The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Attorney appointed for suspect in spa case

J. Daran Burns has been involved in previous high-profile trials.

- By Alexis Stevens alexis.stevens@ajc.com

A Canton attorney has been appointed to represent the 21-yearold man accused of killing eight people in a shooting spree that began in Cherokee County.

The county’s office of indigent defense appointed J. Daran Burns to represent Robert Aaron Long, who has been charged with eight counts of murder and one aggravated assault charge.

Long is accused in three March

16 shootings in Cherokee and

Fulton counties.

“Our firm has been in Cherokee County for twenty-five years, and when tragedy happens in our community, we feel it,” Burns said in an emailed statement. “Our condolence­s are with the victims and their families. We are working on behalf of our client, Robert Aaron Long, to investigat­e the facts and circumstan­ces surroundin­g this incident.”

Investigat­ors believe Long killed four people inside an Acworthare­a business, then drove to Atlanta, where he’s accused of killing four others in two spas. He was captured that night about 150 miles south of Atlanta and returned to Cherokee, where he was being held without bond Tuesday.

Long waived his first court appearance last week. No other court hearings have been scheduled.

“Everybody is doing their jobs, both law enforcemen­t and the District Attorney’s Office,” Burns said. “Now, our firm will conduct a thorough investigat­ion on our client’s behalf.”

Burns declined to make any additional comments on the case.

A graduate of the University of Georgia law school, Burns has run the Burns Law Group for nearly three decades. He has been involved with several high-profile cases in Cherokee.

In 2012, he was one of two attorneys who represente­d Ryan Brunn, who pleaded guilty to the December 2011 murder of 7-year-old Jorelys Rivera. Brunn, a groundskee­per at an apartment complex, lured the girl to a vacant apartment, where he molested her and killed her before putting her body in a dumpster. Brunn later killed himself in prison.

And in 2011, Burns represente­d a Cherokee County teacher who in 2008 confined an autistic boy to a chair with duct tape and kept a blind girl under a desk. That teacher, Laurie Peavy, pleaded guilty to false imprisonme­nt and was sentenced to six years of probation and $2,000 in fines.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Latrelle Rolling (left) and Jessica Lang pray as they leave flowers at Youngs Asian Massage, where some victims were killed last week.
CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM Latrelle Rolling (left) and Jessica Lang pray as they leave flowers at Youngs Asian Massage, where some victims were killed last week.
 ??  ?? J. Daran Burns
J. Daran Burns

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