I was in NOLA during the time that L'Express was flying, and knew a couple of guys that flew there that were farther down the pipeline than I was (IE getting ratings, building time, CFI, check-running and so on). They had 99s and 1900s. I believe it was run by the same people that ran Royal, but I am not %100 on that.
The 1900s were C models, and were your basic white, with purple, green and gold (Mardi Gras colors) stripes. I had the chance to sit in one at KNEW.
They had a 99 auger in near Birmingham.
My bros that flew there report the typical start up, family owned commuter airline trauma. A "challenging" management, to say the least.
If memory serves, they wound up in financial trouble, had planes repo'ed, went bust and wound up owing the pilots (among others) a lot of money. The more things change....
Good news was that after they went bust, what was then Nashville Eagle, later to become Flagship hired most, if not all of the pilots.
Nu