Stoehr earns CUSA Coach of the Year honors; four Techsters earn honors

by Malcolm Butler

Brooke Stoehr earned the Conference USA Coach of the Year Award announced by the league office on Monday while four Louisiana Tech players received all-conference accolades. 

After guiding Louisiana Tech to its first regular season conference title in 15 years, Stoehr was honored by a panel of league head coaches, SIDs, and media members.

It shouldn’t come as a surprise. 

Not only did Tech win the title, the Lady Techsters ran away with it. 

Seventeen straight CUSA wins, the longest streak in 25 years.

The 5-game margin in the win column over the runner-up (FIU) tied the largest margin of games in the history of Conference USA. 

Tech posted a perfect 9-0 record on the road in league games. Undefeated. No other team was better than 6-3 (FIU and Jacksonville State, who by the way, Tech defeated on their home floors). 

Twelve of the 17 wins came by double digits. Tech’s margin of victory was over 15 points a game.

But Stoehr is the first one to point to the fact that it was her players that did the work, night in and night out, home and away. 

Paris Bradley earned first team honors, while Jianna Morris and Jordan Marshall were named second team all-league. Alexis Weaver was named honorable mention. 

But no specialty awards for a team of players that ran away with a regular season league title was the surprise. 

Player of the Year? Defensive Player of the Year? Freshman of the Year? Newcomer of the Year? Sixth Player of the Year? 

Tech went 0-for the lot of them. 

To put this into historical context, the previous five years the league champion has never failed to walk away with at least one superlative award winner for a player. And most of those years the title race was much closer (outside of MTSU winning by 5 games in 2023-24; that year the Blue Raiders had both the Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year).

This year, Tech clinched it with two weeks remaining. 

Since the 2013-14 season when Louisiana Tech joined the league, this is only the third time the regular season champion hasn’t won at least one player specific specialty award (2017 WKU, 2018 UAB). And both of those years, WKU and UAB at least was rewarded with two first team all-conference honors. This year, Tech had just one (Paris Bradley).

And Tech had plenty of top-notch candidates. 

Last year’s Freshman of the Year and this year’s Preseason Player of the Year Paris Bradley was one of only two players in CUSA to rank in the top 15 in scoring, assists and steals. She also ranked in the top 25 in rebounding. Bradley averaged 14.4 points (No. 5), 3.2 assists (No. 7), and 1.9 steals (No. 14) a contest. And for good measure, she pulled down 5.2 rebounds a game (No. 25). 

Unselfish. Versatile. Talented. Best player on the best team. 

How about Jianna Morris for Defensive Player of the Year? She held Missouri State’s Kaemyn Bekemeier who led CUSA in scoring (17.5 ppg) to a grand total of 14 points in two games. That’s 7.0 points a game.

Morris also got the assignment on FIU’s Parris Atkins, who ranks No. 3 in the league in scoring at 17 points a game. Atkins totaled 24 points and committed 10 turnovers in two games. That’s 12.0 points per contest, well under her average.

That’s four games against two of the top three scorers in CUSA, who averaged just 9.5 points a game, just over half of their average. And in those four games, Morris played 147 of 160 possible minutes. 

To make matters more perplexing, not only did Morris not get Defensive Player of the Year, but she wasn’t even voted to the league’s 5-person All-Defensive Team. 

Let’s move on to Kaleigh Thompson for 6th Player of the Year. Take away two games in which Thompson didn’t score (she played a total of 27 minutes and took a total of 3 shots in those two games), she averaged right below 9.0 points and 4.3 points a contest in league-only games coming off the bench. 

She is one of the toughest match-ups in the league with her size, ball-handling ability, quickness and ability to do so many of the little things that win games. 

And what about that lack of representation on the all-Defensive Team, made up of the five “best” defenders in the league. 

Louisiana Tech ranked No. 1 as a team in fewest points allowed per game at only 57.7 in league-only games. It ranked No. 3 in turnovers forced per game and No. 3 in opponent 3-point field goal percentage (even after UTEP went nuclear Saturday night when it hit a program record 14 vs. Tech). 

The Lady Techsters held their opponent to 60 points or less 13 times. So surely they deserved at least one player on that team. Jianna Morris, perhaps?

At the end of the day, as Tech prepares to open the CUSA Tournament Wednesday in Huntsville, Alabama, the only hardware this team is concerned with is the CUSA Tournament Championship trophy. 

And the league coaches, SIDs, and media just gave a group that didn’t need extra motivation … exactly that. 


Three Dunkin’ Dogs earn postseason awards

DJ Dudley

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

Louisiana Tech’s DJ Dudley, AJ Bates, and Melian Martinez earned Conference USA postseason honors, the league office announced on Monday.

Dudley was voted Third Team All-Conference USA, while Bates received Honorable Mention All-CUSA and Martinez was named to the CUSA All-Defensive Team.

Dudley has been the Bulldogs’ top scoring option throughout the season, averaging a team-best 14.1 points per game. The sharpshooter also anchored the team’s perimeter attack, knocking down 57 three-pointers at a 39.0 percent clip while adding 2.9 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 0.9 steals per contest.

The junior has led LA Tech in scoring a team-high 13 times and has reached double figures in 21 games, including eight 20-point performances – seven of which came during conference play. During one stretch of league action, Dudley scored 17 or more points in seven straight games.

He also delivered several clutch moments this season, making the game-winning basket in four contests, including conference victories over Delaware, Middle Tennessee, and Missouri State. Dudley’s season high came against Missouri State when he poured in 27 points on 10-of-19 shooting. During conference play, he averaged 15.5 points per game, ranking 13th in CUSA.

Bates, the Bulldogs’ floor general, earned honorable mention recognition after averaging 11.2 points per game, second most on the team, while also serving as the team’s primary playmaker.

The guard is the only Bulldog to start all 31 games this season and leads the team with 5.9 assists per game, a mark that ranks 30th nationally. His 182 total assists this season rank as the 10th most in LA Tech single-season history, and he recorded at least five assists in 20 games. Bates also produced three double-doubles during the campaign.

One of his most notable performances came against Jacksonville State when he dished out a career-high 15 assists, the most ever by a Bulldog against a CUSA opponent and tied for the second most in program history.

Bates also averaged 2.8 rebounds and 1.1 steals per game, scoring in double figures 17 times, including four 20-point games. He led the Bulldogs in scoring eight times, highlighted by a career-high 34-point performance in LA Tech’s upset win over first-place Liberty. In that game, Bates shot 13-of-23 from the field and 6-of-11 from three-point range.

Martinez anchored the Bulldogs’ defense and earned a spot on the CUSA All-Defensive Team after leading the conference in both blocks per game (1.81) and total blocks (49). His shot-blocking presence also ranks 38th nationally in blocks per game and 58th in total blocks.

The center has recorded at least three blocks in 10 games this season and averaged 2.21 blocks per game during conference play, the top mark in the league.

Martinez’s season highlight came against Missouri State when he swatted a career-high seven shots. He is also on the verge of a milestone, needing just one more block to reach 50 for the season, which would make him the ninth Bulldog in program history to reach that mark in a single season.

Martinez has been a key piece of a Louisiana Tech defense that ranks among the top 10 in the nation in both scoring defense and field goal percentage defense this season.

Sixteen Bulldogs have now garnered 26 All-CUSA honors since joining the league in 2013-14, the second most in the league during this span. Meanwhile, Martinez became the ninth Bulldog to be named to the CUSA All-Defensive Team, the most of any conference team over the last 13 years. LA Tech has had at least one player make the All-Defensive Team in 10 of the 13 seasons.

CONFERENCE USA POSTSEASON AWARDS
Player of the Year
Zach Cleveland, Liberty

Defensive Player of the Year
Kashie Natt, Sam Houston

Newcomer of the Year
Mostapha El Moutaouakkil, Jacksonville State

Freshman of the Year
Christian Bliss, Delaware

Sixth Player of the Year
Jacob Walker, Sam Houston

Gene Bartow Co-Coaches of the Year
Ritchie McKay, Liberty
Chris Mudge, Sam Houston

All-CUSA First Team
Mostapha El Moutaouakkil, Jacksonville State
RJ Johnson, Kennesaw State
Zach Cleveland, Liberty
Brett Decker Jr., Liberty
Teagan Moore, WKU

All-CUSA Second Team
Christian Bliss, Delaware
Corey Stephenson, FIU
Keith Palek III, Missouri State
Jemel Jones, New Mexico State
Po’Boigh King, Sam Houston

All-CUSA Third Team
Kaden Metheny, Liberty
DJ Dudley, Louisiana Tech
Torey Alston, Middle Tennessee
Michael Osei-Bonsu, Missouri State
Kashie Natt, Sam Houston

All-CUSA Honorable Mention
Justyn Fernandez, Delaware
AC Bryant, Jacksonville State
Colin Porter, Liberty
AJ Bates, Louisiana Tech
Kamari Lands, Middle Tennessee
Jacob Walker, Sam Houston
Elijah Jones, UTEP
Kaseem Watson, UTEP
Jamal West Jr., UTEP
Grant Newell, WKU

CUSA All-Defensive Team
Eric Dibami, FIU
Braedan Lue, Kennesaw State
JJ Harper, Liberty
Melian Martinez, Louisiana Tech
Kashie Natt, Sam Houston

CUSA All-Freshman Team
Christian Bliss, Delaware
Eric Dibami, FIU
Trey Simpson, Kennesaw State
Jacob Walker, Sam Houston
Armelo Boone, WKU


Bulldog diamond teams host games tonight

Photo by Josh McDaniel

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

Bulldog Baseball

Louisiana Tech is set to host the Lamar Cardinals at JC Love Field at Pat Patterson Park tonight at 6 p.m. CT.

The contest can be seen on ESPN+.

The Diamond ‘Dogs (10-7) are coming off a series win over South Alabama, securing the final two games of the series after dropping Friday’s opener. Hudson Rowan and Brooks Roberson both earned the win in each of their starts over the weekend, while Riley Fisher earned his third save as a Bulldog and Thomas Allen picked up his first collegiate save.

Trey Hawsey hit homers in Saturday’s and Sunday’s games, marking the fourth time in his career to hit a homer in consecutive games. Zeb Ruddell snapped a seven-game cold spell of not recording a hit with a double and a go-ahead two-run homer in Saturday’s win.

After dropping Friday’s game by a score of 9-3, the ‘Dogs outscored the Jaguars 12-3 through the remaining 18 innings of the weekend.

Colby Lunsford still sits among the top 10 in CUSA with a .683 slugging percentage and a 1.127 OPS, along with 17 runs, 20 hits and nine doubles. Hawsey and Sebastian Mexico are also among the top 10 each with 20 base hits, while Hawsey is tied for the fifth-most homers with five.

The Cardinals (9-7) enter Tuesday’s contest coming off a series loss in Southland play to Stephen F. Austin on the road. Lamar put up a four-spot in the third inning of the series opener to take a 4-2 lead, but allowed four unanswered runs to fall 6-4. The Cardinals won Game 2 with a sizeable 11-3 victory with four runs in the seventh and seven runs in the eighth.

The rubber match of the weekend featured an 14-11 shootout, with the Lumberjacks on the winning side of that score. Lamar led 9-3 going into the eighth before giving up 11 runs in the home half.

The Bulldogs are looking to avenge their midweek loss to Lamar from 2025, falling 6-5 at the Love Shack on February 25. Prior to last season, Tech had won four of the previous five clashes with the most recent win dating back to the 2012 season by a score of 8-1.

_____________________________

Bulldog Softball

Louisiana Tech softball returns home to Dr. Billy Bundrick Field for a five-game homestand, beginning tonight with a matchup against Alcorn State at 6:00 p.m. and McNeese on Wednesday at 4:00 p.m.

Both games will be streamed on ESPN+.

Tuesday’s meeting will mark the 19th all-time contest between LA Tech and Alcorn and the first since March 29, 2016, when the Bulldogs defeated the Braves 12-0 in five innings in Ruston. Tech’s only loss to Alcorn came in a 3-1 defeat in 2008. The Bulldogs have won the last 11 games.

Wednesday will mark the 95th meeting between the Bulldogs and Cowgirls. LA Tech leads the all-time series 62-32 after taking down MSU 10-5 at home last season. The Bulldogs have won five straight dating back to 2022, including three wins over MSU in 2024. Tech won 32 straight games against McNeese from 1982-1990.

The Bulldogs moved to 13-10 (0-3 Conference USA) after being swept by New Mexico State in their CUSA series opener this past weekend. Tech fell 14-5 (5) on Friday, 15-14 on Saturday and 7-1 on Sunday.

LA Tech collected 25 hits in the series, 12 of which went for extra bases, including eight home runs. The Bulldogs belted six home runs in Saturday’s 14-15 loss, marking the most home runs in a single game by a Bulldog team since May 1, 2009, when Tech also hit six at NMSU. Reagan Marchant and Bradi Gallaway both had two home runs in the loss while Gracie Flores and Aleah Brooks registered their first career homers in the contest.

Marchant finished the weekend with four home runs, hitting at least one in all three games and is up to a team-best seven long balls this season. She had a grand slam and solo blast to finish with five RBI on Saturday. The second-year Bulldog now ranks sixth all-time in program history with 25 career home runs.

Alcorn State enters Tuesday’s meeting with a 9-10 record and most recently fell to Arkansas-Pine Bluff, 13-4, on Friday in its SWAC opener. Only the Friday game was played, as the rest the series was postponed due to rain.

McNeese is 19-7 this season and is coming off a Southland Conference series-opening sweep of Lamar. The Cowgirls earned key non-conference wins over Houston (14-9, 7-3), Baylor (5-4), Iowa (11-4), Missouri (5-3, 4-1), and No. 21 Ole Miss (12-11).


Remembering Mary Ella Graham

Graveside services for Mary Ella Graham, age 90 of Ruston, LA will be held at 2:00 PM, Tuesday, March 10, 2026 in Kilpatrick Memorial Garden. Burial will follow under the direction of Owens Memorial Chapel Funeral Home of Ruston. Visitation will be held at the funeral home Tuesday from 10:00 AM until 1:00 PM.

Mary was born July 13, 1935 in Lake City, AR to Opal McFarland Gadberry and Lois Hope Gadberry and passed away Thursday, March 5, 2026 in Monroe, LA. She started pre-pharmacy school but she dropped out to support her husband, A.G. Graham, while he attended Dental School. After his graduation, Dr. Graham started his dental practice in Arcadia, LA where Mary worked as the office manager and bookkeeper. She always supported her husband whole heartedly. After the dental practice was moved to Ruston, she and her brother, Billy began breeding Greyhounds for the race track. She really enjoyed this the rest of her life.

When Mary was not working, she was a mother. To her children she was more than a mother, she was the heart and soul of the family. She was a minister’s daughter and she lived it; a very Christian person always loving others and a very giving person that would help others in need.  Mary enjoyed watching Perry Mason, cooking cobblers and pies, and adopting dogs, especially Doberman’s. She loved listening to country music and to travel. Mary also owned and operated Graham Properties, an apartment complex.

Mary was preceded in death by her parents; her husband A.G. Graham; son, Steven Craig Graham; brothers, Oral Gene Gadberry, Billy Dean Gadberry, and Gerald Stanley Gadberry.

Mary is survived by her sons, Larry Kent Graham of Ruston, LA and Michael Wayne Graham and wife Cindy of Baton Rouge, LA; sister, Ellen Gibbons of Monette, AR; several special nieces; and a host of other family and friends.


Remembering Nancy Elizabeth Felice

A Celebration of Life for Nancy Elizabeth Felice, 98, of Choudrant, LA will be 2:00 P.M. Thursday, March 12, 2026, at Kilpatrick Funeral Home Chapel in Ruston, LA.  Rev. Jon Tellifero will officiate the service. Interment will follow in Beulah Cemetery in Calhoun, LA under the direction of Kilpatrick Funeral Homes in Ruston, LA.

A Visitation for family and friends will be prior to the service beginning at 12:00 noon until service time at Kilpatrick Funeral Home Chapel in Ruston, LA.

Nancy Elizabeth Felice passed on to a glorious homecoming on Friday, March 6, 2026. Better known to many as Babe, Elizabeth, Liz, or Mammaw. Our wonderful matriarch lived a life that was filled with love, full of the normal daily tasks and highlighted by fun and adventure. Everything she did was executed with conscientious devotion to family and friends.

Born to Connie and Ida Ruth Walters on December 8, 1927, at home in Calhoun, Louisiana, she was the 5th of 8 brothers and sisters. Born and raised in Calhoun, she was a graduate of Calhoun High School.

Elizabeth enjoyed life whether she was at home with her family or traveling the globe with her husbands and with her sister and best friend, Annette. She found joy in the everyday – riding her lawnmower and enjoying the sunshine – and in the adventures – seeing the Great Wall of China and cruising the Caribbean.

A talented artist, she blessed many with her paintings in watercolor and acrylics. She had an eye for nature and painted many of the beauties seen even right outside her window. A family heirloom of a portrait of her mother hung in her home and shows a cherished love from a daughter.

She was a longtime member of Beulah Community Church where she served as the pianist for many years while also volunteering as the church’s Treasurer and Holiday Basket Organizer. Her faith helped to lead her family.

Better known as Liz on the golf course, she took up golfing later in life and enjoyed many sunny days on the course with her friends and family. She was active in playing at Pine Hills and Calvert Crossing until 2020 and was a member of the Ladies Golf Associations.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her first husband, James B. Smith; second husband, Frank Felice; grandson James Gregory Smith, brothers Leander, Gilbert, Layton, Hilton, and Ray; sister Mittie; and daughter-in-law Sandra Smith.

Nothing meant more to her than her family, and she cherished every moment with her children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.

She is survived by her sister Annette Coker; her four sons, Gary (Glenda), Randy (Lisa Clair), Charles (Linda), and Steven; step-daughter Linda Foto (Gary). Along with 12 grandchildren and 20 great grandchildren.

The family wishes to recognize and thank the following caregivers: Joyce, Lori and Linda, as well as the staff of Caring Hands Hospice, with special thanks to Nurse, Peyton.

Pallbearers are Charles Smith, Corey Smith, Tyler Smith, Zach Smith, Keith Walters, and John Marshall Knighten.

Honorary Pallbearers are James Gary Smith Jr., Roy Turner, Jimmy Pitts, Larry Parker, and George Addicott.

In lieu of flowers, please make donations to Beulah Community Church, 487 Beulah Church Road, Calhoun, LA 71225.

 

 

 


Notice of death — March 9, 2026

Kenneth Wayne Kimrey 
September 16, 1968 – March 4, 2026 
Visitation: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 9:00 AM – 10:00 AM, Emmanuel Baptist Church, 1200 Farmerville Hwy, Ruston 
Funeral Service: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 10:00 AM, Emmanuel Baptist Church, 1200 Farmerville Hwy, Ruston 
Cemetery Committal: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 11:00 AM, Forest Lawn Cemetery, 2500 West California Ave, Ruston 

Mary Ella Graham 
July 13, 1935 – March 5, 2026 
Graveside service: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 2:00 PM, Kilpatrick Memorial Garden, Ruston 


LPPJ to hold public meeting in regards to transportation planning

Lincoln Parish Police Jury – Transportation Plan

There will be a public meeting hosted tonight (Monday, March 9) at 6 p.m. in the Jack Beard Community Room at the Lincoln Parish Library. 

The meeting will include an outline of the transportation planning process, identification of key findings, presentation of the final draft before publishing, and a question and answer session. 

This is a great opportunity to understand the work that has gone into creating this transportation plan and the impact it will have on Lincoln Parish for years to come.


Louisiana Tech now part of opportunity-rich Gulf Scholars Program

Courtesy of Louisiana Tech University Communications

Louisiana Tech undergrads have gained another top-shelf interdisciplinary education opportunity.

The Gulf Research Program (GRP) of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine recently added six colleges and universities — including Tech — to its Gulf Scholars Program (GSP), a five-year, funded pilot program that prepares undergraduate students to address pressing environmental, health, energy, and infrastructure challenges in the Gulf Coast region.

The addition of this fifth cohort — Tech, Alcorn State, Millsaps College, Texas Southern University, Ole Miss, and South Florida — expands the GSP network to 30 institutions across the five Gulf States, marks the final cohort of the pilot phase of the program, and sets the stage for an extensive network of higher education partners working toward a more resilient and sustainable Gulf region.

“Because of all these social and environmental challenges of our region, the great thing the program allows is for all of our five colleges to engage,” Dr. Jennifer Hill, associate professor of Biological Sciences in Tech’s College of Applied and Natural Sciences and director of Tech’s Gulf Scholars Program, said. “The program is framed around integrated education across multiple disciplines informing students and the community of the interdisciplinary nature of our regional challenges.

“This is very much a team effort with faculty from various disciplines on the steering committee,” Hill said. “This program is designed to be engaged by the entire University community.”

As a participant in the GSP, Tech will develop a unique educational curriculum consisting of place-based courses, workshops, and an internship program that includes major research, service-learning, or creative project in partnership with a local or regional organization to address our region’s complex environmental, social, energy, and resilience challenges.

In working to find solutions for the region and planet — and therefore for people — students and faculty might explore anything from recycling programs to health disparities to construction materials that better contend with flooding.

“There are so many different things that we need big solutions for,” Hill said. “And we want to find solutions by engaging the public, our alumni, and the community, not just working behind the scenes in our labs. We’re working to engage in a way that we’ll have active solutions.

“I’m a scientist and ecologist; I am not an economist, so on my own I don’t have the answers,” Hill said. “This is why we want all disciplines involved, to feed off each other, to help each other learn and solve. Our students are hungry for his information and engagement.  While this program isn’t all about coastal problems, the program initiatives will help us get them into our (Gulf) environment more, see what these challenges for the coast and the people there look like up close. We want to make our students more civilly engaged in all the issues we are facing. The more informed they are, the more active they’ll be in making needed change.”

An undergrad and internship initiative commissioning between eight to 13 interns annually, the program officially begins next academic year, funded with $600,000 by the GRP.

The National Academies’ Gulf Research Program is an independent, science-based program founded in 2013 as part of legal settlements with the companies involved in the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster. The GRP’s mission is to develop, translate, and apply science to enhance the safety of offshore energy, the environment, and the well-being of the people of the Gulf region for generations to come. It supports innovative science, guides data design and monitoring, and builds and sustains networks to generate long-term benefits for the Gulf region and the nation.


Dream Home ticket total increases to 9,000

An artist’s rendering of the 2026 Monroe St. Jude Dream Home.

Ticket sales are now underway for the 2026 Monroe St. Jude Dream Home, and organizers say 9,000 tickets will be available this year – an increase from the 8,500 offered previously.

Ruston’s Zeta Rho chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha is once again leading the volunteer effort, handling ticket processing and coordinating Open house tours. Z107.5 continues as the exclusive radio partner, helping spread the word about the annual fundraiser.

This year’s Dream Home, built by BRACO Construction, is located at 9073 DeSiard Trace in Sterlington’s DeSiard Trace subdivision. The upscale cottage-style home has an estimated value of $525,000. Among its features are a custom built-in banquette breakfast nook off the kitchen, a spacious walk-in pantry and a private study area apart from the living spaces.


In addition to the possibility of winning the house itself, ticket buyers have a chance to win other prizes. Upcoming deadlines are:

– Tickets on Sale Prize deadline, March 13 – $2,500 Visa gift card. Courtesy of Assurance Financial.

– Early Bird Prize deadline, April 10 – “Exmark 42” Zero-Turn Mower with extended warranty and maintenance plan plus Echo handheld package. Courtesy of 3B Outdoor Equipment.

– Bonus Prize deadline, May 8 – 2026 Mazda3 Sedan Select. Courtesy of Dream Day Foundation.

– Last Chance Prize deadline, June 5 – Generac home standby generator. Courtesy of Albritton Service Co.

Open house tours will be scheduled during May and June. Visitors may also register for a free drawing for the Open House Prize, a $5,000 shopping spree courtesy of Ivan Smith Furniture.

Furniture staging for the Dream Home is being furnished by Sleepy Hollow. The interior designer is Jan Strickland of Strickland Interiors, of Rayville.

The winner of the house, in addition to winners of the other prizes, will be announced live June 16 on Monroe TV partner stations KTVE and KARD.

Tickets are $100 each. To purchase, call 1-800-592-1582 or visit dreamhome.org.

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Switched license plate catches trooper’s attention

A Louisiana State trooper arrested a 35-year-old man in Ruston after he noticed the man’s Cadillac was displaying a switched license plate.

Justin J. Nolan, of Angie, La., was arrested March 4 after the trooper found suspected methamphetamine in his car.

Nolan was stopped on La. Highway 33 in Ruston at about 8 a.m. when the trooper determined the license plate on his Cadillac belonged to a Honda. During the traffic stop, the trooper detected a strong odor of burnt marijuana.


A records check revealed Nolan’s driver’s license was under suspension.

A search of the vehicle located a glass container with a small amount of suspected methamphetamine. Nolan denied ownership of the drug.

Nolan was taken to the Lincoln Parish Detention Center and booked for possession of methamphetamine, driving under suspension, and switched license plate.

This information has been provided by a law enforcement agency as public information. Persons named or shown in photographs or video as suspects in a criminal investigation, or arrested and charged with a crime, have not been convicted of any criminal offense and are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

West Monroe man killed in one-vehicle crash

Courtesy of Louisiana State Police

On March 6, 2026, at approximately 11:30 a.m., Louisiana State Police Troop F responded to a one-vehicle crash on Louisiana Highway 599 at Bernie Turner Road.  The crash claimed the life of 65-year-old Michael A. Hutson of West Monroe.

The initial investigation revealed that a 2017 commercial vehicle, driven by Hutson, was southbound on Louisiana Highway 599.  For reasons still under investigation, Hutson left the roadway, traveled down the ditch embankment and overturned.  

Hutson, who was not restrained, sustained fatal injuries and was pronounced dead. Routine toxicology sample was obtained and submitted for analysis. This crash remains under investigation.

While not all crashes are survivable, proper use of seat belts can greatly decrease an occupant’s chance of death and may greatly reduce the extent of injury. Always ensuring every occupant is properly restrained can often mean the difference between life and death.


ICYMI: Bearcats head back to semifinals after dominant win over Parkway

(Photo by Reggie McLeroy)

By Kyle Roberts

RUSTON, La. — What a third quarter it was Friday night for No. 2 Ruston.

Between an explosive offense and a filthy defense, the Bearcats outscored the No. 23 Parkway Panthers 30-7 in third quarter alone to help propel Ruston to a  68-30 win and a trip to its third state tournament appearance in four years.

“I think in the first half we were playing uptight and trying not to make mistakes,” Ruston High Head Coach Marcus Jackson said. “In the third quarter, we got going. We had defense that led to offense, and that’s what allowed us to win. We preach that defense wins championships — if we’ve got a chance to win it, we have to play defense first.”

Ruston found itself down toward the end of the first quarter 10-6 after being held scoreless for nearly six minutes before sophomore Darren Ford hit his first of three-straight three-pointers — first at the end the first period and then two more in a row to start the second to put the Bearcats up 15-11 with 5:44 to go in the first half.

After a pair of Ford free throws, junior Ahmad Hudson then scored six of Ruston’s nine points for the remainder of the quarter to help put Ruston up 26-18 at halftime.

In the third quarter, it was junior Keshun Malcolm’s turn to take over after he scored nine of Ruston’s for 12 points of the period to put Ruston up 38-20 with 3:35 to go in the period. Two back-to-back dunks right after by Ford sent the crowd into a frenzy and forced Parkway to take a timeout with 3:00 to go in the third, where the Bearcats would go on to lead 56-25 going into the fourth.

And after a Malcolm bucket and a Hudson dunk, the clock ran for the rest of the game en route to the Ruston victory.

Ford finished the night with 26 points, while Hudson and Malcolm had 15 and 13, respectively, in front of a raucous crowd.

“All three of those guys have unique talents,” Jackson said. “If we play off each other and not try to play against one another, that opens up the flow of the game. It was obviously a playoff atmosphere, for sure. Ruston has a great crowd and a great community.”

For Jackson, taking the Bearcats back to the state tournament feels pretty sweet after some personal difficulties from last year.

“Where I was last year being hurt and then burying my mother, this is just overwhelming,” an emotional Jackson said. “I’m just so proud of the guys. They’re buying in. They didn’t know me coming into (last) season. I thought the Oregon trip helped us, a lot of church trips, eating together — that all helped us get to this moment. I’m proud of Ruston High’s administrators and teachers — they supported me this whole while, and I’m just thankful and grateful for it.”

The Bearcats will face No. 6 Central – B.R. in the semifinals in the LHSAA State Tournament in Lake Charles, La., on Thursday, March 7 at 8 p.m.

ICYMI: Panthers down OCS to earn fifth straight trip to Marsh Madness

Lincoln Prep senior Kaden Vernon is pictured celebrating with the net after cutting it off the rim Friday night. (Photo by T. Scott Boatright)

 

By T. Scott Boatright

 

The Lincoln Preparatory School boys basketball team made a list of five goals to accomplish before the 2025-26 season started.

So far, the Panthers have reached four of them, but the biggest and most elusive so far still lies ahead.

The Panthers roared past Ouachita Christian 59-40 at home Friday night to earn a fifth straight trip to March Madness and a semifinal berth in the Division IV Select School Playoffs.

Now the Panthers turn their focus toward something they’ve never accomplished under the moniker of Lincoln Prep — capture a state championship.

“By the grace of God, we’ve been able to do that,” Panthers coach Antonio Hudson said of earning a fifth straight trip to the championship tournament in Lake Charles. “Now we just have to figure out how to finish it.”

The first half went the way most of Lincoln Prep’s games have gone this season — defensive domination by the Panthers, who led 8-7 at the end of the opening stanza and 22-11 at halftime.

And the Panthers hit the first basket of the third quarter 45 seconds in on a putback by Devin Shine, who scored all six of his points in that stanza.

But the Eagles pulled within striking distance at nine points down at 26-17 at the 5:20 mark of the period on a baseline layup by D’sian Bradshaw, who hit a short jumper at the buzzer to make a 13-point game at 39-26 in Lincoln Prep’s favor heading into the fourth quarter.

“That’s our best deal — our best style of game,” Hudson said of the defensive start his team got off to. “We’ve played some really good teams, but I think OCS is one of the best defensive teams that we’ve played. In the half-court set it’s hard for people to get locked in, and we did that in the first half.

“Toward the end of the third quarter I think we got kind of lax because we got comfortable with the lead. We gave up more layups than anything in the third quarter, and that’s unacceptable. That’s not the way to win a championship. But we’re going back down to (Marsh Madness) again, and that’s a good thing.”

The Eagles remained within striking distance for the first four minutes of the final stanza, cutting it to 11-point lead for Lincoln Prep on one of two technical foul free throws when the Panthers were hit with a tech for taunting with 4:17 remaining.

But before any more time ran off, the Eagles were hit with a technical foul of their own, with Lincoln Prep’s Jabari Levingston hitting one-of-two of his free throws to push the Panthers’ lead back to 12 at 46-34.

The game also started with a technical foul before the opening jump that OCS hit one of two free throws on to take a 1-0 lead before the clock started.

“We’ve been running out the same way all year, but they said we couldn’t run out under their goal,” Hudson said. “I never heard of that, but you know, they know more than we do.”

After the fourth quarter technical fouls exchange, the Panthers then went on a 9-0 run to pull away for good with their biggest lead coming at 21 points with 1:14 remaining on an Alley Opp pass from Trey Spann to Zion Hicks, who caught the ball under the net and bounced it smoothly off the backboard for the score.

Levingston and Hicks both double-doubled for Lincoln Prep, with Levingston chalking up 22 points, 13 rebounds, eight steals, six assists and a blocked shot while Hicks recorded 21 points, 14 boards, three assists, two steals and two blocked shots.

Hudson declined to take part in the net-cutting ceremony, letting senior Kaden Vernon completely remove it from the rim.

The win was especially meaningful for the Panthers’ three seniors — Trey Spann, who totaled six points, five assists, one rebound and one steal — along with Hicks and Vernon.

“I want to win the championship for the players who played in front of me who didn’t get this chance I’m going to get, and for all the people who have supported us,” Hicks said.

In a postgame locker room talk, Panthers assistant coach Yum D. Pujoe told the team they had now accomplished four of those preseason goals, with one remaining.

“The first was to win or 25 or more games (the Panthers are 28-0), No. 2 was to win district, No. 3 was to go undefeated at home (where Lincoln Prep went 15-0) the fourth was to finish the season at No. 1 (which the Panthers have been since season’s start),” Pujoe said. “Now we only have one goal left — win the state championship.”

After the game, Hudson said the Panthers’ final goal is the only one that matters.

“We gotta get it,” Hudson said. “It’s for the community, too. In some ways, it’s selfish of us, but it’s for the team, because we’ve got to prove that we can get it done. We’ve been down there so many times and have come back empty handed. We’ve got to make it happen. I want to cut the net down in Lake Charles. That’s why I didn’t want to do it tonight. I want to do it down there.”

Top-seeded Lincoln Prep will take on fourth seed Central Catholic Tuesday, March 10, at 1 p.m.


Local events

Each Monday through Friday, the Lincoln Parish Journal will post a list of non-for-profit upcoming events happening in the parish. If you would like to add your event to this list or advertise your for-profit events, please email us at lpjnewsla@gmail.com

Monday March 9
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
6 p.m.: Toastmasters International meeting (Louisiana Center for the Blind, 101 South Trenton Street)
6-9 p.m.: Creative Meetups (Creatives at Work, 301 N. Trenton)

Tuesday, March 10
10 a.m.: Storytime (Lincoln Parish Library)
1 p.m.: Grambling State softball
4 p.m.: Cafternoon (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: Video-led exercise class (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: LA Tech softball
6 p.m.: LA Tech baseball
7 p.m.: Lincoln Parish Police Jury meeting (Lincoln Courthouse)


Wednesday, March 11
7-8 a.m.: Veterans Coffee Club (PJ’s Coffee)
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
12-1 p.m.: Rotary Club meeting (Historic Fire Station)
4 p.m.: LA Tech softball
6 p.m.: GSU baseball

Thursday, March 12
9:30 a.m.: Piney Hills Quilt Guild meeting (Grace Methodist Church)
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
6 p.m.: Tween and Teen Time (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: Southern A’Chord Chorus rehearsal (Presbyterian Church fellowship hall, 212 N. Bonner St.; open to all women singers)

Friday, March 13
6-9 p.m.: Beer Crawl (Downtown Ruston)
6 p.m.: LA Tech baseball
6 p.m.: LA Tech softball

Saturday, March 14
8 a.m. to noon: Friends of the Library Community Garage Sale (Lincoln Parish Library Events Center)
8:30-11:30 a.m.: Hazardous Waste Material Collection and Recycling (2609 Farmerville St.)
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
10 a.m. to noon: Pictures with the Easter Bunny (Lincoln Parish Library)
2 p.m.: LA Tech baseball
2 p.m.: LA Tech softball

Sunday, March 15
11 a.m.: LA Tech baseball
11 a.m.: LA Tech softball
2 p.m.: Springhill Baptist Church celebration of 5th Pastoral Anniversary (727 D. Store Rd., Simsboro)

Monday, March 16
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
5:30 p.m.: Ruston Planning and Zoning meeting (Ruston City Hall)
6 p.m.: Toastmasters International meeting (Louisiana Center for the Blind, 101 South Trenton Street)
6-9 p.m.: Creative Meetups (Creatives at Work, 301 N. Trenton)

Tuesday, March 17
10 a.m.: Storytime (Lincoln Parish Library)
4 p.m. Crafternoon (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: Video-led exercise class (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: LA Tech baseball

Wednesday, March 18
7-8 a.m.: Veterans Coffee Club (PJ’s Coffee)
11:30 a.m.: Lunch on Us (Presbyterian Church, 212 North Bonner Street., Ruston) — everyone welcome
12-1 p.m.: Rotary Club meeting (Historic Fire Station)

Thursday, March 19
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Kiwanis Club lunch and program (Trinity Methodist Church fellowship hall)
4 p.m.: Tween Time (Lincoln Parish Library)
5 p.m.: Library Board of Control Meeting (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: Teen Time (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: Southern A’Chord Chorus rehearsal (Presbyterian Church fellowship hall, 212 N. Bonner St.; open to all women singers)
6:30 p.m.: Books and Bites Book Club (Lincoln Parish Library; registration required by calling 318-513-5510)

Friday, March 20
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.: Friends of the Library Children’s Books and Puzzle Sale (Lincoln Parish Library)
6 p.m.: GSU baseball

Saturday, March 21
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Ruston Farmers Market
8 a.m. to 2 p.m.: Missions Market 2026; Concord/Union Baptist Association Women on Mission craft and bake sale (Temple Baptist Church Fellowship Hall, 1515 S. Service Rd. W., Ruston)
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.: Friends of the Library Children’s Books and Puzzle Sale (Lincoln Parish Library)
2-3 p.m.: Tween and Teen Writer Workshop (Lincoln Parish Library)
3 p.m.: GSU baseball

Sunday, March 22
1 p.m.: GSU baseball

For the latest local news, subscribe FOR FREE to the Lincoln Parish Journal and receive an email each weekday morning at 6:55 right to your inbox. Just CLICK HERE to sign up.

Techsters survive OT vs UTEP; celebrate CUSA championship (bracket attached)

The Lady Techsters celebrated the program’s first conference regular season title since 2011 after defeating UTEP in OT. (photo by Josh McDaniel)

by Malcolm Butler

It took an extra five minutes, but Louisiana Tech survived an upstart UTEP team 91-87 in overtime Saturday night at the Thomas Assembly Center.

The win was the 17th straight for the Lady Techsters (24-5, 17-1), who claimed the program’s first regular season title since 2011 and will enter the CUSA Tournament as the No. 1 outright seed after running away with the championship by five games. 

It was a game that featured 22 lead changes and 16 ties.

“We had to dig deep tonight to come out with the win,” said head coach Brooke Stoehr. “Give UTEP credit. They played really well and made some big shots. It was not our best defensive effort, but sometimes you have to credit your opponent. I am incredibly proud of the grit and resilience this group showed when we did not have our best and things did not go our way.”

The Miners, who lost 87-48 to Tech in El Paso on Feb. 5, had revenge on their minds. UTEP hit a program single game record 14 three-pointers and almost rallied from a late nine-point deficit to pull off the upset. After Tech used a 12-2 run to take a 75-66 lead with three minutes to play, including a five-point possession in which Bradley hit a layup and then Jianna Morris stole the inbounds pass and scored while being fouled.

“That’s my role,” said Morris. “It was a momentum play. I knew that was my role in that moment … doing whatever I needed to do to help us win.”

The Miners fought back … all the way back.

Portia Adams lane jumper in traffic with 5 seconds to play gave UTEP a 79-78 lead. Following a timeout, Tech put the ball in the hands of Paris Bradley, who drove baseline and drew a foul with 3 seconds left. Bradley sank one of two free throws to tie the game, sending it to overtime after the Miners misfired on a last second attempt.

In OT, sophomore Averi Aaron stepped up, scoring eight of Tech’s 12 points, including a three-pointer with 1:19 to play that broke an 85-85 tie.

“I just play the game,” said Aaron. “I don’t think about it too much. I feel like a lot of people get caught up (in the moment), but to me, every play is just the next play.”

After UTEP hit two free throws to close to within 88-87, Alexia Weaver sank a pair of free throws and Aaron hit one of two at the charity stripe to seal the win. The 17 straight league wins is the most by a Conference USA team in 25 years. 

“We just come out and compete every day,” said Paris Bradley, who scored 26 points and grabbed nine rebounds in the win. “We show up and work every day no matter what the result is. We have had a really good season and it’s because we are consistent in what we do.”

In addition to Bradley’s big night, Weaver added 22 points and Aaron had 13 points and nine rebounds. 

Tech will open the CUSA Tournament Wednesday against the winner of Sam Houston State and Liberty with a trip to the NCAA Tournament on the line.

“We can’t overlook any game. It is a tournament,” said Weaver. “We have to come in with the same mindset we have had all year. It’s about us. It’s about what we do. We just need to show up and take care of business.”

Ivane Tensaie scored 26 points, including seven three-pointers, while Adams added 23 for the Miners.

 


Bulldogs dominate Blue Hens; earn No. 4 seed in CUSA Tournament (bracket attached)

Mel Martinez (21) blocks a shot in Tech’s road win at Delaware.

Courtesy of LA Tech Athletic Communications

Louisiana Tech delivered one of its most dominant defensive performances of the season on Saturday afternoon, overwhelming Delaware with a suffocating second half to cruise to an 81-38 victory inside the Bob Carpenter Center.

Two days stunning first-place Liberty in Lynchburg, Virginia, LA Tech (18-13, 11-9 CUSA) turned a comfortable halftime lead into a runaway, outscoring Delaware 41-16 after the break while allowing just four field goals in the final 20 minutes to complete the road sweep going into the Conference USA Men’s Basketball Championship.

“Our defense was unbelievable in the second half. I thought it was good in the first half, but we were stifling in the second half. We were in gaps, we had active hands, and we were getting steals and turning them into easy offense.

“We did not have to play against Delaware’s zone so much, but when we did, we moved the basketball and got good looks. We did not try to force anything. Kaden Cooper, Jaylen Fenner, Avery Thomas, they were dynamic in going to get offensive rebounds too.”

The Bulldogs never trailed against the Flames and never trailed versus the Blue Hens, leading from start to finish and seizing full control midway through the second half with a staggering 28-0 run that turned the game into a rout.

The defensive effort was relentless as Delaware finished the afternoon shooting just 11-of-48 from the field (22.9%) and 6-of-29 from three-point range.

On the flipside, the Bulldogs were efficient offensively, shooting 54.2 percent from the floor and knocking down 10 three-pointers, while forcing 18 turnovers that led to 31 points.

LA Tech built early momentum behind the hot shooting of Avery Thomas II, who connected on all three of his attempts from beyond the arc in the opening half to help the Bulldogs take a 40-22 lead into the break.

The Bulldogs then delivered their most dominant stretch of the afternoon midway through the second half. After Delaware trimmed the deficit to 50-33, LA Tech responded with the decisive 28-0 surge, fueled by transition baskets, steals, and second-chance opportunities. The run ballooned the lead to as many as 45 points, the Bulldogs’ largest advantage of the game.

Six Bulldogs scored in double figures, led by Avery Thomas II with a season-high 20 points on an efficient 7-of-9 shooting. Kaden Cooper added 17 points, seven rebounds and six steals, while Jaylen Fenner chipped in 14 points. DJ Dudley finished with 10 points, and AJ Bates orchestrated the offense with a game-high nine assists to go along with nine points.

The Bulldogs also controlled the glass, outrebounding Delaware 39-25, while scoring 36 points in the paint.

With the road sweep, Tech earned the No. 4 seed in the upcoming CUSA Tournament in Huntsville, Alabama. 

“I feel like our guys are playing more confident,” said Hester. “They are believing in who we are and what we have built as a team. We wanted to be playing our best basketball at this time. Coming into this trip, we had not been very successful on the road. As a coach, I can look back and say we should have done this earlier or I am glad we are doing it now. I would rather say we are playing this kind of basketball at this point in the season.”

Tech will open the tourney on Thursday, March 12 at 5:30 p.m. against No. 5 seed Middle Tennessee.


Ruston softball sweeps Choudrant Tournament, Lady Aggies win two of three

(Photo by Sissy Tolar)

By Kyle Roberts

CHOUDRANT, La. — Ruston High ended the weekend with a four-game winning streak in tact in softball after sweeping the weekend at the Choudrant Tournament on Friday and Saturday, while Choudrant would pick up its first two wins of the season on Thursday and Friday.

The Lady Bearcats (5-4) started the weekend with a 13-3 win over Calvin Friday thanks in large part to senior Akeirah Jones getting four hits and four RBI, which included a home run, two triples and a double. Sophomore Aubrey Stoehr also finished the game with four hits at the plate, including a double, while sophomore Skylar Bowers and freshman Ashleyn Dixon both got doubles at the plate, as well.

Ruston then won 9-4 over Choudrant thanks to another home run and a double by Jones. Stoehr and Dixon both doubled, as well, as Dixon drove in four runs in the win. Ruston then run-ruled Summerfield 17-4 after the top of the fourth. This time, it was Stoehr with a pair of solo homeruns, while Ainsley Simpson got an inside-the-park-homer and a double. Senior Sage Tolar would get a double and score a run, as well.

“I think this weekend served as a good boost for us,” Ruston High Head Coach Lauren Garvie said. “We came into season very, very young and I’m blessed with true athletes but when that’s the case they are multi sports athletes so you really get to know each other those first few weeks of season. I don’t think we’ve played the same lineup two games in a row yet. This weekend allowed us to do that and to work out some things. The girls hit well, especially Akierah and our freshman Ashlyn Dixon. Ashlyn has stepped up in huge ways. We get to a spot often times with runners on, needing some RBIs, two outs and two strikes on her but she never quits and often times comes up with at least base hit to produce.

“That’s what this team is looking for – consistent production. We are saying service is leadership this year and that means we keep pushing and working hard for everyone around us. This weekend helped us do that and build a little community in the dugout.”

For Choudrant (2-9), the Lady Aggies got an 8-5 win over Byrd Thursday, thanks to a multi-RBI games from catcher Emery Boggs and right fielder Bailey McGuire. Choudrant then run-ruled Calvin 13-2 on Friday after the top of the fifth inning. Boggs and first baseman Katelynn Winstead both finished with multiple RBI’s, as Boggs ended the game with two doubles. Centerfielder Kelsee Guillotte added a triple, too, for the Lady Aggies in the win.

“I thought we played very well — we’re a very young team, and we have improved so much since our first game of the year,” Choudrant Head Coach Stacey Tassin said. “I’m very pleased with our performance. We’ve been struggling to hit a little bit, and we’ve made some errors in the field, and all that was improved. I see us getting better every game we play. It’s the little things we’re starting to do right that make a big difference in the game.”

Ruston will host OCS at home tonight at 5:30 p.m., while Choudrant will host Calvin again at 5:30 p.m., as well.


Remembering Kenneth Wayne Kimrey

A Celebration of Life for Ken Kimrey, will be held at 10:00 AM on Tuesday, March 10, 2026 at Emmanual Baptist Church, with Rev. Paul Watts officiating.  Burial will follow at Forest Lawn Cemetery under the direction of Owens Memorial Chapel Funeral Home of Ruston, LA.  A visitation will be held prior to the service from 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM at Emmanual Baptist Church. 

Kenneth Wayne Kimrey, age 57 of Simsboro, was welcomed into his Eternal home on March 4, 2026, after a lengthy illness.  Ken was born on September 16, 1968 in Ruston to Merlene and Harry Kimrey.  A preemie baby weighing only 2 ½ pounds at birth, he was presented early on with physical challenges that prevailed throughout his life.  Although he endured several surgeries and painful procedures at a young age, he was a happy, inquisitive and sometimes mischievous child who never let his physical limitations stop him from doing the things he loved. 

Ken graduated from Ruston High School and attended Louisiana Tech, where he met the love of his life, Lisa Ann Young.  They married soon after and had two children.  He was a devoted husband and a loving father.  Ken worked for many years at the Weyerhaeuser OSB plant in Arcadia, before his illness caused him to retire.  Ken loved hunting, camping, watching football, good BBQ, trivia games and learning about Civil War history.  He loved his family, and most of all, he loved the Lord.  He was a faithful member of Emmanual Baptist Church, having served as a Deacon and having worked with RA’s and the bus ministry.

In his last days, through declining health, Ken’s brightest moments were with his grandchildren.  Affectionately known to them as “Bear,” he cherished all of them with his whole heart and loved nothing more than having them snuggled beside him in his chair reading books or enjoying movies together.  Ken was preceded in death by his father, Harry L. Kimrey of Ruston; his father-in-law, Will Young, of Winnsboro, LA, and his brother-in-law, Jim Grigsby of Ruston.

Survivors include his wife of 35 years, Lisa Young Kimrey; son, Hunter W. Kimrey (Nicole) of Burien, WA; daughter, Katie Kimrey Landry (Noah) of West Monroe, LA; four grandchildren:  Stella Landry, Sawyer Landry, Wyatt Kimrey, and Beau Kimrey (coming soon); mother, Merlene Kimrey of Ruston; mother-in-law, Nell Young of Winnsboro, LA; brother, Paul L. Kimrey, Sr. (Debbie) of Maryville, TN; sister, Denise Kimrey Grigsby of Ruston; brother, Claude H. Kimrey (Jennifer) of Dubach, LA; sisters-in-law, Kay Young Dubberly (Steve) of Bossier City, LA and Lori Young Collins (Randy) of Winnsboro, LA, brother-in-law, Tim Young (Cathy) of Winnsboro, LA; and numerous nieces, nephews and extended family who will miss his quick humor and boisterous laugh.   

Serving as pallbearers will be:  Seth Grigsby, Preston Bordelon, Jacob Kimrey, Randy Calloway, Kenneth Calloway, and Barry Noles. 

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that any donations be made to Shriner’s Children’s Hospital, 3100 Samford Avenue, Shreveport, LA 71103. 


Notice of death — March 8, 2026

Kenneth Wayne Kimrey 
September 16, 1968 – March 4, 2026 
Visitation: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 9:00 AM – 10:00 AM, Emmanuel Baptist Church, 1200 Farmerville Hwy, Ruston 
Funeral Service: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 10:00 AM, Emmanuel Baptist Church, 1200 Farmerville Hwy, Ruston 
Cemetery Committal: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 11:00 AM, Forest Lawn Cemetery, 2500 West California Ave, Ruston 

Mary Ella Graham 
July 13, 1935 – March 5, 2026 
Graveside service: Tuesday, March 10, 2026, 2:00 PM, Kilpatrick Memorial Garden, Ruston