I would be lying if I said I never imagined myself on the business end of a gun. Southeast Louisiana has always been a violent place. The Dueling Oaks inside New Orleans’ City Park got that moniker honestly as it was the meeting place for the well-heeled to “resolve” their disputes with pistols. In modern times, our society’s unwillingness to rein in the unprecedented proliferation of firearms among civilians, combined with a decadeslong failure to address intergenerational poverty, trauma and lack of opportunity, creates a perfect storm for violence to proliferate.
My experience being carjacked has gotten so much attention because I am the district attorney in Orleans Parish, and I’ve advocated for policies aimed at accuracy and equity in our criminal justice system.
No one is immune to this American pandemic of violence. And on the evening of Oct. 17, when two people with guns approached me outside my car as my elderly mother sat inside, she and I joined the ranks of violent crime victims.
Many others in New Orleans have been carjacked. Take 73-year-old Linda Frickey, a beautiful soul who lost her life for not moving as fast as the carjackers desired. But my experience being carjacked has gotten so much attention because I am the district attorney in Orleans Parish; and during my campaign, and after, I’ve advocated for policies aimed at fair and humane treatment and accuracy and equity in our criminal justice system. I have done so because I believe these policies will make our system better and our community safer.
A few people have publicly gloated about me, the “progressive” DA, being carjacked. One far-right blog argued that, somehow, I contributed to my victimization, and my mother’s, because there’s a “D” next to my name on the ballot.
Americans love to pick sides and wear jerseys. We define ourselves by the petty things we believe distinguish us, rather than cleaving to those principles that unite us. We all want to be safe. Republicans and Democrats, traditionalists and progressives, conservatives and liberals, Black people and white people, rich and poor, all know that murder, rape and armed robbery are scourges.
I still firmly believe that the law and the legal process should be vehicles for change; forces that can uplift communities, address the root causes of crime and remove those who are harming our communities. I have not faltered in those convictions because I was carjacked.
I was focused on my elderly mother. I stood there as an easy target; but the fear that they would hurt her overpowered me.
In that heart-pounding moment as the carjackers accosted me and my eyes trained to the guns being pointed at my head, neither my political leanings nor my elected office could shield me from the raw fear and vulnerability of being a victim. My thoughts were racing during the commission of the crime, but I was focused on my elderly mother. I stood there as an easy target; but the fear that they would hurt her overpowered me.
Seeing my mother’s fear as she witnessed me — her only son — held at gunpoint still haunts me. And though she remains disquieted by the incident, her astonishing resilience and grace are humbling. We are on a journey of healing together, and neither one of us in any of the moments since that night has felt that an unfair or rigged criminal legal system would assist that healing, or that it would have prevented our ordeal.
There’s a phrase that’s often bandied about that says “a conservative is a liberal who got mugged.” This proposition is almost as dangerously polarizing as it is witty. It falsely presumes that Americans are more at odds than they are aligned as it relates to violent crime. We all want accountability and swift, fair punishment for those crimes.
Also, carjackers indiscriminately target victims without regard for their political ideologies. Typically, folks who live in the same marginalized communities as the offenders suffer the most from crime, but their victimization garners far less media attention.
The adage also grossly oversimplifies the complexity of political ideology and our basic human survival instinct; and it assumes that a terrible experience necessarily alters a person’s moral compass.
It hasn’t for me.
We know crime isn’t just a legal matter; it’s a social and communal issue that we must address as a society. Data shows it’s symptomatic of larger issues that cannot be remedied through punitive measures alone.
I understand “progressive” to mean more accurate, effective, strategic, focused and fair prosecutions, while committing to crime prevention by meaningfully intervening and investing in people.
As a district attorney and, before then, as a city councilman in New Orleans, I have seen the importance of balance in our collective approach to public safety. Policing and prosecution are vital, but they’re poor substitutes for early intervention for people living in abject poverty and who are beset by violence, mental health problems and substance abuse. I understand “progressive” to mean making more accurate, effective, strategic, focused and fair prosecutions, while committing to crime prevention by meaningfully intervening and investing in people.









