For Democratic State Rep. Joy Walters, the legacy of mass incarceration is synonymous with gun violence in Shreveport.
"They all work hand in hand," she said.
Walters, whose district covers part of the city, sits on the state's House Administration of Criminal Justice committee. She said the area's crime comes up almost every day in conversations with her constituents.
At the same time, many of the people she talks with have had a parent in prison.
Earlier this year, Walters held town halls to inform the community after a package of new "tough-on-crime" laws — including changes to how 17-year-olds are charged, good-behavior release credits and parole — galloped through the legislature.
"My district is impacted — all districts are impacted — by these pieces of legislation. Because people will sit for longer in jails," she said.
It will take a concerted effort by law enforcement, community organizers, religious leaders, and even people involved in crime, to take on gun violence in her area, Walters said. She respects her statehouse colleagues, but "us making laws out of fear, it's still not solving the issue."
Back on the red-and-green porch, Law's little boy gets restless, wriggling on his hip. At one point, Law directs him inside to get a drink of water or tells him not to touch some bleach on the porch.
As a parent in this community, he said there's a lot to worry about.
"By him being a young Black man in this world? Yes, I think about that all the time," Law said.
He wants the city to create more opportunities for young people like Blaze and his older child, who's in school. He said he got his box truck in hopes of building something that his kids could inherit from him after he dies.
He also wants to be a good dad, like his own father.
The violence he's seen growing up in Shreveport, “make[s] me want to be in my son's life even more,” he said. “It make[s] me want to raise him right, and teach him the right thing.”
"My daddy taught me the right thing. He was in my life; he just went to jail. He just wasn't here physical[ly]. But my thing is, I want to make sure I be here physical[ly] for him, you know?"