
Edosa Ogbebor
Edosa Ogbebor is a Customer Success Specialist at Diligent Media Solutions and spends his time speaking to CEOS all over the world.
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- October 21
- 8 min read
🔎 Plaintiff Calls Attention to Irregular Court Communications Surrounding Louisiana Injunction
LAFAYETTE, LA – OCTOBER 21, 2025 – Request Filed By: Mr. Ogbebor
To Whom It May Concern:
Mr. Ogbebor, a civil-rights litigant in ongoing federal and state proceedings, has revealed a serious irregularity in the handling of a state-court permanent injunction that was widely circulated to third parties far beyond the scope allowed by law.
Court records show that when the injunction was issued, copies were sent not only to the parties in the case but also to the University of Louisiana at Lafayette , the Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Office, and even the Louisiana Supreme Court — none of which were parties to the proceeding or proper recipients under the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure.
However, when Mr. Ogbebor later filed a motion to dissolve that injunction, and the court issued an order denying it, those same third parties were not copied. The selective omission of recipients in the later filings strongly suggests that court personnel recognized the impropriety of the earlier dissemination and quietly corrected course without formal acknowledgment.
“This isn’t about a personal dispute,” Mr. Ogbebor stated. “It’s about transparency and fairness. If an order is circulated publicly to harm someone’s reputation, the same institutions deserve to know when that order’s validity is challenged. Justice requires equal notice, not selective communication.”
Mr. Ogbebor has called for the record to be corrected to ensure that all recipients of the original injunction are formally notified of subsequent developments, and for judicial administrators to review dissemination practices that risk reputational harm or violate due-process standards.
Legal observers note that the pattern raises constitutional questions under the Fourteenth Amendment’s due-process clause and the “stigma-plus” doctrine established in Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693 (1976), which prohibits government actors from imposing reputational harm without fair procedure.
Mr. Ogbebor intends to continue pursuing corrective relief through proper legal channels while advocating publicly for procedural integrity in Louisiana’s courts.
Respectfully,
Mr. Ogbebor


University of Louisiana at Lafayette Police Department – Lafayette, LA
Lafayette Consolidated Government – City of Lafayette, LA
Lafayette Police Department – Lafayette, LA
Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Office – Lafayette, LA
Lafayette Parish District Attorney’s Office – Lafayette, LA
Lafayette Parish Public Defender’s Office – Lafayette, LA
United States Court of Appeal for the 5th Circuit
United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana
District Judge Terry Alvin Doughty
Magistrate Judge Carol B. Whitehurst
District Judge Michelle Breaux
Commissioner Judge Andre Doguet
Commissioner Judge Thomas Frederick
Lafayette Parish District Attorney’s Office – Lafayette, LA
Lafayette Parish Public Defender’s Office – Lafayette, LA
District Attorney Donald Landry
Assistant District Attorney Chris Richard
Mark Garber – Lafayette Parish Sheriff’s Office
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