BY Brenden AckermanApril 5, 2026
4 weeks ago
BY 
 | April 5, 2026
4 weeks ago

DOJ charges two men with burning down the only Catholic church in a Louisiana parish ahead of Holy Week

Two men in Columbia, Louisiana, now face federal arson charges after allegedly burning down the sole Catholic church in Caldwell Parish just days before Holy Week began.

The Department of Justice announced Thursday that Anthony Dillon Jr., 19, and James Dale Smith IV, 21, broke into St. John's Chapel on March 27, ransacked it, and set it on fire. The church was the only place Catholic residents in the parish could gather to worship.

If convicted, each man faces a minimum of five years in federal prison and a maximum of 20 years, along with a $250,000 fine.

What Authorities Say Happened

According to an official press release, the destruction wasn't random. Dillon and Smith had allegedly been stealing power from the church for their home. When church officials confronted them, the two apparently decided the appropriate response was to grab a baseball bat, smash a church window, and loot the building. The Daily Caller reported.

They allegedly stole at least three televisions and a sound system before torching the place. One of those televisions, broken, was later sold to a separate man, a detail that gives you a sense of the sophistication of this operation.

So to recap: they were caught stealing electricity from a church, and their retaliation was to burglarize it, gut it of anything they could carry, and then burn it to the ground. Days before Easter.

A Community Left Without Its Church

United States Attorney Zachary A. Keller framed the stakes in exactly the right terms:

"Worshiping where we choose is a fundamental liberty woven into the founding fabric of this Nation, and these two men are alleged to have destroyed the sole church in Caldwell Parish where its Catholic residents could meet and worship right before the holiest week in the church calendar."

That word "sole" carries the weight of the whole story. This wasn't a parish with five churches and a cathedral down the road. This was it. Caldwell Parish Catholics had one place to celebrate Palm Sunday, Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter. Now they don't.

Keller also addressed the broader significance for rural communities:

"Our Office looks forward to seeking and securing justice for the residents of Caldwell Parish here and hope that this case shows our rural communities that we remain present and vigilant in serving and protecting them."

The Diocese of Alexandria has set up a fund to rebuild the church. Masses will be held at a separate location "until further notice," according to their website. For Catholics in Caldwell Parish, Holy Week 2026 will be observed in improvised quarters because two men decided a confrontation over stolen electricity warranted arson.

The Federal Response

FBI New Orleans confirmed its involvement in the investigation alongside the ATF, the Louisiana State Fire Marshal, and the Caldwell Parish Sheriff's Office. The case is being pursued at the federal level, which signals the seriousness with which the DOJ is treating an attack on a house of worship.

That's the correct posture. Churches, synagogues, mosques, and every other house of worship sit at the intersection of two things the federal government exists to protect: religious liberty and the rule of law. When someone destroys a place of worship, it isn't just property crime. It's an assault on the community's ability to exercise a constitutional right.

A Broader Pattern Worth Watching

Attacks on churches in America rarely receive the media saturation they deserve. When a Catholic church is vandalized, firebombed, or, in this case, razed to the ground, the coverage tends to be local and fleeting. Reverse the target, and the story would dominate cable news for a week.

That double standard doesn't diminish what happened in Caldwell Parish, but it does explain why so many Americans feel that hostility toward Christian institutions is treated as a lesser offense in the national conversation. The facts here are plain enough:

  • Two men were confronted for stealing from a church.
  • They responded by destroying it entirely.
  • The timing, days before Holy Week, compounds the violation.
  • An entire parish lost its only Catholic house of worship.

Rural communities already contend with fewer resources, fewer institutions, and less visibility. Losing a church isn't just losing a building. It's losing the anchor of communal life. The DOJ's willingness to pursue federal charges here matters, not just for Caldwell Parish, but as a signal that the people in small towns who hold this country together have not been forgotten.

The people of St. John's Chapel will rebuild. They always do. But the reason they have to rebuild at all is a story that deserves more than a passing headline.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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