minute drive from former long-time LSBC Chairman Francis Hand’s school.  Hand remains as an LSBC member today (the only one other than Jill Hebert to survive the transition from Jindal to Edwards).  Are the sudden “problems” Paul references above about trivial issues such as too wide of grout separation between tiles coincidental to that move?  We’ll let our subscribers be the judge.

3. Here is the assessment of costs and fees totaling $43,000 (not including the $5,000 fine) against Dural which forced her to file for personal bankruptcy. We would point out that the $39,000 in legal fees does not even include subsequent legal fees incurred as Dural asked for Judicial Review of the Board’s ruling in the 19th JDC.  When tallied up, the costs which the LSBC spent merely shutting down Dural would have paid for the new roof recently installed by the Board (after it made grossly exaggerated Legislative testimony of the costs of such a new roof as it pled for a fee increase).

4.  During the same exact timeframe that the LSBC was pushing so hard to close Dural’s school, it also put on the full-court press to close another school offering students instruction at no cost, and that was Raynetta Frazier’s public school in New Orleans. Here is video of those efforts:

6/13/16 LSBC Meeting (four months before Dural’s administrative hearing to shut her school down), Raynetta Frazier addresses the Board about its efforts to shut her school down over the two-instructor rule.

So, we have very little doubt that smaller schools contacted Pitre and voiced their concerns over the letter that was sent out.  Furthermore, given the past illustrations outlined above, we can very easily see how they viewed such a letter as a threat.

Additionally, being formerly associated with a very large school, Paul Mitchell, we have little doubt that concerns exist regarding the present leadership of the LSBC siding with big schools at small schools’ expense as has so extensively been done in the past.

Further, we openly question the appropriateness of a secretive, behind-the-scenes efforts of one person, LSBC Chairman Jennifer Reed, simply hand picking former Executive Director Steve Young’s replacement and then just saying, “I’m asking the Board Members to go along with my recommendation.”  We are becoming increasingly uneasy about the way this selection transpired (with it even having to be added to an agenda rather than properly disclosed beforehand for public input), so we can only imagine that much more so being the case with small school owners!

Here’s the bottom line:  From everything we have been told, the cosmetology school business is dog-eat-dog and, even when everything may appear rosy and glowing on the outside, as evidenced by our October 5, 2021 feature wherein then-LSBC Chairman Edwin Neill III had to literally sue his financial savior and accused him of launching a “hostile takeover” of his operations at a time of extreme financial distress, looks can very often be deceiving.  Who knows exactly why Erin Marceaux may have even been tempted to depart Paul Mitchell School to become the LSBC’s Executive Director?

We know that Pitre expressed near panic at the thought of Federal funds being eliminated and many schools (perhaps his?) being forced to possibly close.  Maybe Pitre and others now have a better appreciation for how Dural and others who faced such closure felt as they saw their passions and livelihoods being vigorously pursued for closure on what we bluntly assess as selective enforcement entailing a “kangaroo court administrative hearing!”  Further, knowing of such practices may very well explain why existing smaller school owners would indeed view the letter Pitre references as a “threat.”  We would if we were in their shoes!

Lastly, we committed to periodically publishing a table showing the LSBC’s financial condition.  Here is the latest iteration of the table:

Date of LSBC StatementsSummation: UNRESTRICTED Cash & Income (Loss) Since FYE
August 25, 2025 (Income Statement); September 30, 2025 (Balance Sheet).$61,000 net income; $1.275 million cash on hand.
December 30, 2025 (both balance sheet and income statement)($87,000) net loss; $1.291 million cash on hand.
4/12/26 (P & L) and 4/14/26 (balance sheet)$86,000 net profit; $1.427 million cash on hand.

We look forward to the next meeting on June 8, 2026!

 

 

Evangelist Donnie Swaggart says he’s “glad” about Sen. Cassidy being “thumped big time,” says he’s not “big fans” of the two runoff contenders but since Trump “knows her,” he’ll go along with Trump.

Evangelist Donnie Swaggart prepares to express joy that incumbent U. S. Senator Bill Cassidy got “thumped big time,” and, without even naming her by name, states that, “since Trump knows her, I’ll vote for her.”  Swaggart made his declaration during morning church services of Sunday, May 17, 2026, the day after Cassidy’s defeat (or “thumping”).  [Note:  Photo published in conformity with Fair Use.]

Our site visitors will recall our March 22, 2026 feature in which we stated that, “arguably” the most Trump-obsessed pastor in America, Evangelist Donnie Swaggart, in a way only he could manage to do, “endorsed” fellow Preacher and State Senator Rick Edmonds for what was then a rapidly-approaching election for the Fifth Congressional District from Louisiana.

As everyone knows, once the U. S. Supreme Court made its ruling declaring that the U. S. Sixth Congressional District, specifically drawn and advanced AND DEFENDED at the Court by Gov. Landry AND AG Liz Murrill to get Cleo Fields back in Congress, was a racially gerrymandered map, Gov. Landry issued an Executive Order cancelling the U. S. Congressional elections in Louisiana.

That action on Landry’s part has absolutely infuriated black voters across Louisiana, to wit:

5/14/26 NOLA article:  New Orleans area residents line up to support recall effort against Gov. Jeff Landry.  From that article:

A line of residents snaked across three rooms Wednesday inside the tight corners of Gwangi & Hollywood Community Center in Algiers.

But the final straw, residents say, was the governor’s decision last week to cancel to postpone the ongoing U.S. House primary election to make way for a new congressional map that might eradicate two majority-Black districts.

Per state law, organizers have 180 days from their filing date to collect signatures from 20% of registered Louisiana voters – some 500,000 people — on a petition asking the state to call a referendum on Landry as governor. If enough people sign, the state would be forced to put the issue on a ballot.

The chances of a recall are slim…….“They’re going to have to raise a lot of money, and they’ll have to run it like a traditional political campaign to even have a shot,” said Robert Collins, a political analyst and Dillard University professor.

Even if they fail, their efforts could drive more turnout in the upcoming U.S. Senate election and other elections. Turnout numbers statewide have persistently been low, he added.

To Collins’ last point, we can’t even begin to count the number of Tik Tok videos we’ve seen stating that voters (black voters in particular) need to view all five of the Constitutional Amendments which were on yesterday’s ballot no differently than if each said, “Keep Jeff Landry as Governor,” and vote on each amendment as if answering that question.

The results are unmistakable:  Amendment One (remove some civil service protections) failed by a margin of 78-22; Amendment Two (permit City of St. George to form its own school system) failed by a margin of 64-36 (with it failing in East Baton Rouge Parish [passage was necessary in addition to statewide passage] by an even larger margin of 69-31); Amendment Three (“permanent” teacher pay raise via debt paydown and interest savings) failed by a margin of 58-42; Amendment Four (repeal of business inventory tax) failed by a margin of 66-34; and Amendment Five (raise mandatory retirement age for judges from 70 to 75) failed by a martin of 77-23.

Hence, there can be no debate whatsoever that dramatic voter turnout by black voters vis-à-vis the 2023 election for Governor (which we assert on this link referenced above was suppressed via a joint agreement between Fields and Landry) was dramatically higher, and we have little doubt whatsoever that the trend will continue through Landry’s re-election efforts should he decide he wishes to pursue such a re-election in the face of such massive distrust and disdain which exists regarding him throughout the State of Louisiana.  It’s a decision only he can make, but as our good friend Rev. Freddie Lee Phillips is fond of saying, “It don’t look good for the home team.”

As far as the “big feature” race on yesterday’s ballot, the Republican Primary of the U. S. Senate race, Congresswoman Julia Letlow led the pack by 45-28-25 over former Congressman, former Trump Assistant Chief of Staff, and current Louisiana Treasurer John Fleming, and incumbent U. S. Senator Bill Cassidy, respectively.

At today’s (Sunday, March 17, 2026) service at Family Worship Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Evangelist Donnie Swaggart provided his take on yesterday’s Senate election in Louisiana:

5/17/26:  Swaggart states he’s “glad” that Cassidy was “thumped big time” and states he’s “not big fans” of either of the runoff opponents (Letlow and Fleming) but that, since “Trump knows her,” he’ll be voting for Letlow.  [Note:  Video published in conformity with Fair Use.]

We’ll find out on June 27, 2026 whether the Republican nominee for U. S. Senate is Letlow or Fleming but, if many other voters share Swaggart’s sentiments, it would appear that, with the main goal accomplished (i.e. ousting Cassidy), there may he a high level of indifference for whomever that nominee may turn out to be.

Former LSP Sgt. Huey Galmiche alleges that, after Walmart skip scanning accusations totaling $171.30, LSP coerced his retirement under duress while having him handcuffed to a desk.

Former LSP Sgt. Huey Galmiche provides highly detailed account of his arrest on Wal Mart skip scanning allegations and his subsequent treatment at the hands of the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s Office and LSP officials.

On October 2, 2024, then-LSP Sergeant Huey Galmiche was arrested amid allegations he had engaged in “skip scanning,” which is essentially failing to scan items in a self-checkout isle and placing them on into bags and exiting the store, which in this case was a Walmart in Covington.

According to WAFB, as the station posted today, LSP Col. Robert Hodges is, according to his “inner circle,” planning to step down in August because he is interested in running for St. Tammany Parish Sheriff or seeking appointment as the next U.S. Marshal for the Eastern District of Louisiana, which includes the New Orleans area.

Our site visitors may recall us first publishing on December 16, 2025 that Hodges was “in the running” for that U. S. Marshal position; however, based on some of the most absolutely reliable sources which we have within LSP, we also stated in this February 7, 2026 feature that Hodges himself had conveyed on or around December 17, 2025 (the day after us publishing that he was in the running) to his underlings that he was “not” in the running for that Marshal position.  From the just-linked feature as it referenced video discussion between Burns and former Ascension Parish Sheriff Captain C. J. Matthews:

As Burns states in the video above, Hodges himself made it known on or around the next day, December 17, 2025, that he was no longer a candidate for that U. S. Marshal position.

Of course, with President Trump (who will ultimately make the appointment), anyone can be “out” of the running at 9:00 a.m. in the morning and then be the “lead contender” for the position by 3 p.m. that same day, so who knows regarding whether Hodges is a viable contender for that Marshal position or not.

Irrespective of whether Hodges ends up stepping down in August as WAFB is reporting, the voters in St. Tammany Parish may wish to take into account what one former LSP Sergeant, Huey Galmiche, had to say regarding the circumstances of his retirement in the aftermath of his arrest for the charges of skip scanning referenced above.  Let’s take a look:

5/13/26:  Galmiche provides extensive details surrounding his October 2, 2024 arrest on charges of skip scanning at a Covington Wal Mart and the subsequent handling of the matter by St. Tammany Parish Sheriff’s officials and LSP officials.

In connection with the video above, Galmiche provided this official statement regarding the entire episode as well as a copy of this medical diagnosis of the condition he asserts led to the inadvertent failure to scan the items.

Galmiche’s statement is extremely detailed and fairly lengthy, so we took the time to prepare an executive summary of its contents, and here is that executive summary:

Executive Summary: Huey Galmiche’s Public Statement of Facts

Overview Huey Galmiche, a 26-year-5-month veteran Louisiana State Police Sergeant with an exemplary patrol record, issued a detailed public statement documenting his involuntary retirement on October 2, 2024. He asserts the retirement was coerced while in police custody, amid shoplifting accusations he attributes entirely to severe side effects from a statin medication change.

Key Events

  • Medication Change (June 27, 2024): His cardiologist switched him from atorvastatin 40 mg to high-intensity rosuvastatin 20 mg to further lower already optimal LDL cholesterol (85 mg/dL).
  • Cognitive/Behavioral Decline (July–September 2024): Family observed progressive forgetfulness, confusion, agitation, insomnia (2–3 hours/night), zoning out, misplacing items, hand tremors, and poor judgment. A safety audit score dropped sharply from 91–99% to 72%.
  • Arrest & Custody (Sept 30–Oct 2, 2024): Accused of “skip-scanning” ~13 low-value items ($171.30 total) at Walmart over six dates while on duty. During interrogation at the Sheriff’s Office, he was Mirandized, shown evidence, and explained his cognitive issues.
  • Coerced Retirement: Moved to an unrecorded interview room, handcuffed to a desk, and pressured by Louisiana State Police personnel. They used his son (then a cadet graduating days later) as leverage, warning of felony charges (initially six counts each of malfeasance and shoplifting) and departmental ruin. He signed immediate retirement documents in under one minute without reading glasses, explanation, or counsel. A second letter was signed in a jail cell.

Medical Diagnosis Neurological evaluation (October 9, 2024, and January 6, 2025) diagnosed statin-induced encephalopathy / toxic metabolic encephalopathy. Symptoms resolved after discontinuing rosuvastatin. A subsequent cardiologist confirmed no medical need for the dosage change or switch. Galmiche also noted pre-existing high-frequency hearing loss, impairing self-checkout beeps.

Procedural & Financial Issues

  • Retirement documents were pre-prepared and improperly obtained; policies require member-initiated requests and formal meetings with Retirement System executives.
  • Loss of DROP option and ~$9,000/year in annual retirement benefits.
  • Administrative leave notice delivered 16 days late.
  • No copies of signed documents initially provided; tax forms contained errors (e.g., filed as single with no dependents).

Resolution Galmiche accepted a pre-trial diversion agreement with no bill of information filed, maintaining full innocence: the incidents were unintentional due to medication-induced impairment. He emphasizes he is “not a thief,” spent nearly $12,000 legitimately at the same store in the prior year, and seeks to prevent similar experiences for others.

The statement, compiled contemporaneously, highlights alleged due-process violations, exploitation of his medical condition, and pressure tactics by law enforcement and retirement system representatives.

So, this episode just may give St. Tammany Parish voters pause if in fact Hodges does opt to pursue becoming the next Sheriff of St. Tammany Parish.  As for his suitability for being the next U. S. Marshal, that would be up to President Donald Trump, but it’s very fortunate for Hodges that such an appointment does not hinge upon a favorable recommendation from us at Sound Off Louisiana!