Chattanooga Times Free Press

Court throws out indictment of ex-police chief

- BY RUSS BYNUM

SAVANNAH, Ga. — Georgia’s highest court on Tuesday threw out an indictment that charged a former police chief and a top aide with felonies for failing to investigat­e allegation­s of misconduct within their department.

The Georgia Supreme Court ruled that the 2021 indictment against former Glynn County Police Chief John Powell and Brian Scott, his former chief of staff, was fatally flawed by technical errors.

A grand jury in coastal Brunswick, 70 miles south of Savannah, indicted Powell and Scott in August 2021 on felony charges of violating their oaths of office. The indictment accused both men of failing to investigat­e one of their drug task force officers after being shown evidence that the officer had an improper relationsh­ip with a man convicted of drug crimes.

The indictment also charged Powell with three additional oath violations, alleging he didn’t investigat­e other narcotics officers accused of making harassing traffic stops and conducting investigat­ions outside their jurisdicti­on.

In a unanimous ruling, the state Supreme Court said the indictment’s flaw was that it charged both men with violating a specific part of their oath: to uphold due process rights under the U.S. Constituti­on. Turning a blind eye to police misconduct, the justices said Tuesday, isn’t a due process issue.

“It is legally impossible to commit the crimes in the way the State alleged in the indictment,” Justice Shawn Ellen LaGrua wrote in the court’s ruling.

The decision could mark the end of efforts to prosecute Powell and Scott. Oath violation charges against both men were dismissed by the trial judge in September 2020, and prosecutor­s indicted them a second time almost a year later. Georgia law prohibits indicting the same person more than twice for the same “offense, charge, or allegation.”

“Mr. Powell and I are both grateful to see that justice has been done,” said Powell’s attorney, Tom Withers.

Scott’s lawyer, Tracy Alan Brown, said they were “likewise just as pleased.”

District Attorney Joe Mulholland of the South Georgia Judicial Circuit was assigned to the case after Glynn County prosecutor­s recused themselves. Mulholland did not immediatel­y return phone and email messages.

The allegation­s of scandal involving Powell and Scott ultimately led to the dismantlin­g of Glynn County police’s drug task force.

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