The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Divided Athens passes safety measures

Demonstrat­ors on both sides of immigratio­n issue attend meeting.

- By Fletcher Page fletcher.page@ajc.com

ATHENS — The Athens-Clarke County Commission late Tuesday unanimousl­y approved investment­s in public safety amid a polarized response to nursing student Laken Riley’s slaying.

Two groups of demonstrat­ors gathered outside City Hall before the meeting. Inside, residents sparred over immigratio­n and crime during a public comment session that lasted roughly 90 minutes.

“Just walk outside and you can see the whole city is divided,” said Athens resident Charles Hardy.

Police arrested Jose Antonio Ibarra on Feb. 23, charging him with murder in Riley’s death after the student’s body was found on the University of Georgia campus with signs of blunt force trauma. Authoritie­s say Ibarra, a Venezuelan, entered the U.S. unlawfully in 2022.

At the “Make Athens Safe Again” rally on the steps of City Hall, speakers, including Republican state Rep. Houston Gaines, criticized Mayor Kelly Girtz and District Attorney Deborah Gonzalez for allegedly being soft on crime and enforcemen­t of immigratio­n law. People in the group held signs that said “Deport All Illegals” and “Sanctuary Communitie­s Kill.”

“We want our commission­ers to be accountabl­e,” said Laurie Camp, a retired Athens schoolteac­her who organized the rally. “We want everybody in our community to be accountabl­e.”

Gathered on the sidewalk across the street on College Avenue, the Athens Anti-Discrimina­tion Movement held a “unity vigil” that included members of the Party for Socialism and Liberation. People there held signs that said “Xenophobia Does Not Make Us Safer” and “Hate Won’t Heal.”

“There are people here who are using Laken Riley’s tragic murder to push racism, to push an anti-immigrant agenda,” said Trey Holloway, a UGA student.

Girtz and the 10-person commission agreed to expedite safety measures. Investment­s totaling at least $525,000 include completing a real-time crime center, increased and improved camera technology in areas high in traffic and crime areas, and the purchase of heavy-duty surveillan­ce trailers and all-terrain vehicles.

A man interrupte­d the meeting shortly after the motion was passed.

“Kelly Girtz, you are going to resign,” he said loudly before police escorted him out.

Resident Athena Eisenman called for Girtz and commission members to be sanctioned and censured for engaging in a “sanctuary city of policies and practices” toward immigratio­n.

Critics of Girtz, a progressiv­e politician, point to a 2019 county resolution he signed in support of immigrants regardless of documentat­ion status.

Girtz, who has been mayor since 2018 and has two years remaining in his final term, has said there has been no legislatio­n by the local government that’s created a sanctuary city.

Georgia law bans cities and counties from adopting a “sanctuary policy” that prevents or hinders authoritie­s from enforcing immigratio­n law, but cooperatio­n with Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t varies across jurisdicti­ons. Athens-Clarke County checks the criminal history of people in custody and keeps people detained with outstandin­g warrants, but doesn’t jail immigrants who are in the country illegally if they have no other criminal history.

Athens-Clarke law enforcemen­t gave Ibarra a citation for shopliftin­g last October but did not arrest him. Immigratio­n lawyers said last week that ICE likely would not have detained Ibarra last year if the county had notified the agency, citing the relatively minor nature of the earlier charge.

Murders in Athens-Clarke County, with a population of roughly 130,000, have been in the single digits every year since 2009. Before last week, UGA’s campus hadn’t seen a homicide since 1996.

Athens-Clarke County Board of Education member Tim Denson, a former county commission­er, backed heightened public safety measures at Tuesday night’s meeting.

But “blaming migrants and forcing them to live in the shadows will not make Athens safer,” he added. “Why are innocent undocument­ed Athenians being targeted for Laken’s death?”

Jessica Fore, a Democratic primary candidate for U.S. House of Representa­tives District 10, prioritize­d combating violence against women.

“I’ve learned that violent, abusive men can often be identified prior to committing a homicide, not by their demographi­c characteri­stics or immigratio­n status, but by their behavioral patterns,” she said.

At least 18 Athens residents spoke during the open comment session.

“It shouldn’t have to get to the point for somebody to die for us to open our eyes and see that this city needs help,” Hardy said.

 ?? ?? Supporters of the Athens AntiDiscri­mination Movement hold a “unity vigil” Tuesday night across the street from City Hall.
Supporters of the Athens AntiDiscri­mination Movement hold a “unity vigil” Tuesday night across the street from City Hall.
 ?? PHOTOS BY NELL CARROLL FOR THE AJC ?? People attending a “Make Athens Safer” rally Tuesday at City Hall blamed Mayor Kelly Girtz for lax immigratio­n laws. ◄
PHOTOS BY NELL CARROLL FOR THE AJC People attending a “Make Athens Safer” rally Tuesday at City Hall blamed Mayor Kelly Girtz for lax immigratio­n laws. ◄

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