Odds and Ends: La. senate rejects bill that bans wearing saggy pants

By The Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. – A state Senate panel rejected a bill on Tuesday that would make it a crime to wear one’s pants too low, even as Cajun-country towns around Louisiana have been banning saggy pants from their streets.

Sen. Derrick Shepherd’s bill would have made it illegal to wear, in public, clothing that “intentionally exposes undergarments or intentionally exposes any portion of the pubic hair, cleft of the buttocks or genitals.” Violators would have faced a fine of up to $175 and eight days of community service. Exceptions included thong swim suits and clothing worn in fashion shows.

Sen. Yvonne Dorsey said she disliked the look of baggy pants but wanted to defend the public’s right to wear their clothes as they wish.

“When we begin to take the freedom of speech away … I think we’re doing something that’s just not right,” said Dorsey, a Democrat.Shepherd said the state should take a stand against droopy pants, which he called just one example of widespread indecency in contemporary clothing styles. “The shorts are getting shorter, the tops are getting smaller, the cleavage is getting larger,” said Shepherd, also a Democrat. “When are we going to say, ‘Enough is enough’?”

With no objection, the Senate judiciary panel voted against moving the measure to the floor.

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Shepherd tried and failed to pass a similar bill in 2004, but the measure died in the face of opposition from the American Civil Liberties Union. About a dozen Louisiana towns and cities have enacted or are considering bans on saggy pants.

The style is believed to have started in prisons, where inmates are issued ill-fitting jumpsuits but no belts to prevent hangings and beatings. The look was popularized in gangster rap videos.

Florida woman discovers alligator inside her home

OLDSMAR, Fla. – And some people get jittery about mice in the kitchen. Authorities say 69-year-old central Florida woman found an 8-foot long alligator prowling in her kitchen late Monday night.

Sandra Frosti says the gator must have pushed through the back porch screen door and then went inside through an open sliding glass door at her home in Oldsmar, just north of Tampa. It then apparently strolled through the living room, down a hall and into the kitchen.

A trapper with Animal Capture of Florida removed the alligator, which was cut by a plate that was knocked to the ground during the chaos. But no one inside the house was injured.