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New Orleans man pleads guilty in 2016 shooting death of Jefferson Parish deputy

​​​​​​​View Date:2024-12-24 01:45:45

GRETNA, La. (AP) — The man accused of gunning down a suburban New Orleans’ sheriff’s detective nearly eight years ago pleaded guilty Wednesday in his death.

Jerman Neveaux, 27, of New Orleans, was scheduled to begin trial next week on charges of first-degree murder in the 2016 death of Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Detective David Michel Jr., 50. Had Neveaux been convicted as charged, he could have faced the possibility of the death penalty. Instead, Neveaux agreed to plead guilty to a lesser charge of second-degree murder, which carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison.

“This has truly been a nightmare that I can’t wake up out of,” Michel’s wife, Angela, told the court while giving victim impact testimony to a courtroom packed with grieving relatives and friends, The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate reported.

“I just can’t understand why... It’s been my question for eight years. Why? Why? Why something so senseless?” she asked of Neveaux, who sat handcuffed at a defense table.

Michel was shot on June 22, 2016 as he headed to lunch with fellow officers in Harvey. En route to his destination, he radioed in that he was going to conduct a stop of a man spotted “suspiciously following” another man, the sheriff’s office said.

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Within moments, Michel called back saying he had been shot.

The gunman, identified as then 19-year-old Neveaux, shot Michel three times in the back before fleeing into a nearby subdivision. Michel was taken to a hospital where he later died.

Deputies found Neveaux about 20 minutes after the shooting.

The legal case against Neveaux dragged on for nearly eight years, slowed by claims that the defendant was not competent to stand trial and other court motions filed by the late defense attorney Martin Regan. Other delays, judge recusals and attorney changes followed.

Neveaux last year successfully appealed to the Louisiana Supreme Court to have state District Judge Nancy Miller replaced as the trial judge because her husband was a sergeant with the Jefferson Parish sheriff’s office and the jurist could not recall whether she had attended Michel’s funeral. That scuttled a trial that had been scheduled to start in August 2023.

At Wednesday’s hearing, Neveaux entered the plea to the reduced charge before state District Judge June Berry Darensburg.

Harriet “Sam” Daigle, Michel’s 79-year-old mother, spoke to Neveaux in a victim impact statement, saying her son was “so kind,” WVUE-TV reported.

“We miss him so much,” Daigle said. “David has a grandson (he never met). He would have been a wonderful grandpa. I want you to know David would have been so kind to you. ... You’ve ruined your life, you’ve ruined your family’s life and you took David from us.

“God only is supposed to end someone’s life, not you.”

Neveaux tearfully expressed remorse for the killing and apologized to the victim’s family.

“I know this is a very difficult time. I wanted to talk to you multiple times,” he said. “I’m truly sorry. Find it in your heart and your soul to forgive me one day.”

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