Chattanooga Times Free Press

Rep. Moore casts unpopular no vote against Gov. Deal building honor

- BY TYLER JETT STAFF WRITER

Former Gov. Nathan Deal’s criminal justice reform efforts will be set in stone later this year, when the state’s new judicial complex opens. Georgia’s House of Representa­tives overwhelmi­ngly passed a resolution Wednesday to name the building after him, voting 159-2.

One of those two lawmakers on the negative side was Freshman State Rep. Colton Moore, R-Trenton. Moore told the Times Free Press he didn’t believe the building should be named after anybody, and Deal’s criminal justice reforms didn’t go far enough.

“There are poor, broke and damned people in the state of Georgia that are not receiving justice,” he said. “Until we can find a true leader in justice reform, we shouldn’t rush to name the building the Nathan Deal Justice Center just because he is our recent governor. He should not be the symbol of justice for our state.”

Criminal justice reform was the marquee effort of Deal’s time as governor. When he took office in 2011, Georgia’s incarcerat­ion rate was the fourth-highest in the country. It also was on track to grow by 8 percent in five years, putting the total population at 60,000. The state prepared to build two new prisons at a cost of about $260 million.

Deal appropriat­ed millions to open accountabi­lity courts across the state, offering alternativ­es to prison sentences. In the Lookout Mountain Judicial Circuit, local judges now oversee a drug court and a parental accountabi­lity court, which is aimed at divorced parents who are behind on child support. With Deal in office, the state also tweaked some sentencing laws — for example, Georgia now has more punishment thresholds for drug possession, with the intention of keeping people out of jail if they are caught with low quantities.

Moore, whose father was convicted of marijuana distributi­on in Dade County in 1999, argued that Deal’s efforts were motivated by the financial picture instead of changing how the state’s police and prosecutor­s work. He believes some members of law enforcemen­t are still too eager to harshly punish defendants. He also said the number of people in the state under supervisio­n for conviction­s is still too high.

“They didn’t get to the root of the criminal justice problem,” Moore said.

He also criticized an ethics probe into Deal’s 2010 campaign, which centered on how money was spent. Moore further said the governor should have testified in the December 2017 trial of Nydia Tisdale, a citizen journalist who was arrested after refusing to stop filming a Republican Party campaign rally in Dawsonvill­e, Georgia. Deal was at the event.

Tisdale resisted an officer as he arrested her, though a jury later acquitted her of felony obstructio­n and misdemeano­r trespass charges. She was convicted of misdemeano­r obstructio­n and sentenced to 12 months probation. Before the trial, Deal was subpoenaed to testify. But a judge later ruled he did not have to come to court.

Moore grabbed attention with Wednesday’s vote — and also for whom he was aligned with. The other “no” vote came from State. Rep. Matt Gurtler, R-Tiger, a frequent critic of Republican leadership. During Gurtler’s re-election campaign last year, Speaker of the House David Ralston contribute­d to his opponent’s campaign. Moore and Gurtler happen to be roommates in Atlanta during this legislativ­e session.

After Moore’s vote, reporters with the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on noted his diverse set of jobs, which includes truck driver and auctioneer.

“[Moore] can now add irrelevant state lawmaker to his list of occupation­s,” the reporter wrote. “You do not cross the House speaker, a man of your own party, on an innocuous bit of legislatio­n with the expectatio­n of future rewards.”

When it opens later this year, the Nathan Deal Judicial Center will hold the Georgia Supreme Court and Georgia Court of Appeals.

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