Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gwinnett settles for with bounty hunters

- BY ALIA MALIK

The Gwinnett County Board of Commission­ers on Tuesday approved a $2 million settlement with two Tennessee bounty hunters who were charged with kidnapping and home invasion in a 2014 incident near Lawrencevi­lle.

Police said Kevin Roberson and Khalil Abdullah were trying to arrest a man on a misdemeano­r traffic violation out of Tennessee when they kicked in the door of a Castlebroo­ke Way home and pointed guns at the fugitive’s wife and children. A grand jury in 2015 indicted them on charges of kidnapping, home invasion, false imprisonme­nt, aggravated assault and cruelty to children. They were acquitted of all charges the following year.

Roberson and Abdullah in 2019 sued the county and two police officers, Albert Miller and Ronnetta Coates, in federal court alleging malicious prosecutio­n.

One of their attorneys argued in 2014 that the law allows bounty hunters to enter homes, use force and take other actions that would be illegal for police. They denied threatenin­g the children.

Roberson spent 21 months in the Gwinnett County Jail because he could not afford his high bond, according to his lawyer, Kevin Ramon Anderson of West Palm Beach, Florida.

“He was placed in jail as, essentiall­y, a law enforcemen­t figure,” Anderson said. “That is a very tough position to be in when you’re in general population.”

Abdullah spent five months in the jail, according to county records.

The lawsuit accused Miller and Coates of arresting the bounty hunters without probable cause in violation of their Fourth Amendment rights. Roberson and Abdullah suffered emotionall­y, physically and financiall­y as a result of their arrest and incarcerat­ion, the lawsuit said.

Gwinnett County Attorney Michael Ludwiczak told commission­ers Tuesday that Roberson and Abdullah’s allegation­s in the federal lawsuit “have been vigorously disputed during the course of this litigation.”

But the county is proposing to settle because of the risks of taking the case to a jury and the expenses of continuing the litigation, he said.

“I recommend this proposed settlement to this board as a prudent resolution of this matter,” he said.

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