STAYING IN TOUCH AFTER TRAGEDY

BY JIM MUSTIAN
THE DAILY IBERIAN
Published/Last Modified on Monday, October 6, 2008 2:07 PM CDT

A casual observer might have mistaken Catholic High School’s homecoming last week as run of the mill.

A king and queen were crowned, though the football team lost. But it was the appropriateness of this year’s theme — community — that made last week noteworthy.

This year, the Class of 1978 is celebrating a 30-year reunion, but they are doing so without former classmate David LeBlanc, the 17-year-old St. Martinville native who was murdered with his girlfriend, Loretta Bourque, 31 years ago on homecoming night, a tragedy that helped inspire the book and movie “Dead Man Walking.”

(Use arrows above to view more photos)

Advertisement
“What homecoming is really about is feeling a connection to your school that lasts many, many years,” Catholic High Principal Tim Uhl told a gym full of students Thursday following a special Mass. “The connections you’re making here are going to last many years, especially because this is also a faith community.”

The Class of ’78 has epitomized that message.

Several of David’s classmates stayed in touch with his family over the years, assuring them David will never be forgotten. They attended both of the funerals — services were held in St. Martinville and Thibodaux — and sent countless flower arrangements.

But it didn’t stop there. Each time the class has gotten together, they’ve been sure to send pictures and signed cards. Some send Christmas greetings around the holidays.

“This is a great example of community,” Uhl said. “These people have really kept in touch with each other and the LeBlancs.”

For a family that was left to grieve, the support of David’s classmates has been of no small benefit. 

“They were a good bunch of kids, they really were,” said Vickie Albert, David’s older sister. “And they let us know David wasn’t forgotten.”

David’s best friend, Wade Vincent, stood in Albert’s wedding and is godfather to her youngest son. “

David couldn’t be there so we asked him,” she said wiping away a tear. Vincent said he and David were “attached at the hip” when the two were at school. Another good friend, Donald Robertson, was part of their “trio” at school and also has stayed in touch, Vincent said.

David’s death brought his classmates even closer together. His was a small, close-knit class of 51 students.

“(His death) was a hard pill to swallow,” Vincent said. “But we stuck by each other and made sure no one went through it alone.”

Dead Man Walking

More than three decades have passed since that unforgettable November night. David attended the homecoming football game with Bourque, and the two were parked in a lovers’ lane later that night when they were approached by two young men impersonating police officers. The faux deputies, Elmo Patrick Sonnier and his younger brother Eddie, told the couple they were in trouble for trespassing.

According to police reports, the Sonniers handcuffed David to a tree and took Bourque away to rape her. They later shot both of them in the back of the head three times near a sugar cane field along Crochet Road in New Iberia. Albert said the two were found holding hands together.

After testifying against his brother, Eddie received a life sentence that he is still serving at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola. Patrick was sentenced to the death penalty and in 1984 was executed in the electric chair.

Sister Helen Prejean, a New Orleans nun who has since become a well-known anti-death penalty advocate and author, befriended Patrick during his stay on Death Row and chronicled her relationship with him in the award-winning novel “Dead Man Walking,” which was subsequently turned into a film of the same name.

It’s a film Albert has never seen.

Albert said Prejean asked her to look over some the drafts of the book and was alarmed by much of what she read.

“I told her your book should have been titled ‘Lying Man Walking’ because the Sonnier brothers lied to you and you believed it,” Albert said.

Prejean’s relationship with the Sonnier brothers created a bit of tension with both the LeBlancs and the Bourques initially, but Albert said Prejean has remained a family friend over the years.

Lloyd’s death

Thursday was an emotional day for Albert and her mother, Eula, for many reasons. Attending the Mass Thursday morning marked one of the very few times the family has visited the school since David’s death.

“My daughter was over there a couple of years ago for a Relay for Life and it felt funny,” she said. “We just haven’t had any other reason to go.”

Albert said it was “hard to be there” but comforting to be among some of the classmates who could make it Thursday.

“It was fantastic what they did after all this time,” Prejean said in a telephone interview this morning. “That people came out on a business day, that really says something.”

But there was one man missing from the crowd Thursday.

“My only regret is that my dad was not here, because he would have loved to have gone,” Albert said.

David’s father, Lloyd, died in May of a heart attack at the age of 79.

“It’s sad, but he survived and he was a strong man. Not one day passed when he didn’t think about (David),” Albert said. 

“My daddy was a bulldozer operator, and he said for every tree he knocked over, it made him remember that his son was handcuffed to a tree when he died.”

Since Lloyd’s death, Albert said a clearer picture has emerged of just how forgiving he was toward David’s killers. Albert said she recently learned, while going through some notes, that her father frequently sent money to Patrick Sonnier through Prejean while he sat on Death Row.

“He grew up in the Catholic Church, which teaches forgiveness,” Albert said.

Lloyd missed his son for much of his life, but now, they rest in peace together. His last request was to be interred with his son, and Albert made that happen.

“He had his final wish,” Albert said. “He missed that child so much.”

Comments

    Area Resident Also wrote on Oct 7, 2008 10:11 AM:

    " If anyone is interested the Bourque family also wrote a book about what they had to endore throughout the years about this terrible tragdey. The book is called "Dead Family Walking" and it can be purchased on the internet at www.deadfamilywalking.com I've read the book and it has touched my life to know what they had to go through. I strongly encourage everyone to read it. Rest in peace Loretta and David, you will never be forgotten. "

    Ronald wrote on Oct 7, 2008 7:42 AM:

    " I am a St. Martinville native and Catholic High student. I knew David, but being in 8th grade I didn't know him well. But I did see him often at school. What haunts me is that last period he sat in the dooway across the hall from my class. I saw him that friday, and that image is embedded in my brain. Big smile on his face. It was a shocking time to be a young CHS student and St Martinville resident. David will always be remembered by this SM resident CHS student. "

    hopeful parent wrote on Oct 6, 2008 9:30 PM:

    " I hope these two did not die in vain. Hopefully the younger generation will see that "parking" can lead to horrible things. No family should ever have to endure the pain that these families have had. I remember when this happened 30 years ago. I am from St. Martinville and it was such a scary thing. We had never heard of such a horrific thing happening in our little town. I know it scared me straight. Teenagers please pay attention and parents please share this with your children. I know I did. "

    Becca wrote on Oct 6, 2008 8:32 PM:

    " I have always had a very strong emotional tie to this story. I watched "Dead Man Walking", and from that point on, I wanted facts (not what the movie portrayed), so I went to the library, went through newspaper archives, searched the internet, and did alot of reading. I didn't know David or Loretta, but the story is SO sad, and my heart truly goes out to the families of everyone involved. RIP David and Loretta. And I want to thank The Daily Iberian for such a wonderful article. And kudos to the family and classmates for their amazing tribute. "

    Area Resident wrote on Oct 6, 2008 2:44 PM:

    " So sad for the Leblanc family and the Bourque family! I knew Loretta but not David. But this was a great way to pay tribute to a fallen classmate even after all of these years! "

WRITE A COMMENT

Use the form below to post a brief comment related to this story. Use the word count tool to assist you in keeping your remarks to 100 words or fewer.

•Comments must be approved by an editor or the publisher before appearing on the Web site but are not verified for accuracy nor have we verified the identity of any person supposedly posting an comment. Please consider this as you consider any statement made. A thoughtful contribution to the online discussion is appreciated.

• Please note your comments must attempt to follow basic rules of grammar and punctuation or they will not be posted. Do not use unfamiliar abbreviations or text-like short cuts, like ur for your. Please keep your tone civil. You can say someone's idea is stupid but you cannot say someone is stupid.

• Comments should deal with matters of public concern. Problems with private individuals or private companies are not likely to get posted.

• Questions or comments about items posted should be e-mailed to dailyiberian@bellsouth.net.

(optional)
Current Word Count:
   

Classifieds


Contact Us

Subscribe
Vacation Hold
General Email

Mailing Address:
The Daily Iberian
P.O. Box 9290
New Iberia, LA
70562-9290

Street Address:
926 East Main St.
New Iberia, LA 70560

Phone:
(337) 365-6773

Fax:
(337)-367-9640

Inside Louisiana:
800-365-6773

Local Weather