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Attorney for Georgia lawmaker calls felony charges ‘overreach’

- By Jeff Amy

ATLANTA — An attorney for a Georgia lawmaker who was charged with two felonies after knocking on the door to the governor’s private office said authoritie­s overreache­d in the case, which unfolded while the governor spoke on live television about a sweeping overhaul of state elections.

State police arrested state Rep. Park Cannon, an Atlanta Democrat, on Thursday after she said she wanted to see Republican Gov. Brian Kemp sign the law that places new restrictio­ns on voting by mail and gives lawmakers more power to oversee elections.

Cannon was charged with obstructio­n of law enforcemen­t and disruption of the General Assembly. She was released from jail late Thursday.

A state police spokesman said Cannon knocked on the door to the public lobby of the governor’s office, and then shifted to knocking on a door to a private area.

“She was advised that she was disturbing what was going on inside and if she did not stop, she would be placed under arrest,” Lt. W. Mark Riley wrote in a statement.

Kemp signed the bill before he began speaking. He interrupte­d his televised remarks while Cannon was knocking and later resumed the speech.

“This was a law enforcemen­t overreach on all the charges, and my hope is that after examining the file, the district attorney will dismiss the charges,” Cannon’s lawyer, Gerald Griggs, said Friday. Griggs said he had already spoken to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

The new law requires a photo identifica­tion to vote absentee by mail. It also shortens how long voters have to request an absentee ballot and limits where ballot drop boxes can be placed and when they can be used. Republican­s said Georgia needed to restore the confidence of voters who believed President Donald Trump’s baseless claims of widespread fraud. They also noted that the law increases the number of in-person early voting days on weekends.

“We’re expanding the right to vote in Georgia,” Kemp said Thursday.

Democrats say the law is a power grab by Republican­s who are threatened by Joe Biden’s presidenti­al victory in Georgia in November and the twin Democratic victories of U.S. Sens. Raphael Warnock and John Ossoff in January.

President Joe Biden criticized the law again Friday, saying its Republican sponsors were trying “to deny people the right to vote” and that the measure was “a blatant attack on the Constituti­on and good conscience.”

Biden renewed his call for Congress to pass nationwide voting standards that would include automatic voter registrati­on nationwide, allow former felons to vote and limit the ways states can remove registered voters from the rolls. Such a bill passed the Democratic-controlled House earlier this month but faces opposition from Senate Republican­s.

“This is Jim Crow in the 21st century,” Biden said in a statement. “It must end. We have a moral and constituti­onal obligation to act.”

Three voter-mobilizati­on groups sued late Thursday to block the law, alleging that it violates the First and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constituti­on and illegally hurts Black voters under the federal Voting Rights Act.

Georgia’s constituti­on says lawmakers “shall be free from arrest” during meetings of the General Assembly “except for treason, felony, or breach of the peace.”

Griggs questioned whether felony charges, with mandatory prison terms, were merited. A warrant claims Cannon resisted arrest by stomping on an officer’s feet, but Griggs said he’s seen no video supporting that accusation.

Griggs questioned whether the felony charge for disruption of the General Assembly could be applied because first and second offenses are misdemeano­rs, while only third and later offenses are felonies. Cannon has never been charged or convicted under that law before, Griggs said.

 ?? Alyssa Pointer/atlanta Journal-constituti­on via AP ?? Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, second from right, leaves the Georgia State Capitol Building after he signed into law a sweeping Republican-sponsored overhaul of state elections that includes new restrictio­ns on voting by mail and greater legislativ­e control over how elections are run, on Thursday in Atlanta.
Alyssa Pointer/atlanta Journal-constituti­on via AP Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, second from right, leaves the Georgia State Capitol Building after he signed into law a sweeping Republican-sponsored overhaul of state elections that includes new restrictio­ns on voting by mail and greater legislativ­e control over how elections are run, on Thursday in Atlanta.

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