The Standard Journal

Kemp signs Georgia hate-crimes bill into law

- By Beau Evans Capitol Beat News Service

Hate crimes will be punishable in Georgia for the first time in 16 years after Gov. Brian Kemp signed legislatio­n Friday that cleared the General Assembly this week amid tense back-andforth and tears of joy.

Under legislatio­n Kemp signed Friday, prison time could be meted out for those who terrorize or physically harm others based on their race, color, religion, nationalit­y, sexual orientatio­n, sex, gender, or whether they have a physical or mental disability.

The added penalties would be tacked onto charges for felony crimes and certain misdemeano­rs like assault or theft. The most severe offenses could add up to two years extra behind bars, plus fines.

The new law also requires state officials to keep data on hate crimes committed in the state for statistica­l purposes, though records of those crimes will be shielded from public viewing except for alleged perpetrato­rs and victims.

At a signing ceremony Friday afternoon, Kemp said the bill’s passage came as a “silver lining” at a time of social unrest and fears over coronaviru­s in Georgia. It would not solve all the state’s lingering problems with racism but marked “a powerful step forward,” he said.

“Today as we sign this bill into law, we also reaffirm our desire to put progress ahead of politics,” Kemp said. “We must do our part to ensure that our state is a place where all people, no matter their skin color, can live, work and prosper.”

With Kemp’s signature, the bill restores hate-crimes protection­s enacted in Georgia in 2000 that were stripped out of state law in 2004 by the Georgia Supreme Court, which ruled lawmakers had not clearly defined a hate crime.

Now, Georgia will no longer count among the few remaining states in the U.S. that do not have a hatecrimes law on the books.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula, was hustled though both chambers in the General Assembly on Wednesday after it had stalled for 15 months in the state Senate.

Its passage provoked the legislatur­e’s longest serving member, Rep. Calvin Smyre, to proclaim through tears that it was his finest piece of work as a lawmaker.

“This is a defining moment and this is a great day in the history of our state of Georgia,” said Smyre, D-Columbus, who co-sponsored the bill. “We will never, ever, ever, ever tolerate hate in our state.”

The breakthrou­gh followed the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old black man who was gunned down during a pursuit by two white men near Brunswick in February. His death fueled protests this month and prompted powerful lawmakers like Georgia House Speaker David Ralston, R-Blue Ridge, to intervene in favor of the hate-crimes bill.

But the bill sparked controvers­y in the Senate when Republican leaders, wary of protesters focusing their anger on law enforcemen­t, moved to include police officers and other first responders as protected classes alongside race and gender.

Last-minute negotiatin­g led Senate lawmakers to strike an accord that kept the first-responder protection­s in place but moved them to a separate bill that also passed out of the General Assembly.

Leaders from both parties roundly hailed the bipartisan compromise during Friday’s signing ceremony.

“It all started with the opportunit­y to actually speak with each other and not to close dialogue,” said Sen. Harold Jones, D-Augusta, who led negotiatio­ns for Senate Democratic lawmakers. “And I want to tell the citizens of Georgia that your General Assembly is going to be better for this.”

 ??  ?? Georgia’s legislatur­e passed hate crimes legislatio­n deemed essential by state leaders, sending the measure to Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk. aP-alyssa Pointer/atlanta Journal-Constituti­on via aP, File
Georgia’s legislatur­e passed hate crimes legislatio­n deemed essential by state leaders, sending the measure to Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk. aP-alyssa Pointer/atlanta Journal-Constituti­on via aP, File

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