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  1. The Parish Attorney’s Office is responsible for directing and supervising the legal affairs of the City/Parish of Baton Rouge. The office provides legal advice to the Mayor, the Council and other City departments and boards.

    • Who owns Church property?
    • What is the difference between a parish and a church? People use the expression parish and church interchangeably, but they are very distinct realities.
    • How do parishes merge? Parishes are increasingly having to address the question of whether or not to merge. The declining number of priests to serve the faithful, as well as shifting populations, have caused dioceses throughout the world, especially in Europe and North America, to consider restructuring.
    • What happens with the bank accounts and property in the case of merger? Two canons in the Code of Canon Law oversee the method of merging the juridic person that is a parish.
  2. jefferson-parish-government.azurewebsites.netParish Attorney's Office

    West Bank Office J.P. General Government Building 200 Derbigny Street, Suite 5200 Gretna, LA 70053 Phone: (504) 364-3822 Fax: (504) 364-2673. Email: JPParishAttorney@jeffparish.net. The Parish Attorney's Office is the legal arm of Jefferson Parish Government.

  3. The Parish Attorney serves as legal counsel to the Parish Council, the Parish President, and all departments, offices, agencies, and special districts, and performs such other legal duties as many be assigned by administrative regulations.

  4. The Baton Rouge City Prosecutor’s Office is a Division of the Parish Attorney’s Office of Baton Rouge City. The City Prosecutor’s Office is responsible for the prosecution of all Criminal, DWI, and Traffic matters under the Code of Ordinance of the City of Baton Rouge.

  5. Parish Attorney's Office. The Parish Attorney’s Office is responsible for directing and supervising the legal affairs of the City/Parish of Baton Rouge. Planning Commission

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  7. The District Attorney’s Office cannot put defense witnesses “on-call.” I am the victim in a case, and I want to drop the charges. What should I do? Crimes are charged by the District Attorney’s Office on behalf of the People of the State of Louisiana, not on behalf of the victim.

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