Mississippi Today
Pearl police officer fired for allegedly stealing $32K from dying woman

The Pearl Police Department fired patrol officer Taylor Loftin for reportedly stealing $32,000 from a dying woman’s house. It’s the second officer dismissed for alleged criminal conduct in less than a year.
On the morning of Nov. 18, Jason Kelly’s mother, Jackie, collapsed unexpectedly, and his father called 911.

Ambulance workers arrived. So did four or five Pearl police officers, including Loftin, Kelly said.
His 80-year-old mother never recovered and may have died of a blood clot, he said. “It was unexpected.”
She had just inherited $32,000 and received the money in cash, which she put in an envelope in her drawer in the bedroom, he said.
After ambulance workers and police left, Kelly said his father determined the cash had been stolen and called Pearl police, who returned to the home.
After arriving, Loftin admitted that he had opened the drawer and seen the money, but he insisted he closed it right back, Kelly said. “He turned off his camera and stole $32,000.”
Kelly praised Pearl police’s swift response and said, “I hope they press charges.”
He said he doesn’t know if the city is going to pay the family back.
The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation is investigating, but spokesperson Bailey Martin said the agency could not comment further. Loftin could not be reached for comment.
Kelly believes there must have been thefts on previous occasions as well. “This ain’t his first time doing this,” he said.
Pearl Police Chief Nick McLendon said he’s not aware of any previous incidents.
Asked about possible criminal prosecution, he said he could not comment further because the case is under investigation.
He said in a statement made public that the officer hasn’t been charged with any crime and should be presumed innocent. But the department, he said, “must be concerned with even the slightest appearance of impropriety — and especially in the area of law enforcement.”
Two days before Christmas 2023, Pearl police officer Michael Christian Green forced a man he arrested to lick urine from a holding cell floor.
The 26-year-old officer took the man into custody after a family disturbance call to Sam’s Club in Pearl. After he booked the man into a holding cell, footage showed the man telling Green he needed to urinate, but when Green failed to respond, the man urinated in a corner, according to the federal bill of information.
When Green found out what the man had done, Green berated him, “Let me tell you something. You see this phone? I will beat your f—ing ass with it. You’re fixin’ to go in there, and you’re gonna lick that p— up. Do you understand me? … Go suck it up right now.”
Green filmed the man as he licked the urine from the floor, and when the man gagged, Green said, “Don’t spit it out.” When the man gagged, Green responded, “Lick that s— up. Drink your f—in’ p—.”
When the man was allowed to leave the booking area, he vomited in a garbage can.
On June 13, Green was sentenced to a year in federal prison and a $1,500 fine. He told the judge he regrets what he did.

At a press conference after Green’s guilty plea, Pearl Mayor Jake Windham told reporters, “God created us in his image. Treating someone like this is despicable.”
“If you’re going to operate as a police officer,” said Windham, who served in law enforcement for 16 years, “you’ve got to do things right.”
He apologized to the man and his family for “the horrible treatment by an officer of the law.”
At the time, Windham declared, “We hold our officers to a higher standard.”
Four days after the incident, Windham confronted Green and told him to resign, which he did.
The city handles matters swiftly, Windham said. “I think there’s a stark contrast between the Pearl Police Department and this incident [and the handling of] the ‘Goon Squad.’”
Six Rankin County officers were involved in the January 2023 torture of two Black men and the shooting of one of them, but it wasn’t until six months later that those involved were fired. The six officers pleaded guilty and are now serving between 10 and 40 years in federal prison.
Green had been on the force six months when this incident occurred. “His certificate was clean when he came to the Pearl Police Department,” Windham said. “We strive to do an extensive background check on people.”
He said he hopes law enforcement agencies would report any problems with officers to the Mississippi Board on Law Enforcement Officer Standards and Training.
A new law, passed in the wake of the Goon Squad’s acts, beefs up the board’s ability to investigate allegations against officers.
As for Loftin, McLendon put the officer on administrative leave after investigating the matter. On Thursday, the Pearl Board of Aldermen fired the officer on McLendon’s recommendation.
“We acted on it immediately,” Windham said. “We don’t put up with it.”
It’s a bad situation when “you have to terminate officers,” he said, “but we’re going to make sure that if they screw up, we’re going to send them down the road.”
Asked about getting the $32,000 back to the family, the mayor replied, “Our goal is to make the family whole as soon as possible.”
Loftin was hired by Dean Scott, who resigned as Pearl police chief in January after an investigation into possible misuse of tax dollars. A WLBT investigation revealed that Scott claimed to work for Rankin County as a homestead fraud investigator while on city business at law enforcement conferences on the Coast. He now works as a lieutenant for Capitol Police.
Loftin worked at a series of jobs in law enforcement. He worked at Flowood Police Department and Brandon Police Department before starting at Pearl Police Department, where he had worked a few years.
Loftin graduated from Baylor University, is married and has a newborn son, according to his Facebook page.
“He threw his whole life away,” Kelly said. “You risk your whole family for $32,000?”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Yes, SEC hoops is deeper than ever, but don’t forget the star power of 1980s and ’90s
Yes, SEC hoops is deeper than ever, but don’t forget the star power of 1980s and ’90s
If I’ve heard it said once this basketball season, I’ve heard it a couple hundred times: “The Southeastern Conference is better than it’s ever been.”
I agree with that statement in one regard. That is, SEC basketball, from top to bottom, is better than ever. The league has more teams, more really good teams, more balance and is more competitive than it has ever been. It is the best league in the country by far.

This week’s Associated Press poll says as much: Three of the top five teams are from the SEC. What’s more, four of the top eight, five of the top 14, and six of the top 15 are all SEC teams.
You could make the case that in order to win this week’s SEC Tournament at Nashville, the eventual champion will have to beat more top shelf teams than it would have to beat to win the NCAA Tournament. The league is that good.
But don’t tell me the quality of SEC basketball is better than it was during a period in the late 20th century when Wimp Sanderson was at Alabama, Sonny Smith at Auburn, Nolan Richardson at Arkansas, Dale Brown at LSU, Joe B. Hall and Rick Pitino at Kentucky and Richard Williams at Mississippi State.
Don’t tell me the SEC has the star power now that it had back when players as splendid as LSU’s Shaquille O’Neal, Auburn’s Charles Barkley, Georgia’s Dominique Wilkins and Kentucky’s Jamal Mashburn played three years of college ball before going pro. That’s the biggest difference. Back then, players stayed in college for at least two or three years. Not now.
When Mississippi State shocked Kentucky (and the college basketball world) and won the 1996 SEC Tournament Championship, 11 of the players in that championship game went on to play in the NBA. Nazr Mohammed, a 6-foot, 11-inch bruiser, could scarcely get off the bench for Kentucky in 1996, but went on to play 18 NBA seasons. My point: In 1996 there were 11 future NBA players in one game. Now, there might not be 11 NBA players the entire conference.
Another way to say it: The SEC has more good basketball players now than it has ever had. It had more truly great players during the ‘80s and ‘90s. Think about it. Besides those already mentioned, you had Allan Houston at Tennessee, Vernon Maxwell at Florida, Chuck Person at Auburn, Mahmoud Abdul-Rauff (then Chris Jackson) at LSU, Derrick McKee, James “Hollywood” Robinson and Latrell Sprewell at Alabama, and so, so many more.
Heck, Wimp Sanderson had Sprewell, Robinson, Robert Horry, Jason Caffey and Marcus Webb – all future NBA players – on the same team and still somehow found plenty to frown about.
Richard Williams, still radio analyst for Mississippi State (and recovering nicely from a health scare weeks ago), agrees the league is better, top to bottom, than ever. He says it is by design.

“The commissioner (Greg Sankey) made basketball a priority,” Williams said. “He hired an associate commissioner for basketball and strongly suggested that all SEC members upgrade their schedules, and invest in both facilities and coaches. We’ve seen that happen and now we see them also investing in talent.”
You can do that legally now via NIL. This is not to say some programs weren’t “investing” in players under the table back in the late 20th century.
The SEC Tournament begins Wednesday at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. Mississippi State plays LSU in a first round game Wednesday at 6 p.m. Ole Miss, by virtue of its better league record, doesn’t have to play until Thursday at noon when the Rebels will play the winner of the first round game that matches Arkansas and South Carolina.
Should State beat LSU, the Bulldogs would play Missouri in the second round. Win that one, and Florida would be next. Should Ole Miss win its Thursday game, the Rebels would play top-seed Auburn in the quarterfinals. Clearly, both Mississippi teams face really difficult tasks. Regardless, both will play in the NCAA Tournament.
If you ask me, Auburn, the best overall team, is the odds-on favorite, but Florida, Alabama and Tennessee are all capable of winning the championship. For that matter, all four are capable of winning the national championship. That’s perhaps the best measure of how strong the league is.
Mississippi State sophomore Josh Hubbard won the Bailey Howell Trophy as Mississippi’s top men’s college player, announced Monday at a luncheon at Pearl River Resort in Philadelphia. Ole Miss senior Madison Scott won the Peggie Gillom as the top women’s player.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
p>
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1959

March 11, 1959

“A Raisin in the Sun,” the first Broadway play written by a Black woman, debuted at the Ethel Barrymore Theater.
Lorraine Hansberry, then only 28, drew inspiration for her play from a Langston Hughes’ poem: “What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun?”
Hansberry also drew on her past, her family winning a landmark court case in 1940 against real estate covenants that discriminated against Black Americans, Jews and others.
She attended the University of Wisconsin, only to leave to pursue a career as a writer in New York City in 1950. She fought against evictions in Harlem, worked with W.E.B. Du Bois and Paul Robeson as she wrote for the Black newspaper, Freedom, and made speeches for equal rights.
“Raisin in the Sun” starred Sidney Poitier, Claudia McNeal and Ruby Dee on Broadway and became the first play of the modern era with a Black director, Lloyd Richards. The New York Drama Critics’ Circle named it the best play, and it was adapted into a 1961 film, which starred the original Broadway cast.
Hansberry wrote the screenplay, and Dee won Best Supporting Actress from the National Board of Review.
In 1963, she met with Attorney General Robert Kennedy, questioning the administration’s dedication to civil rights. That same year, she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. She died two years later, and Robeson and SNCC organizer James Forman gave eulogies.
Her friend, Nina Simone, wrote the song, “Young, Gifted and Black” to honor Hansberry. In 1973, her first play became a Broadway musical, “Raisin,” which won the Tony for Best Musical. In 2010, Hansberry’s family home became a historic landmark, and the play, considered one of the great plays of the 20th century, continues to be performed on Broadway and across the nation. PBS featured her in American Masters’ Inspiring Women.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Fatalities reported in UMMC helicopter crash

An AirCare helicopter from the University of Mississippi Medical Center crashed near the Natchez Trace Parkway this afternoon.
A Madison County official confirmed to WLBT that there were fatalities. They were quoted saying, “We are on the scene of a medical helicopter crash in a heavily wooded area south of the Natchez Trace and north of Pipeline Road. There are fatalities. We are now awaiting the arrival from the FAA. Any other information should come from them.”
At the time of publication, authorities have not revealed how many fatalities or identified them. In an email, Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs Dr. LouAnn Woodward stated, “Two UMMC employee crew members and a Med-Trans pilot were on board. There was no patient aboard.”
The helicopter crashed in a heavily wooded area near the Natchez Trace Parkway and Highway 43. Madison County Sheriff’s Office, Gluckstadt Fire Department and several other first responders are at the scene.
UMMC’s flight program, AirCare, includes helicopters based in Jackson, Meridian, Columbus and Greenwood. The helicopters are used to transport patients to and from UMMC and other hospitals.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
-
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed6 days ago
Remarkable Woman 2024: What Dawn Bradley-Fletcher has been up to over the year
-
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed3 days ago
Feed the Children rolls out new program to help Oklahoma families
-
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed5 days ago
March 6,2025: Rain and snow on the way
-
News from the South - Texas News Feed6 days ago
Travis County DA failed to meet deadline to indict murder suspect | FOX 7 Austin
-
Mississippi Today7 days ago
Key lawmaker reverses course, passes bill to give poor women earlier prenatal care
-
Mississippi Today4 days ago
Judge tosses evidence tampering against Tim Herrington
-
News from the South - Florida News Feed6 days ago
64-year-old woman injured after car crashed into her mobile home in Zephyrhills
-
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed5 days ago
School officials voice concerns as US Department of Education remains in limbo