The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Immigratio­n bill’s tweaks imperil new Atlanta ordinance

Lawmaker: Many shouldn’t be freed on own recognizan­ce.

- By Rhonda Cook rcook@ajc.com and Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com

An Atlanta ordinance designed to prevent lowlevel offenders from sitting in jail when they are too poor to post bond is in jeopardy under changes state lawmakers quietly added to a larger immigratio­n enforcemen­t measure.

The House Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee approved those changes to Senate Bill 452 Tuesday without discussing them during a lengthy hearing that instead focused on the immigratio­n-related parts of the measure. Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, a Republican, backs the bill.

The changes say all defendants, including those accused of violating local ordinances, must be brought before a judge. That would hold true even if the court has a “bond schedule” allowing them to be released on their own recognizan­ce as soon as they are brought to a local jail. Atlanta is the only Georgia city following such a system. It was adopted after reports by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and other news outlets of poor people sitting in jail for weeks or months because they could not afford to post bonds for crimes like begging for money or urinating in public.

“This is the epitome of unsavory behavior by politician­s and lobbyists who attempt to pass sneaky bills that if appropriat­ely considered would face major opposition,” said Sara Totonchi, executive director of the Southern Center for Human Rights, which pushed for changes earlier this year in how the Atlanta Municipal Court operates.

Totonchi added that the revised version of the bill “would exacerbate wealthbase­d detention and prohibit local jurisdicti­ons, like the city of Atlanta, from taking steps to increase fairness within local justice systems. This legislatio­n is totally out of line with the deliberate, exhaustive examinatio­n of bail in Georgia that has been undertaken by judges, legislator­s and community stakeholde­rs over the last year.”

Committee Chairman Alan Powell, R-Hartwell, said the changes that his committee made to the bill “came out of the Senate as a proposal, and I said, ‘It ain’t a bad idea to add this.’” Declining to identify who asked for the changes, Powell said too often dangerous or wanted people have been released on their own recognizan­ce without being vetted.

“The committee members had the substitute in front of them. We did pass out copies to everybody. Nobody asked any questions,” Powell said.

Rep. Heath Clark, R-Warner Robins, the lawmaker who shepherded the changes through the committee, said he did not intentiona­lly omit mentioning the revisions when he briefed the panel about other tweaks to the bill dealing with immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Scott Hall, vice president of the Georgia Associatio­n of Profession­al Bondsmen, which aggressive­ly opposed the change regarding the Atlanta Municipal Court, said his group did not push for the changes to SB 452.

Last year, the Southern Center for Human Rights and the Civil Rights Corps wrote then-Mayor Kasim Reed about the constituti­onal problems of jailing poor people simply because they lacked money for bond. In that letter, the civil rights groups said the city could be sued if the practice continued. The groups sent a similar letter to Reed’s successor, Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, once she took office.

Changing the bond system used by Atlanta Municipal Court was the first change Bottoms pushed in her new administra­tion. She signed the ordinance in February, a little more than a month into her term. Bottoms’ office did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

As originally drafted and then passed by the Senate in late February, SB 452 required police officers to detain unauthoriz­ed immigrants and transport them to federal detention centers. The House committee watered down that part of the bill Tuesday. It instead gave police the option to do those things.

The bill also requires Georgia courts to determine whether the defendants they are sentencing are legally in the country. If they are here without legal permission, the courts would then be required to order prosecutor­s to notify federal immigratio­n authoritie­s about them. Further, the committee inserted language requiring the state prison system to publish a report every 90 days that lists the immigratio­n status and native countries of inmates who are not U.S. citizens. All those parts of the bill triggered impassione­d discussion­s during Tuesday’s hearing.

Cagle’s office and the bill’s sponsor, Republican state Sen. Jesse Stone of Waynesboro, did not respond to requests for comment. As he prepared to explain his bill to the committee Tuesday, Stone said he was just seeing the House panel’s version for the first time.

The measure must still pass the full House and go back to the Senate to approve the changes.

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