Committee on Parole revokes parole for three men after revocation hearings
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Summary
The Committee on Parole on April 15, 2026 revoked the paroles of three men after separate hearings on allegations including absconding, failure to report and criminal activity; the board voted unanimously in each case.
The Committee on Parole voted April 15 to revoke the paroles of three individuals following remote revocation hearings held at multiple detention centers.
The actions came after separate case reviews in which the board considered agent notes, arrest records and statements by the respondents and, where present, family members or victims. The decisions affect parolees from Lincoln Parish and Assumption Parish and were made during the panel’s morning session, which began at 8:55 a.m.
At the hearing for Deshaun Gibson (DOC 762937), board members read allegations that he failed to report to his supervising office from July through November 2025, absconded supervision on Aug. 18, 2025, and owed $506 in supervision fees. Gibson said an arrest on Dec. 14, 2025 for an alleged partner battery was dismissed on March 4, 2026; parole staff noted agent efforts to locate him and records suggesting resumed drug use. "Mister Gibson, I vote to revoke your parole based on your absconding supervision," said Committee member Jerry LeDoux. Gibson responded, "Oh, so so you guys are revoking me because of he say, she say?" The panel voted to revoke Gibson’s parole, citing absconding and credibility concerns.
In the proceeding for J. C. Thompson Jr. (listed in the record as DOC 590415), the respondent said a retained lawyer had not enrolled in the case and the board allowed Thompson to choose to proceed without counsel. Violations read by the board included turning himself into custody on Jan. 16, 2026; an entry at a listed address connected to allegations of recent cocaine use; and unpaid supervision and related fees (the record lists $1,245 for supervision, plus a $253 technology fund and a $65 processing fee). Thompson pleaded guilty to several items, including a special no-contact order tied to a condition of parole. "My vote is to revoke for violations number 4, 7, 10 and 13," said Chuckie Tillis. The board voted to revoke and recommended the respondent be offered substance-abuse treatment while in custody.
The board also revoked parole for the man identified in the hearing as William Monfield (DOC 763434), who was introduced in the record by the chair as "Mr. Broomfield." He was arrested Sept. 3, 2025 and charged with aggravated second-degree battery and later pleaded guilty to disturbing the peace on Feb. 9, 2026. The respondent described the incident as horseplay; the board reviewed photographs showing significant lacerations to the victim’s face and concluded the injuries were inconsistent with the account. "Based on that evidence, my vote today is gonna be to revoke your parole," Chair Cheryl Renata said.
Each revocation vote recorded on the transcript shows the three-person panel voting to revoke (votes were recorded in the hearing transcript as affirmative by Cheryl Renata, Chuckie Tillis and Jerry LeDoux). Board staff completed paperwork after each decision; the panel did not announce additional parole-eligibility dates in the transcript.
Actions recorded at the hearing indicate formal revocation decisions only; the record does not show immediate reentry dates or release scheduling. Those procedural details and any opportunities for reconsideration or appeal would follow department rules and are not specified in the transcript.

