The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ex-sheriff gets 6 months in drug raid case

- By Asia Simone Burns asia.burns@coxinc.com

A fo r mer Georgia sheriff accused of violating the civil rights of hundreds of high school students and interferin­g in an investigat­ion entered a guilty plea Wednesday.

Jeff Hobby of Worth County will serve six months of jail time and five years’ probation after accepting a plea deal for three counts of violation of oath of office.

Hobby was indicted in October on charges of sexual battery, false imprisonme­nt and violation of oath of office related to a massive drug search at a high school.

Hobby ordered deputies to carry out invasive body searches of about 700 students at Worth County High School in April 2017. Deputies allegedly touched girls’ vaginas and breasts and groped boys in their groin area during the search, Channel 2 Action News reported.

Gov. Nathan Deal suspended Hobby from his sheriff ’s post in November.

In December, additional charges were filed against Hobby for obstructio­n of justice and interferin­g with witnesses after he told his employees at the sheriff ’s office not to talk about the case with GBI investigat­ors or the local district attorney’s office. A warrant said he threatened to fire his employees if they talked to investigat­ors, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reported.

“Hobby resigned immediatel­y from his position as Worth County Sheriff,” District Attorney Paul Bowden wrote in a press release Wednesday. “He also surrendere­d his POST certificat­ion, which is the certificat­ion required for any law enforcemen­t officer in the State of Georgia.”

Hobby is also prevented from seeking any elected position while he is on probation.

Judge Bill Reinhardt, who presided over the case, chose not to sentence Hobby as a first offender for the indictment related to interferin­g with the GBI investigat­ion.

However, Reinhardt sentenced Hobby as a first offender in two other indictment­s, including one related to the illegal search at Worth County High School.

A $3 million settlement had already been reached in that case in federal court and was paid

by an insurance policy the county held.

“It is incumbent (on) our judicial system to hold all persons, including law enforcemen­t, to the same standard,” Bowden said in a press release.

“The District Attorney’s Office is hopeful the resolution of this case will allow the victims, the Worth County Sheriff ’s Department, and the community to begin the much-needed healing process.”

 ??  ?? Fomer sheriff Jeff Hobby will serve six months in jail and five years’ probation.
Fomer sheriff Jeff Hobby will serve six months in jail and five years’ probation.

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