Susan Hutson
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Susan Hutson is an American lawyer who has been the sheriff of
New Orleans New Orleans (commonly known as NOLA or The Big Easy among other nicknames) is a Consolidated city-county, consolidated city-parish located along the Mississippi River in the U.S. state of Louisiana. With a population of 383,997 at the 2020 ...
, Louisiana, since May 2, 2022. A Democrat, Hutson is the first woman to hold the office. Before becoming sheriff, she worked in criminal justice reform and police oversight.


Early life and education

Hutson was born in
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, Pennsylvania, and raised in
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, Texas. She graduated from the
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in 1989 and Tulane Law School in 1992.


Career


Police oversight

For much of her career, Hutson worked in police oversight in
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, California, and
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. This culminated in her becoming the assistant inspector general for the
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from 2007 to 2010. In 2010, she became the independent police monitor for the
New Orleans Police Department The New Orleans Police Department (NOPD) has primary responsibility for law enforcement in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. The department's jurisdiction covers all of Orleans Parish, Louisiana, Orleans Parish, while the city itself is div ...
, a position established after a successful referendum in 2008. She resigned from that position in 2021 after announcing her run for sheriff. Hutson was also the president of the National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement, a citizen police oversight organization created in 2016. She also resigned from this position after announcing her run for sheriff.


Election as Sheriff

In April 2021, Hutson announced she would run for Orleans Parish Sheriff against longtime Sheriff Marlin Gusman, who had held the position since 2004, in the elections to be held that November. A progressive, she focused her campaign on criminal justice reform and advocated against plans to expand the Orleans Parish jail. She was endorsed by New Orleans District Attorney Jason Williams. Hutson also received a donation of $200,000 from
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CEO
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, which was more than all of her other donations combined. On November 13, Hutson placed second in the nonpartisan primary election, 13 points behind Gusman. Because Gusman failed to earn 50% of the vote, he and Hutson advanced to the general election. On December 11, Hutson won with 53% of the vote.


Tenure

Hutson was sworn in on May 2, 2022, becoming the first female sheriff of New Orleans and the first Black female sheriff in Louisiana. In August 2022, inmates at the Orleans Parish jail barricaded themselves inside a pod and demanded better conditions, including better food and medicine, more adequate entertainment, and a washer and dryer. After multiple days, a sprinkler system was activated inside the pod, and Hutson instructed personnel to break in, ending the standoff. None of the prisoners’ demands was considered. In April 2023, Hutson proposed a ballot measure that would have generated $11.7 million a year for the sheriff’s office by increasing property taxes. The measure failed with 91% of voters rejecting it. In July 2023, federal jail monitors found that jail conditions, which started falling in 2020 under Gusman, had continued to decline under Hutson. The report stated that despite cooperation from Hutson, conditions did not improve, with drug smuggling and frequent violence among inmates. It attributed this decline to a lack of resources and staff. Hutson’s opposition to the expansion of the Orleans Parish jail, on which she centered her campaign, was ultimately unsuccessful after a federal judge in 2023 denied Hutson’s motion and ordered the city to begin construction. Hutson denounced the decision but nonetheless vowed to follow it.


Controversies

In March 2023, Hutson fired four high-ranking officials from the sheriff’s office, saying the office was going through "organizational restructuring". One of the officials, CFO David Trautenberg, claimed in a lawsuit that he was fired for opening an internal financial investigation into alleged "misuse of public funds". It was reported that the funds Trautenberg referred to, nearly $20,000 of taxpayer money, were spent for senior staff to stay in high-end hotel rooms during
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season, most of which reportedly remained unoccupied. Hutson said there was nothing irregular about the expenditure, saying it was "money well spent". After the 2023 Mardi Gras season, it was reported that Hutson overpaid deputies who took on additional duties during the celebrations. According to the inspector general of New Orleans, the payments violated state and federal law. On May 16, 2025, ten inmates with violent charges, including homicide, escaped overnight by moving a toliet fixture and went unnoticed and unreported to partner agencies for over ten hours. Shortly thereafter, Hutson suspended her campaign. At the time of qualifying for re-election on July 9, 2025, one inmate remained at large. She seeks to serve a second term as Sheriff of Orleans Parish.


Electoral history


Orleans Parish Sheriff, 2021

Nonpartisan primary election, November 13, 2021 General election, December 11, 2021


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hutson, Susan Living people 21st-century American women politicians Louisiana Democrats Tulane University Law School alumni University of Pennsylvania alumni 21st-century African-American women politicians 21st-century African-American politicians American police officers Louisiana sheriffs Year of birth missing (living people) Law enforcement officials from New Orleans Law enforcement officials from Los Angeles County, California Law enforcement officials from Texas