The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

DeKalb’s new public safety leader named

Jack Lumpkin was head of Savannah police department.

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com

DeKalb County CEO Michael Thurmond on Friday announced that Joseph “Jack” H. Lumpkin will be the county’s new public safety head.

Lumpkin, who is chief of the Savannah-Chatham police department, replaces Cedric Alexander, who resigned earlier this year. In the role of the county’s deputy chief operating officer of public safety, Lumpkin will be responsibl­e for police, fire and rescue, animal control, emergency management, 911 and medical examiner services.

“Chief Lumpkin has built a stellar leadership record in law enforcemen­t in Georgia and across the country,” Thurmond said in a news release. “He will enhance DeKalb’s public safety department­s, which will help make the county safer and improve quality of life.”

The county didn’t immediatel­y say his start date or salary.

Lumpkin, a believer in data and intelligen­ce-based policing, will be tasked with leading 1,600 employees, with a total 2018 annual budget of nearly $201 million. Among the goals the CEO expects him to hit are:

■ Recruiting and hiring 248 new officers.

■ Continuing the developmen­t of the police mental health roundtable, youth crime prevention initiative­s and outreach to multilingu­al communitie­s.

■ Enhancing coordinati­on and communicat­ions for emergency and disaster responses.

■ Administer­ing more than $85 million in special-purpose local-option sales tax funds over the next six years for improving public safety facilities, as well as replacing and building new fire stations and police facilities.

Like Alexander, Lumpkin has been in law enforcemen­t more than 40 years. He has been chief in Toccoa, Albany and Athens-Clark County.

He’s on the board of directors of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police and previously served as a vice president for the National Organizati­on of Black Law Enforcemen­t Officers.

In 2003, he was Georgia NOBLE’s officer of the year. In 2014, he was the Georgia Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police’s officer of the year.

Lumpkin has been a proponent of so-called “intelligen­ce-led policing,” a style that has a focus on using data to target the most prolific criminals.

“Intelligen­ce-led policing allows us to employ a laser focus on violent criminals, who are committing a significan­tly disproport­ionate percentage of all serious crimes,” Lumpkin said earlier this year. “Along with the District Attorney and the United States Attorney, we are pursuing those who are perpetrati­ng violence within our communitie­s — particular­ly gang/group involved, gun criminals and drug-involved crimes.”

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