Chattanooga Times Free Press

Protests’ aftermath shows political divide

- BY MAYA T. PRABHU

ATLANTA — For months last year, protesters took to the streets of Atlanta following the murder of George Floyd in Minnesota to demand social justice and changes to policing.

Gatherings that began in daylight hours featured calls for changes to law enforcemen­t and greater accountabi­lity in response to the deaths of Floyd — and Ahmaud Arbery and Rayshard Brooks in Georgia — at times became nights of violence and vandalism leading to several arrests.

Heading into Georgia’s 2021 legislativ­e session, lawmakers took varying approaches to how best to address what they witnessed last summer — some choosing to address the root causes of the protests and others targeting the illegal actions of those who protested.

That resulted in divergent priorities among those in positions of power.

Legislatio­n originatin­g in the House and backed by a bipartisan group of leaders won passage to overhaul the state’s law that allows residents to arrest one another

“Republican­s are trying to do something to put people in jail for upholding peace and asking police to stop killing people. They’re going the total opposite way.” – STATE REP. SANDRA SCOTT, D-REX

and increase the penalties for those who commit crimes against someone based on characteri­stics such as their race, gender, religion or sexual orientatio­n.

The General Assembly also passed a Republican-backed House bill that would restrict local government­s from decreasing police budgets by more than 5% in one year or cumulative­ly across five years.

Senate Republican leadership gave priority to bills that would have increased the penalties for those arrested during protests and required drivers to learn how best to interact with police during a traffic stop. Neither measure passed this year.

“To the extent that there’s an implicatio­n that doing some positive things for social justice issues is mutually exclusive of supporting the law enforcemen­t community — I reject that notion,” House Speaker David Ralston said. “Oftentimes we kind of have that tension, and it doesn’t need to be there.”

But Democrats in both chambers pushed back on the Republican-backed efforts. Instead, they introduced, as they do nearly every year, a wide variety of legislatio­n that would overhaul the way Georgians are policed. Those bills didn’t get hearings.

State Rep. Sandra Scott of Rex is one of several Democratic lawmakers who file legislatio­n each year to address racial disparitie­s in policing in Georgia, ranging from anti-profiling legislatio­n to bills that require additional de-escalation training.

“I filed legislatio­n that addresses no-knock warrants, chokeholds, things like that — things that everyone knows is a problem,” Scott said. “Republican­s are trying to do something to put people in jail for upholding peace and asking police to stop killing people. They’re going the total opposite way.”

Scott is referencin­g Senate Bill 171, legislatio­n Cataula Republican state Sen. Randy Robertson introduced that would increase the penalties for people who commit crimes during protests. Robertson is a former police officer. The measure failed.

SB 171 would have increased the penalties for crimes such as blocking a highway, assaulting someone or damaging property if it involves groups of two or more. Opponents said the legislatio­n violated the First Amendment by imposing limits and increased penalties on how and when Georgians can gather.

“I want any group no matter the group, I don’t care if they love Jesus or if they hate Republican­s, I want them to be able to go wherever they want to go on public property and safely get their message across,” Robertson said. “What I do not want is what happened in Charlottes­ville, when two opposing sides ended up clashing and people got hurt and killed.”

Versions of the legislatio­n proposed by both Republican­s and Democrats have popped up in statehouse­s across the country with varying success.

“Since George Floyd’s death, there have been nearly 3,000 bills introduced in state legislatur­es addressing policing,” said Mick Bullock, spokesman with the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. “So far in 2021 there have been at least 2,214 bills introduced and nearly 100 have already been enacted. About 1,800 are still pending as of today.”

Maryland’s Democratic-majority General Assembly voted to repeal protection­s given to police through the “Law Enforcemen­t Officers Bill of Rights” and replaced it with procedures that involve residents in the disciplina­ry process. In the GOP-controlled Oklahoma Legislatur­e, a new law that includes restrictio­ns on protests also grants immunity to drivers who kill or injure those who are protesting — a provision that was included in Georgia’s version of the proposal.

Republican leaders in Georgia say they want to balance common-sense changes to police practices — such as including funding for additional training instructor­s for all officers who receive Georgia Peace Officer Standards and Training certificat­ion — with a need to maintain peace between police and the community.

“The programs are there. They just needed the instructor­s and the funding to expand them,” said Senate Majority Leader Mike Dugan, R-Carrollton.

Dugan said SB 171 and Senate Bill 115 — addressing protests and traffic stops, respective­ly — were being responsive to the needs presented last summer.

“From what I saw, their goal was to just draw attention to what they perceived to be an issue within law enforcemen­t and not really any expectatio­n of a solution to what they perceived to be a problem.” – STATE SEN. RANDY ROBERTSON, R-CATAULA

“Even when you look at citizen’s arrest, there were situations that arose and we said, we probably need to look at this,” he said.

Citizen’s arrest, a Civil War-era law on Georgia’s books that allows residents to arrest someone who they believe committed a crime, was a statute identified by civil rights organizati­ons immediatel­y after the killing of Arbery, a Black Brunswick-area man who was followed by three white men and shot to death. A prosecutor initially cited the citizen’s arrest law when he suggested the men who are now charged and awaiting trial in Arbery’s killing should not be arrested.

After lawmakers came together in 2020 following Arbery’s killing to pass hate-crimes legislatio­n, “the next logical step,” Ralston said, was to overhaul the citizen’s arrest law.

“We saw the potential for disgusting abuse of the citizen’s arrest law in the Arbery case,” Ralston said.

Legislatio­n such as hate-crimes protection and the repeal of citizen’s arrest had been pursued by Democrats for years, Senate Democratic Leader Gloria Butler said. But more recent efforts, such as restrictin­g police from using chokeholds or rubber bullets, haven’t gained any traction in the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

“It’s not surprising to me that our legislatio­n did not get hearings,” she said. “But watch, in a few years we’ll come back, we’ll see Republican­s carrying our bills. … For now, we just have to beat back some of the more extreme things they’re trying to do.”

For example, nearly all of the General Assembly’s Democrats voted against legislatio­n that would have required drivers to learn best practices for how to interact with police officers during a traffic stop. Democrats questioned the need for the legislatio­n when Republican lawmakers were not also pursuing additional training for law enforcemen­t.

Democrats in both chambers introduced several bills to overhaul the way Georgians are policed, including requiring police to file reports on every traffic stop they conduct and to train police on interactin­g with those who may have mental health issues related to posttrauma­tic stress disorder.

Robertson, who also introduced the driver’s education bill, said he found those efforts to be “reactionar­y.”

“From what I saw, their goal was to just draw attention to what they perceived to be an issue within law enforcemen­t and not really any expectatio­n of a solution to what they perceived to be a problem,” he said.

One measure that was backed by Republican leadership in both chambers passed the General Assembly in response to national calls to “defund the police” by reallocati­ng money from law enforcemen­t budgets to fund services such as mental health treatment or education. Local politician­s in Atlanta and Athens considered shifting law enforcemen­t money last year but opted against it.

Ralston said there is room for the sides to come together, such as with the hatecrimes and citizen’s arrest legislatio­n, and pass bills that repair the relationsh­ip between law enforcemen­t and communitie­s of color.

“I’m not opposed to sitting down in a thoughtful way and looking at ways we can make some reforms to policing so that all Georgians will have confidence in the work of our law enforcemen­t agencies, and I say that as one who is a very strong supporter of the law enforcemen­t community, generally,” he said. “When you politicize those types of things, I’m not sure that you get the best result. But I still believe that you can have reasonable dialogue among reasonable people.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/JOHN AMIS ?? State Sen. Randy Robertson, R-Cataula, center, is flanked by Majority Leader Mike Dugan, R-Carrollton, left, and Majority Whip Steve Gooch, R-Dahlonega, right, as he speaks to reporters in Atlanta. Robertson, a former police officer, introduced legislatio­n that would increase penalties for people who commit crimes during protests. The measure failed.
AP FILE PHOTO/JOHN AMIS State Sen. Randy Robertson, R-Cataula, center, is flanked by Majority Leader Mike Dugan, R-Carrollton, left, and Majority Whip Steve Gooch, R-Dahlonega, right, as he speaks to reporters in Atlanta. Robertson, a former police officer, introduced legislatio­n that would increase penalties for people who commit crimes during protests. The measure failed.

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