The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. GOP hopefuls declare violence by gangs a 'crisis'

Democratic rival for AG outlines similar stance; Abrams’ focus differs.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Declaring gang violence a public safety “crisis,” two of the state’s top Republican candidates united behind a plan to create a new unit in the state attorney general’s office devoted to fighting it.

The joint event by Secretary of State Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr this week underscore­d the increasing role that public safety initiative­s have played in Republican campaigns. Both candidates — Kemp is running for governor, Carr for a full term as attorney general — have seized on gang violence.

“They’re terrorizin­g our neighborho­ods and filling our homes with fear,” Kemp said of gangs, adding that the new unit will “empower our officials to crush gangs in the court of law.”

Kemp’s Democratic opponent, Stacey Abrams, a key supporter of Gov. Nathan Deal’s criminal justice overhaul, has focused her law-and-order policy on eliminatin­g cash bail, reducing penalties for some nonviolent offenses and making it easier for released inmates to find jobs.

The plan from Kemp and Carr echoed one outlined by Carr’s Democratic rival, Charlie Bailey, a former prosecutor who focused on gang crimes. Bailey announced his campaign in February with a pledge to create a unit in the Attorney General’s office that would help local prosecutor­s more proactivel­y prosecute gang members.

In an interview, Bailey called

the event a “craven political stunt” and questioned why Carr didn’t advocate for more resources to fight gangs earlier.

“He’s been there two years, and he’s never created this division that I’ve called for since the first day I got in the race,” said Bailey. “He’s never asked for the money or the authority. Words without deeds are dead.”

Carr said a new antigang network under his office’s oversight is essential to cracking down on violence that afflicts communitie­s across the state. He said most of Georgia’s 159 counties — along with many schools — are hungry for more resources.

“You fight a network with a network,” he said. “And I’m going to work with Gov. Kemp to make sure we have an anti-gang network in the Department of Law.”

‘Elephant in the room’

Kemp, for his part, cast his “stop and dismantle” program as an extension of Deal’s eight-year criminal justice initiative that has diverted more nonviolent offenders from costly prison cells and toward more treatment programs.

“If we don’t address the elephant in the room now, we will regret it later,” said Kemp, adding: “This is what good government does. It’s all about building off what Gov. Deal started.”

Kemp had earlier pledged to create a statewide Gang Strike Team to help local authoritie­s combat the crime, launch a public awareness campaign on the dangers of gang-related crime and pour an unspecifie­d amount of state funding into a database created in 2010 to track gang members.

The proposal fits a familiar strategy for Kemp, who has echoed President Donald Trump’s tough-talking initiative­s since entering the race with a “Georgia First” platform a year ago. Trump made targeting MS-13 and other violent gangs a linchpin of his criminal justice policy.

Statistics on gang membership and gang-related crime aren’t easily available. But a 2016 story in the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on documented a rise in gang influence in everything from narcotics to identity theft. In that story, the FBI’s Atlanta Safe Streets Gang Task Force estimated that there were up to 20,000 gang members in metro Atlanta — a significan­t jump since 2000.

Deal, meanwhile, has a different criminal justice wish-list.

Though he supports Kemp, he said in a recent interview that he hoped whoever wins will keep the criminal justice council he formed and consider another major step — reducing or eliminatin­g more mandatory minimum sentences.

 ?? NYT ?? Georgia gubernator­ial candidates Brian Kemp and Stacey Abrams favor different law-and-order policies. Gov. Nathan Deal said he hopes his successor will keep the criminal justice council he formed.
NYT Georgia gubernator­ial candidates Brian Kemp and Stacey Abrams favor different law-and-order policies. Gov. Nathan Deal said he hopes his successor will keep the criminal justice council he formed.
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