Chris Hazel
Lowell Christopher Hazel, known as Chris Hazel (born January 25, 1965), is an attorney from Pineville, Louisiana, and a Republican member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from District 27, which encompasses northern Rapides Parish.
Election history
In the October 20, 2007, jungle primary, Hazel unseated incumbent Democrat Representative Rick L. Farrar of Pineville, 9,330 votes (62.5 percent) to 5,611 (37.5 percent). Farrar had first won the seat in The Primary held on October 19, 1991, when he upset fellow Democrat Carl Newton Gunter, Jr., 7,729 (56.6 percent) to 5,929 (43.4 percent). Gunter had been known for his populist political stance and his fiery opposition to abortion.
Legal experience
Hazel served from 2004-2007 as an assistant district attorney in Alexandria, the seat of Rapides Parish and the largest city in Central Louisiana. From 2003-2004, Hazel was the assistant D.A. in Colfax, the seat of neighboring Grant Parish. From 2000-2002, he was a law clerk for Ninth Judicial District Judge Tom Yeager in Alexandria.
Education and background
Hazel graduated in 1983 from the Roman Catholic Holy Cross High School in New Orleans. He then attended United States Marine Corps infantry training school at Camp Pendleton, California, and served in the Marines at 29 Palms, California, until 1986. Thereafter, he was a Lyndon B. Johnson intern for Democratic U.S. Representative Lindy Boggs of New Orleans. In 1990, Hazel received his bachelor of arts degree in political science from the University of New Orleans. He attended the United States Border Patrol training institute at Artesia, New Mexico. From 1992-1997, he was a Border Patrol agent at the Chula Vista station in San Diego. In 1997, he entered the Thomas M. Cooley Law School in Lansing, Michigan, from which he procured his Juris Doctor degree in 2000. After law school, he returned to Louisiana to begin a legal career.
Hazel holds membership in the Louisiana Bar and the Louisiana District Attorney's associations, the American Legion, Kiwanis Club, Amerita Club, the Rapides/Pineville Soccer Association, and the National Rifle Association. He is a vestry member at St. Michael's Episcopal Church in Pineville. Hazel is married to the former Karen Frances Centanni, and the couple has two children, Sydney and Brik.
Legislative service
As a legislator, Hazel sits on these committees: (1) Administration of Criminal Justice, (2) Agriculture, Forestry, Aquaculture, and Rural Development, and (3) Appropriations. Hazel's first bill, HB 148 passed in the 2008 legislative session. It "adds the intentional manufacturing, purchasing, distributing, or attempting to manufacture, purchase, or distribute a controlled dangerous substance in violation of the CDS law in the presence of a minor child as an element of the crime of cruelty to a juvenile."
Reflecting his own background as an employee of two district attorneys, Hazel introducted HB303 in March 2008. This would authorize former employees of district attorneys and assistant district attorneys to retain their retirement benefits if they become reemployed at a salary less than provided under existing state law." The measure would not apply to Hazel, for he had only four years of such service.
Hazel also introduced HB 40 in the 2008 session to help police crack down on prostitution by broadening the definition of "[...] intercourse" to include "oral, anal or vaginal" contact. Hazel said that his measure would "close loopholes" so that defense attorneys could not argue over the nuances of [...] relations in certain instances. Despite ridicule from numerous bloggers, Hazel's bill was signed into law by Governor Jindal on June 12, 2008.