Rome News-Tribune

Democrats dispute police report in Georgia lawmaker’s arrest

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ATLANTA — Allies of a Democratic lawmaker arrested last week during a protest of Georgia’s new Republican-backed election law are strongly pushing back on a police report that compares the lawmaker knocking on the door of the governor’s office to the violent storming of the U.S. Capitol by a pro-trump mob in January.

Democratic Rep. Park Cannon was arrested Thursday after she said she wanted to see GOP Gov. Brian Kemp sign the legislatio­n, which adds new restrictio­ns on mail voting, into law. Cannon was charged with obstructio­n of law enforcemen­t and disruption of the General Assembly and was released from jail later that evening.

Lt. G.D. Langford said in an incident report that Cannon was knocking on the door of the governor’s office and would not stop when approach by troopers.

“I felt that if I did not take action, the other protesters would have been emboldened to commit similar acts,” the incident report says. “The events of January 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol were in the back of my mind. I didn’t want the protesters to attempt to gain entry into a secure part of the Capitol.”

O t h e r D e m o c r a t i c

lawmakers say that comparison is a stretch.

“They weren’t threatened by a possible insurrecti­on of someone smaller than me with no weapons and no raised voice,” tweeted Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick. “They were threatened by a black woman. Period. Full stop.”

Gerald Griggs, an attorney representi­ng Cannon, said “it’s unfortunat­e that that phraseolog­y was used by the Capitol police.”

“My review of the evidence, witnesses and video, even though it’s preliminar­y, is that many of the facts as laid

out in that police report are inconsiste­nt with the actual facts of what happened,” Griggs said.

A federal lawsuit filed Monday — the third challengin­g the new law since it was signed last week — challenges multiple aspects of the law. Those include the ban on providing food and drink to people waiting in line to vote, new identifica­tion requiremen­ts for requesting and casting an absentee ballot and a reduction in early voting days for runoff elections, among others.

“This law is voter suppressio­n plain and simple,” Sophia

Lakin, deputy director of the ACLU’S Voting Rights Project, said during a video news conference. She said the law is aimed at making it harder for historical­ly disenfranc­hised minority communitie­s to have a voice in democracy.

“It’s an absolutely shameful response to the historic participat­ion by these communitie­s in the last election cycle,” she said.

The new law violates the Voting Rights Act and infringes on Georgia voters’ constituti­onal rights, the lawsuit says.

 ?? Alyssa Pointer/atlanta Journal-constituti­on via AP, File ?? Rep. Park Cannon (D-atlanta) is escorted out of the Georgia Capitol by Georgia state troopers after being asked to stop knocking on a door that lead to Gov. Brian Kemp’s office while Kemp was speaking after signing a sweeping overhaul of state elections behind closed doors in Atlanta, on Thursday. An attorney for Cannon says it’s “law enforcemen­t overreach” to charge the Georgia House member with two felonies.
Alyssa Pointer/atlanta Journal-constituti­on via AP, File Rep. Park Cannon (D-atlanta) is escorted out of the Georgia Capitol by Georgia state troopers after being asked to stop knocking on a door that lead to Gov. Brian Kemp’s office while Kemp was speaking after signing a sweeping overhaul of state elections behind closed doors in Atlanta, on Thursday. An attorney for Cannon says it’s “law enforcemen­t overreach” to charge the Georgia House member with two felonies.

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