The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Is gunfire on New Year’s worth risk of year in jail?

Prosecutor­s raise bar on penalty for reckless celebratin­g with guns.

- By Amanda C. Coyne Amanda.Coyne@ajc.com

Before you go all Yosemite Sam with your New Year’s celebratio­ns, ask yourself: Is this worth a year in jail?

The Gwinnett County Solicitor General’s Office will recommend a yearlong sentence for anyone convicted of “reckless celebrator­y dischargin­g of firearms,” it announced Monday. Prosecutor­s will also ask judges to confiscate the offender’s gun and levy the maximum possible fine. Judges take prosecutor­s’ recommenda­tions under considerat­ion during sentencing, but the final decision is solely theirs to make.

“The solicitor general’s office will continue its efforts to ensure Gwinnett citizens feel safe and secure through aggressive and innovative prosecutio­n,” said investigat­or Curtis Clemons in a statement. “Further, the above measures are be i ng i mplemented to deter any individual­s who would endanger the public through reckless disregard of human life and safety.”

Shooting a gun in the air can cause harm to people and property due to falling bullets A Lilburn man was killed by celebrator­y gunfire on Dec. 31, 2010. Also in Gwinnett, two men were charged with shooting guns under the influence of alcohol and near public roads on Jan. 1, 2019. Each also faced a charge of reckless conduct.

In Georgia, it is illegal to fire a gun on someone’s property without permission, within 50 feet of a public road or highway and while under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Violating any of those laws is a misdemeano­r offense.

The solicitor general’s office prosecutes misdemeano­rs.

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