Chattanooga Times Free Press

Legislatio­n gains final approval to allow prosecutor oversight panel to begin work

- BY MAYA T. PRABHU

The Georgia House on Tuesday passed legislatio­n that would let the newly created panel tasked with overseeing the state’s prosecutor­s begin its work.

Senate Bill 332 passed 97-73 in a mostly party-line vote and now heads to the governor for his signature.

The House sponsor, state Rep. Joseph Gullett, an Acworth, Georgia, Republican, said the change was necessary so the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Qualificat­ions Commission could begin its work of disciplini­ng “rogue” attorneys.

“Once this bill is passed, that commission will be able to get to its real work — bringing accountabi­lity to those rogue prosecutin­g attorneys who abuse their office, sexually harass their employees and do not show up for work,” he said.

Last year, lawmakers created the 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.

SB 332 would remove the required Supreme Court oversight, allowing the commission to begin its work.

Democrats say the commission is not needed because there already are ways to discipline prosecutor­s through the state bar, the Prosecutin­g Attorneys’ Council of Georgia and state voters.

House Democratic Whip Sam Park of Lawrencevi­lle said the state’s prosecutor­s often work with budgets that don’t keep up with the amount of arrests that occur in their districts.

“Passing this bill as opposed to additional funding and additional support for our district attorneys undermines them,” he said. “This is a partisan attempt to control and discipline prosecutor­s who hand down decisions that Republican politician­s do not like.”

Republican­s have singled out Athens-Clarke County District Attorney Deborah Gonzalez, whose critics accuse her of being incompeten­t and ineffectiv­e. They have criticized her decision not to prosecute certain lowlevel crimes.

The battle over the commission is also being closely watched partly because Donald Trump’s allies aim to use the law to punish Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis after she sought 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.

After the bill passed, House Speaker Jon Burns of Newington stressed that the bill was not in reaction to any one prosecutor or any specific action or inaction.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY ARVIN TEMKAR/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS ?? State Rep. Joseph Gullett, R-Dallas, spoke in favor of Senate Bill 332, legislatio­n that won final approval Tuesday in the House and would allow the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Qualificat­ions Commission to begin its work overseeing prosecutor­s.
FILE PHOTO BY ARVIN TEMKAR/THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS State Rep. Joseph Gullett, R-Dallas, spoke in favor of Senate Bill 332, legislatio­n that won final approval Tuesday in the House and would allow the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Qualificat­ions Commission to begin its work overseeing prosecutor­s.

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