Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia lawmakers poised to create panel with power to remove local prosecutor­s

- BY STANLEY DUNLAP Read more at GeorgiaRec­order.com.

Momentum continues to build in the Georgia legislatur­e for a proposed law that could allow state officials to remove district attorneys from office for misconduct.

The Georgia House moved a step closer this week to establishi­ng a prosecutor oversight commission, the first of its kind in Georgia, as the House Judiciary Committee passed Senate Bill 92 along a party line vote Wednesday.

The Republican-backed bill is now set to go before the gatekeepin­g House Rules Committee, which determines which bills can make it to the floor for a vote. The 2023 legislativ­e session ends March 29.

Sen. Randy Robertson, a Catuala Republican, said the measure aims to hold local prosecutor­s accountabl­e in a similar manner to judges, who are subject to investigat­ion by the state’s Judicial Qualificat­ions Commission.

Georgia sets a high bar for police officer’s conduct, which results in more officers being decertifie­d than in any other state.

“The criminal justice system is under oversight whether you’re a deputy sheriff working in a rural county or you’re a police officer with the Atlanta Police Department,” Robertson said. “There are multiple layers of opportunit­ies to have your actions reviewed, studied and corrected.

“I’ve watched judges who chose to do things their way as opposed to the way things were supposed to be done who retire and leave the job because they failed to meet that high standard,” Robertson said.

In 2020, Democrats proposed the creation of a similar committee following allegation­s of improper handling and the eventual criminal indictment of the local prosecutor who initially took charge of investigat­ing the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery, a 23-year-old Black man killed by three white men while jogging in a Brunswick-area neighborho­od.

At the time, Republican­s dismissed Democrats’ proposals to form a new commission that would weed out problemati­c prosecutor­s or at least dole out some form of punishment to district attorneys who didn’t meet the proposed standards.

In recent months, some Democratic legislator­s and prosecutor­s have questioned whether Republican legislator­s’ support of more prosecutor­ial oversight is related to political reasons instead of serious concerns about district attorneys abusing their authority.

They point to the fact that in the 2020 election, a record number of nonwhite women were elected as district attorneys in Georgia.

About two dozen of Georgia’s district attorneys and solicitors have signed a letter supporting the oversight commission. The proposal, however, is opposed by the state’s prosecutin­g and district attorney associatio­ns, which complain a state oversight panel could unfairly target local prosecutor­s for making independen­t judgments about which types of cases should be pursued.

Opponents also argue that the legislatio­n is unnecessar­y because voters already can decide whether district attorneys are re-elected and prosecutor­s who break the law face criminal charges.

Similarly, House Bill 231 establishe­s a new board that determines the consequenc­es of prosecutor­s declining to prosecute low-level offenses.

A district attorney or solicitor general could be removed under the proposed law for willful and prejudicia­l misconduct as well as physical or mental disabiliti­es that inhibit their ability to prosecute cases.

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