The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Employee files racial discrimina­tion suit against Sheriff’s Office

Powder Springs, Marietta and more can get the latest on Twitter: @cobbnewsno­w

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

A black employee of the Cobb County Sheriff’s Office has filed a racial discrimina­tion suit against the department alleging that he has been discipline­d more harshly than his white col- leagues.

The suit, filed in federal court last week, was brought by Chester Coachman. Coach- man was hired in 2008 and demoted from deputy sheriff to a criminal justice special- ist in August, 2017, according to his personnel file.

His demotion followed his arrest in Florida for allegedly threatenin­g the brother of his daughter’s boyfriend with a gun. According to the lawsuit, the case was dismissed in March, 2018, and his cer- tification as law enforcemen­t was restored by the Georgia Peace Officer Standards and Training Council in Febru- ary 2019.

According to Coachman’s POST file, his certificat­ion is probationa­ry and he is required to complete an anger management course and an ethics course.

“While awaiting a decision to be re-instated back to a sworn deputy, Defendant assigned Mr. Coachman to work details that no similarly situated Deputy have had to perform, including cleaning showers, trash, dirty laundry and jail cells smeared in feces and old food without proper materials or equipment,” the filing reads. “Rather than reinstate Mr. Coachman to a sworn deputy position like it had done to similarly-sit- uated Caucasian officers following their P.O.S.T. recertific­ation, Defendant continued to assign Mr. Coachman to less desirable work including detail picking up dirty trays and dirty laundry.”

Sheriff Neil Warren has refused to reinstate Coachman since, the lawsuit says. It does not detail the sheriff ’s stated reasons, but calls them “false” and a “pretext for race discrimina­tion.”

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