Edgar Cason, sometimes known as Ransom Edgar Cason, is a farmer, businessman, and philanthropist from Coushatta in Red River Parish in northwestern Louisiana, where he has resided since 1990. He is particularly known for his donations to Republican political and Southern Baptist church causes, the latter through his Cason Foundation, which he established in 2010.
The Caskey Divinity School at Baptist-affiliated Louisiana College in Pineville is named for his father-in-law, a pastor from Red River Parish. Cason and his wife, the former Flora Jean Caskey, donated $5.1 million to the divinity school over several years prior to 2013. It was reported that the Cason Foundation was prepared to give upwards of $60 million for the operation of the divinity school, but the Baptist Message, the state denominational newspaper, could not ascertain any public statements on behalf of Edgar Cason stipulating a specific amount that might be forthcoming. Then in a dispute with then LC president, Joe W. Aguillard, they withdrew all future funds to the institution. Cason maintained that Aguillard diverted $60,000, including $2,000 for a pair of suits, from the Caskey Divinity School to an LC missions project in Tanzania, Africa, which Cason had never agreed to underwrite. Cason was particularly disturbed that the LC trustees in March 2013 refused to hear his complaint in the matter. Cason wrote the trustees: "We deeply regret that we must now discontinue support the actions of President Aguillard which we believe to be unethical and potentially illegal. We disapprove of his use of Caskey funds for LC Tanzania and consider this to be misappropriation." A year later, as other controversies mounted, the trustees removed Aguillard as president but allowed him to remain a president emeritus with one year of salary while on leave and the option to return in 2015 as a tenured faculty member in the GraduateSchool of Education. Aguillard's interim successor was Argile Smith, the former director of the Caskey Divinity School. After the dispute with Louisiana College, the Casons entered into an agreement with New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary to establish the Caskey Center for Church Excellence with an initial gift of $1.5 million from an anonymous donor. The center will offer free theological education for small-church bi-vocational pastors and staff members of Southern Baptist congregations within Louisiana.