The Standard Journal

Lethal force by police to face scrutiny in Ga. Senate review group

- By Beau Evans Capitol Beat News Service

Police training and tactics like chokeholds, no-knock warrants and rubber bullets for crowd control in Georgia will face scrutiny from a group of state lawmakers tasked with making reform recommenda­tions for law enforcemen­t agencies before year’s end.

The Georgia Senate study committee looking at policing techniques and oversight comes after the General Assembly passed legislatio­n outlawing hate crimes following testy debate in the 2020 legislativ­e session between Republican and Democratic state senators.

The study committee will assess the use of lethal force, training procedures, de-escalation techniques and “practices which may need to be prohibited or more strictly regulated” such as chokeholds, no-knock warrants, tear gas and rubber bullets, according to legislatio­n creating the committee.

“Law enforcemen­t officers across our state put their lives on the line for us every day, and are generally underpaid and oftentimes not provided with tools for success,” said Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan.

“This committee will engage in a comprehens­ive study of our law enforcemen­t practices in order to examine whether we are adequately equipping officers with the necessary training to protect our communitie­s.”

The study committee has to draft recommenda­tions by Dec. 15.

Several of the same senators who butted heads during negotiatio­ns over last-minute changes to the hate-crimes bill have been tapped as members of the study committee, who were announced by Duncan’s office on Thursday, Aug. 13.

Included among them are Sen. Bill Cowsert, R-Athens, who led Republican efforts in the Senate to add police officers and other first responders as protected classes under the hate-crimes bill.

That move sparked stiff opposition from Democratic senators including Sen. Harold Jones II, D-Augusta, who led negotiatio­ns on the Democratic side. He is also a member of the study committee.

Adding police to the hatecrimes protection­s threatened to scuttle support for the bill in June after state lawmakers from both parties backed the measure amid protests in Atlanta and nationwide against police brutality and racial injustice.

The police protection­s were ultimately pulled from the hate-crimes bill and included in separate legislatio­n. Both measures passed the General Assembly and were signed by Gov. Brian Kemp.

The hate-crimes bill gained momentum after the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man killed in a pursuit by two white men while jogging near Brunswick in February. The two men claimed they were making a citizen’s arrest after spotting Arbery at a constructi­on site alleged to have been burglarize­d.

Several Democratic lawmakers brought bills in June that took aim at repealing the state’s citizen’s arrest and stand-your-ground laws, as well as creating “anti-choke hold” rules, a ban on no-knock search warrants and new oversight for district attorneys. None advanced in the legislatur­e.

Also named to the study committee were Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Jesse Stone, R-Waynesboro; Senate Public Safety Committee Chairman John Albers, R-Roswell; Sen. Randy Robertson, R-Cataula, a retired major with the Muscogee County Sheriff’s Office; and Sen. Gail Davenport, D-Jonesboro, a real estate profession­al and civil rights advocate.

 ??  ?? Harold Jones II
Harold Jones II

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