One week it’s sheriffs who can’t seem to get their act together and are initiating fights in restaurants and the next week it’s state judges.
Wow, our elected officials just seem to have this feeling of entitlement and invulnerability when it comes to their own behavior in public places.
Actually, the fracas that landed 23rd Judicial District Court judge Steven Trueau and two women amongst the garbage behind a Gonzales eatery occurred more than three years ago but justice can move painfully slow and the Louisiana Judiciary Commission has just now gotten around to addressing his social faux pas.

23rd JDC Judge and champion mud wrestler Steven Tureau
The judge’s encounter occurred shortly after dinner at a Gonzales steakhouse while St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Randy Smith’s ambush of a political opponent happened in a Madisonville steakhouse. The lesson here would probably be to avoid alcohol when consuming steaks—or avoid steaks when consuming alcohol. Who knows?
But back to our Ascension Parish saga. The judiciary commission, which is charged with keeping—or at least attempting to keep—judges in line and to recommend discipline for those who misbehave or otherwise besmirch their robes, has set a hearing date in September to consider the charges against Tureau, who just happens to be up for re-election this year, according to The Baton Rouge Advocate.
Basically, here’s what transpired when his honor, his wife and another couple popped into a bar called Swamp Chicken Daiquiris on Feb. 12, 2023 following dinner and (apparently several) drinks at a local restaurant. Tureau, at the time, was involved in secret negotiations with the bar’s co-owner, Stephen Frederick, about a buyout of Frederic’s partner, Michelle Lee.
Apparently, Frederic was somewhat peeved that one of the bar’s licenses was about to expire and he blamed Lee for the lapse and said so to Tureau.
Tureau, apparently lubricated by drinks, made his way to confront Lee, violating the non-disclosure pact and mentioning his buying the bar. The commission said Tureau told Lee, “you were going shut her down,” whereupon Frederic began to push Tureau away from the scene.
“You weren’t supposed to say anything to Ms. Lee about the expiring license and your conversation (about the buyout negotiations),” the commission wrote, adding that video footage showed that Tureau was “angry, red-faced and spilling a bottle of what appears to be beer, and you appeared to be intoxicated.”
Frederic and several bar patrons then shoved Tureau, his wife and the other woman who had joined them out the back door where the two women “ended up on the muddy, trash-strewn ground,” along with the judge, the commission said further.
The second woman said she believed she ended up on top of Tureau while Mrs. Tureau testified that she landed in a garbage can or on top of some garbage bags and Tureau himself was “under everyone else in the dirt and the mud.”
Now, you have to admit, that’s a video we’d all love to see on YouTube.
The Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Office responded to Lee’s 911 call but of course the brouhaha involved a sitting (or in this case, prone) judge so no action was taken.
Tureau, meanwhile, has denied that he intended to “invoke or exercise judicial power or influence against Ms. Lee or her business” with his threat to “shut her down.” But he at least admitted that his conduct might have been interpreted as threatening.
And of course, Tureau has lawyered up—just in case. His attorney, Dane Ciolino, said the judge has accepted responsibility for what occurred “in this isolated and brief event,” The Advocate quoted him as saying.
Who needs Netflix for entertainment in Louisiana?


