Chattanooga Times Free Press

Parts of Gov. Kemp’s anti-gang package advance, others stall

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Some parts of Gov. Brian Kemp’s anti-gang push are moving forward, but the centerpiec­e of the package is bottled up in the state Senate as the clock winds down on the 2020 legislativ­e session.

The Republican governor said in his State of the State speech in January that gangs are “a statewide threat that undermines our safety and our future.” Several bills were introduced to move Kemp’s proposals forward.

On Friday, the House Committee on Public Safety and Homeland Security voted to advance Senate Bill 393 to the full House. It would create a legal division under the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion to provide prosecutor­s to help prosecute gang crimes or sex traffickin­g crimes. The Kemp administra­tion says prosecutor­s with special expertise can help district attorneys fight those types of crimes. The measure says the GBI lawyers would work under the local prosecutor and not act on their own, as once discussed.

“One of the changes we made was confirming they were underneath that district attorney,” said Sen. Brian Strickland, a McDonough Republican.

Kemp is also seeking more money to fight gangs. Under the budget proposed for 2021, lawmakers would appropriat­e an additional $885,000 to allow the GBI to hire seven people for a gang task force despite billions in budget cuts.

But the most significan­t measure passed by the House is currently stuck in the Senate Committee on Assignment­s, meaning leaders haven’t released it for committee action.

House Bill 994 would let prosecutor­s ask juvenile judges to shift cases into adult courts and let them cite evidence of gang activity as a reason for the shift. It would also require children convicted of gang-related offenses as juveniles to be enrolled in an evidence-based interventi­on program that has been shown to decrease gang involvemen­t.

It would also add human traffickin­g, some sex crimes and felony obstructio­n of justice as gang-related crimes, and require people convicted of gang-related sex crimes to be placed on the state’s sexual offender registry. The measure would also let judges order gang members to forfeit property.

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