The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New prosecutor oversight bill drops high court involvemen­t

State Senate passes legislatio­n, mostly along party lines.

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

The Georgia Senate on Tuesday passed a second version of legislatio­n that aims to let the newly created panel tasked with overseeing the state’s prosecutor­s begin its work.

Senators voted 29-22 in a mostly party-line vote, with state Sen. Colton Moore, R-Trenton, joining Democrats to vote against the bill.

Last year, lawmakers created the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Qualificat­ions Commission and empowered it to sanction prosecutor­s once the state Supreme Court approved rules to guide the panel.

The law was challenged in court, and the Supreme Court said it had “grave doubts” about whether it had the constituti­onal authority to approve rules and standards of conduct for the commission as required by the law.

Senate Bill 332, sponsored by state Sen. Randy Robertson, R-Cataula, would remove the required Supreme Court oversight.

Robertson said he sponsored last year’s bill creating the commission and this year’s bill to amend the law in response to former Muscogee County District Attorney Mark Jones’ indictment and conviction for misconduct in office. Robertson said judges and law enforcemen­t officers have oversight panels and prosecutor­s should have something similar.

“All we’re trying to do is hold every officer of the court to the same standard,” Robertson said. “It’s what’s right. It’s what the citizens who elected (the) district attorneys deserve.”

The House last month passed its own version of a fix to last year’s bill, House Bill 881, also removing the need for Supreme Court approval.

The battle over the commission is being closely watched, partly because Donald Trump’s allies aim to use the law to punish Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis for seeking election interferen­ce charges against the former president and more than a dozen others in their efforts to reverse the results of the 2020 election in Georgia.

Moore told his colleagues that they should not be “passing the buck” to an unelected commission and should instead use the process already in state law that allows legislator­s to investigat­e and censure elected prosecutor­s.

“We have a rogue district attorney right now — Fani Willis in Fulton County — who is a domestic threat to our constituti­on, and we’re going to farm out the responsibi­lity of keeping her accountabl­e to this prosecutor­ial commission,” Moore said.

Shortly after Willis announced the indictment­s of Trump and his co-defendants, Moore began calling for a special legislativ­e session to investigat­e the district attorney. He was unable to gather support for his call.

SB 332 now goes to the House for its considerat­ion, but it’s unclear which version — if any — will pass the General Assembly this year.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? State Sen. Colton Moore, R-Trenton, a critic of Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, joined Democrats in voting against a bill that would let the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Qualificat­ions Commission start work.
AJC FILE State Sen. Colton Moore, R-Trenton, a critic of Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, joined Democrats in voting against a bill that would let the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Qualificat­ions Commission start work.

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