The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hill sentenced to prison for violating detainees’ rights.

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com

Attorneys for former Clayton County Sheriff Victor Hill have appealed the lawman’s October felony conviction­s for violating the civil rights of jail detainees.

Hill, 58, became one of the state’s most well-known sheriffs during his almost 15-year tenure as Clayton’s top cop, because of his bravado and claim that the county facil- ity he ran was “Georgia’s toughest para-military jail.”

But on Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge Eleanor Ross sentenced Hill to 18 months in prison, six years of probation and 100 hours of community service. Ross called Hill arrogant and forbade him from working in law enforcemen­t upon his release, including as a consultant.

Hill’s appeal, filed Wednesday, will be heard by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Fe d eral prosecutor­s indicted Hill in April 2021 on charges that he violated the civil rights of seven detainees by ordering them strapped to restraint chairs for hours, even though they were not a threat to themselves or others. The jury found Hill guilty on all but one count.

Hill’s attorney, Drew Find- ling, said after Tuesday’s sentencing that he would appeal the former sheriff ’s conviction on several grounds.

First, Findling said, the

federal government failed to provide prior notice to Hill that the way he was using the chair was illegal. Sec- ond, Findling had concerns that a juror had been pres- sured to produce a verdict despite his alleged reser- vations.

The jury appeared dead- locked on a verdict during several days of deliberati­ons after the foreman said she was troubled that one juror was struggling cognitivel­y with the case. The fore- man said because of this, she feared the jury could not come up with a verdict.

But Ross brought the man out and asked him if he was able to make a decision. When he said yes, the judge returned the jury to deliberati­ons.

“The issue that jumps out ... is that the jury was out for four days and the juror that held out was brought

out for individual question- ing, which was somewhat unheard of in my experi- ence,” Findling said.

Hill remains free on bond pending a date for his incarcerat­ion. Findling asked the court Tuesday that Hill be sent to a minimum secu- rity prison camp and that officials take into consid- eration his safety because he is a former law enforcemen­t officer.

“He has been dealing with people charged with crime, both as an elected sheriff and as a homicide detec- tive,” Findling said. “So you don’t know ... who he’s going to encounter in a correction­al facility and he’s going to have somewhat of a target (on him).

“We want to make sure he’s in as much of a secure and safe setting as possible,” Findling said.

Hill has been a controver

sial leader, stationing snip- ers on the Clayton County jail’s roof after firing sher- iff ’s office staff his first day on the job in 2005 and getting into hot water a decade later after he said he shot a female friend at a Gwin- nett model home. Hill said his gun went off acciden- tally as he was practicing “police tactics.”

He was acquitted in 2013 of all charges in a 32-count Clayton County district attorney’s office indictment, which included four counts of racketeeri­ng.

Federal officials had recommende­d Hill serve up to 46 months on the civil rights violations conviction, but Ross handed down the lighter sentence, she said, in part because of letters of support she received on behalf of Hill and because there was little legal prece- dent to guide her decision.

 ?? FILE ?? Former Sheriff Victor Hill, convicted of violating detainees’ rights by strapping them into a restraint chair, is free on bond pending a date to start his prison sentence.
FILE Former Sheriff Victor Hill, convicted of violating detainees’ rights by strapping them into a restraint chair, is free on bond pending a date to start his prison sentence.

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