http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001051261

'Times-Picayune' Announces New Home - in Houma - and Reports Looting by
Cops and Firemen

By E&P Staff

Published: August 30, 2005 6:25 PM ET


NEW YORK The battered Times-Picayune of New Orleans, which evacuated its
downtown office this afternoon, posted a simple note to it staffers on its
Web site late this afternoon: "We are working at the Houma Courier for a
few days. If you have news, call 985-850-1182. We plan to set up a longer
term newsroom in Baton Rouge. Call the Advocate to find out where we are."

Meanwhile, two staffers published a story on one of the Web site's blogs,
reporting on the looting in the city - joined in by cops and firemen who
had been called to the scene.

Other reports, and TV footage, have shown brazen looting at many sites
around the city. One compared the current climate in the increasingly
desperate city to "Sodom and Gomorrah."

One looter shot a local police officer, but Tuesday night word came that
the officer was expected to survive.

At the Times-Picayune Web site, Mike Perlstein and Brian Thevenot wrote
that at a Wal-Mart on Tchoupitoulas Street, mass looting broke out after a
giveaway of supplies was announced at that location. While some did indeed
carry away food and essentials, others "cleared out jewelry racks and
carted out computers, TVs, and appliances on handtrucks. Some officers
joined in taking whatever they could, including one New Orleans cop who
loaded a shopping cart with a compact computer and a 27-inch flat screen
television.

"Throughout the store and parking lot, looters pushed carts and loaded
trucks and vans alongside officers. One man said police directed him to
Wal-Mart from Robert's Grocery, where a similar scene was taking place. A
crowd in the electronics section said one officer broke the glass DVD case
so people wouldn't cut themselves.

"The police got all the best stuff. They're crookeder than us," one man
said. Most officers, though, simply stood by powerless against the tide of
law breakers.

One veteran officer said, "It's like this everywhere in the city. This
tiny number of cops can't do anything about this. It's wide open."

Some groups, the reporters wrote, "organized themselves into assembly
lines to more efficiently cart off goods. Inside the store, one woman was
stocking up on make-up. She said she took comfort in watching police load
up their own carts. 'It must be legal,' she said. 'The police are here
taking stuff, too.'"


E&P Staff ([EMAIL PROTECTED])



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