Rome News-Tribune

See Georgia General Assembly coverage, including where bills are positioned in advance of the final day of the session. Today is the last day.

♦ Bills concerning early probation release and improvemen­ts to sexual-assault kit tracking head to the governor.

- By Dave Williams and Beau Evans

ATLANTA — A lot of legislativ­e business remains unsettled entering the final day of this year’s General Assembly session.

But lawmakers won’t have to deal with a couple of measures on Wednesday that gained final passage on Monday.

The legislatur­e sent to Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk for his signature two bills related to criminal justice that would let some Georgia offenders gain early release from probation and improve the processing and tracking of sexual-assault kits.

The early-probation bill, which passed the House 169-2 on Monday, is aimed at reducing Georgia’s third-highest-in-the-nation probation population.

It would let first-time felons in Georgia sentenced to prison for 12 months or fewer seek early terminatio­n of their probation after they’ve been released, paid court fines and avoided another run-in with the law for two years.

Probatione­rs would be allowed to petition courts for early terminatio­n of their supervisio­n terms after three years.

“This bill provides an incentive for those on probation to behave,” said Rep. Tyler Paul Smith, R-bremen , who carried the bill in the House.

The sexual-assaults test kit bill, which passed both the House and Senate unanimousl­y, is intended to resolve a chronic backlog of incomplete forensic tests in Georgia that only recently started to decline.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Scott Holcomb, Datlanta, would create a statewide tracking system to tally the number, location and processing status of sexual-assault kits. Victims would not need to file criminal charges to complete assault tests and could receive updates anonymousl­y on their kit’s status.

With Holcomb’s bill, the tracking system would be set up with funding from the state Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Council and see Georgia join 27 other states with similar systems, said Sen. John Albers, Rroswell, who carried the bill in the Senate.

“The goal is to improve informatio­n and ultimately put bad actors away,” Albers said. “Overall, these measures will improve the state’s response to sexual assaults.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Gov. Brian
Kemp
Gov. Brian Kemp

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States