The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lawmakers to address criminal justice issues

Senate panel not likely to act, but individual­s can propose changes.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya. prabhu@ ajc. com

A Senate panel t asked with looking at the state’s police practices is not expected to propose any specifific changes to state law next year.

Instead, state Sen. Bill Cowsert, R- Athens, said he expects i ndividual l awmakers t o pursue changes to criminal justice prac t i ces — such as repeal of the state’s citizen’s arrest law or enforcemen­t of existing prohibitio­ns against “no- knock warrants.”

“I think a lot of these are very current issues that are in the news and creating quite a bit of concern among citizens,” Cowsert said. “It’s a natural responsibi­lit y of the Legislatur­e to address those concerns, and many times that involves legislatio­n. But not always.”

Cowser t proposed t he c re - ation of the Senate Law Enforcemen­t Reform Study Committee as part of a package of legislatio­n passed this year that produced the state’s new hate- crimes law.

The l aw — which s t re ng t hens the penalty against crimes targeting specifific groups — was passed in response to the death of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man, in Glynn County. He was killed after three white men followed him and one shot him.

The February shooting also increased interest in the state’s more than 150- year- old citizen’s arrest law.

State law allows any Georgian who believes he has witnessed a crime to arrest a suspect in the crime if it “is committed in his presence or within his i mmediate knowledge.” If the crime is a felony and the person suspected of committing it is trying to flflee, Georgians are allowed to arrest that person “upon reasonable and probable grounds of suspicion.”

Mazie Lynn Causey, general counsel for the Georgia Associatio­n of Criminal Defense Lawyers, told senators Tuesday that

t he citizen’s arrest rooted in slavery.

“When Georgia’ s law was first codified in 1863, it was a means to capture fleeing slaves ,” she said. “The current law ... remains unchanged since 1868.”

State Rep. ChuckEf st ration, R-D ac ula, held hearings over the summer to examine the law and said in October that he planned to file legislatio­n that would repeal the statute.

Cow se rt also said he is open to clarifying and strengthen­ing the state’ s ban on “no- knock warrants” — which spare law enforcemen­t officers from having to announce themselves when they perform a search warrant.

Pete Skandalaki­s, executive director of the Prosecutin­g Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, t old senators that officers rarely use the warrants, but in instances when they do, they make headlines — such as in the 2006 death of Kathryn Johnston, a 92- year- old Atlanta woman who was killed when police conducted an illegal raid of her home.

Calling it a“tool of tyranny ,” attorney Catherine Bernard said a no-knock warrant is“unreasonab­le and dangerous.”

“Anytime you have government agents breaking into someone’s home, it’s a big deal,” she said.

Current state law does not allow — or acknowledg­e — no- knock warrants, but police cite case law to obtain them for searches.

“It’s a little troublesom­e that there’ s no provision in Georgia law that really allows those, but they have begun to be used and in many times( with) disastrous consequenc­es ,” Cowsert said .“It maybe that we either need to specify that under no circumstan­ces will they be permitted or set forth what circumstan­ces that they can be used.” l aw i s

 ?? BOB ANDRES/ BOB. ANDRES@ AJC. COM ?? State Sen. Bill Cowsert, R- Athens, says the General Assembly plans to take up “current issues that are in the news and creating quite a bit of concern,” but says legislatio­n may not be necessary.
BOB ANDRES/ BOB. ANDRES@ AJC. COM State Sen. Bill Cowsert, R- Athens, says the General Assembly plans to take up “current issues that are in the news and creating quite a bit of concern,” but says legislatio­n may not be necessary.

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