The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sentence overturned for bias against Islam

- By Chelsea Prince For the AJC

An Iranian-American’s fivemonth jail sentence was vacated one week after he filed an appeal accusing a Sandy Springs judge who sentenced him of harboring anti-Islamic bias.

Municipal Court Judge Sharon Dickson recently came under fire for remarks she made at Fazial Azizan’s sentencing last year. According to court transcript­s, Dickson referenced the nursing student’s heritage multiple times, questioned his respect for women and called him “despicable.”

The city of Sandy Springs decided Friday to reverse the judge’s ruling.

“We welcome the city’s decision to overturn the judge’s sentence, which was fatally tainted by her expression of bigotry,” said Edward Ahmed Mitchell, the director of the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a Muslim civil rights advocacy group. “This should not have been a hard decision for Sandy Springs to make. Bigotry has no place in our society, much less our courts.”

Azizan was on trial for misdemeano­r disorderly conduct after a crash in his Uber car last spring. A customer was in the back seat at the time of the accident near the intersecti­on of Hammond and Glenridge drives, Channel 2 Action News reported.

Azizan told the news station he was not at fault, but after being treated for his injuries, he was detained.

Azizan said he needed medical attention, but the ambulance driver refused to take him to a hospital that accepted his insurance. At some point, the two argued, he told Channel 2.

In dashcam video obtained by Channel 2, the EMT can be heard complainin­g about Azizan to an officer who responded to the accident.

“I don’t really think there’s anything wrong with this guy and now the back of our ambulance stinks of alcohol and he’s really starting to (expletive) me off,” the EMT said. “He’s being belligeren­t.”

Based on the EMT’s remarks, Azizan was removed from the ambulance and later arrested on a charge of disorderly conduct, according to Channel 2. He was held for three hours at the North Fulton jail annex.

A DUI task force officer later confirmed Azizan was not drunk, the news station reported.

“Remember, I’m the victim of an accident and at the same time, I’m being handcuffed,” he told Channel 2. “Going to the jail, the whole time I was just in a state of shock and crying.”

When he came before the Sandy Springs Municipal Court last July, he represente­d himself. Azizan thought he could clear his name, he told Channel 2.

He was convicted during the bench trial. Before she handed down the sentence, the judge called Azizan “a threat to everyone who wants to catch Uber” and referenced Azizan’s Islamic heritage at least six times, CAIR said.

Azizan had appealed first to the Fulton County Superior Court, which found Dickson’s remarks “objectiona­ble” and “wholly inappropri­ate” but upheld her ruling. Then he appealed to the Georgia Court of Appeals, and on July 24, the Muslim rights group filed a brief on his behalf.

Three days later, the city of Sandy Springs vacated the ruling and sentenced Azizan to two months probation.

The future of the judge remains unclear, but CAIR is calling on Sandy Springs to reevaluate its relationsh­ip with Dickson as well as the prosecutin­g attorney who did not intervene when she made her remarks.

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