The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill that targets county police agencies advances

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com

A proposed law that lays the groundwork to dissolve county police department­s cleared a Georgia Senate panel Thursday despite passionate opposition from coastal elected officials.

If approved, the measure could impact law enforcemen­t in several metro Atlanta counties.

Under Senate Bill 317, state lawmakers could ask local voters whether they want to get rid of county police department­s and let county sheriff ’s offices handle law enforcemen­t. The bill passed the Senate Government Oversight Committee by a 5-4 vote.

State Sen. William Ligon, a Brunswick Republican, said he proposed the legislatio­n in response to a Glynn County grand jury’s suggestion that county commission­ers ask voters whether the Police Department there should be dissolved. District Attorney

Jackie Johnson requested the grand jury investigat­e the department.

The county Board of Commission­ers opposed dissolving the Police Department.

“I spoke with law enforcemen­t officials and lawyers and felt there was a goodfaith reason to go forward,” Ligon said. “When you have one body saying one thing and one body saying the other, who do you go to? I just think you should put it to the people.”

Clint Mueller, a lobbyist with the Associatio­n County Commission­ers of Georgia, said he was concerned about state lawmakers subverting the ability of local officials to govern. “Our No. 1 issue is the precedent it sets,” he said. “This has never been done in the state of Georgia where the local delegation, through a local path, has the ability to go around the board of commission­ers to put something on a local referendum.”

There are seven state-certified county police department­s in Georgia — mostly in metro Atlanta, including Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton and Gwinnett counties. In counties where there are two agencies, the county police handle enforcemen­t of state and local laws while the sheriff ’s office manages the jail. Sheriffs also are elected, while county, or municipal, police chiefs are appointed by local government officials.

Mike Browning, chairman of the Glynn County Commission, asked lawmakers to defeat the measure.

“This has been a slap in the face to us to find out we had to come up to Atlanta to ... save our Police Department,” he said. “What they’ve done is tear our community up.”

Browning said he believes the legislatio­n is politicall­y motivated, citing the case of former Glynn County Police Lt. Robert C. Sasser, who in 2010 avoided punishment after spraying bullets into a car and killing Caroline Small, who was unarmed.

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