The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House backs bid to ditch Glynn PD

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

The Georgia House backed an effort Friday to dissolve the Glynn County Police Department following its handling of the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery.

The House voted 152-3 to allow voters to decide whether to eliminate their county police department­s, moving authority to county sheriff ’s offices.

There are several county police department­s in Georgia, including in Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton and Gwinnett counties. In counties where there are two agencies, the county police handle the enforcemen­t of state and local laws while the sheriff ’s office manages the jail.

The vote comes after the shooting death of Arbery, a 25-year-old black man who was killed in February while jogging near Brunswick. Three white men, Travis and Greg McMichael and William “Roddie”

Bryan, have each been charged with felony murder in the Arbery case, which has drawn national attention and sparked demonstrat­ions.

“There have been too many missteps over there,” said state Rep. Al Williams, a Democrat from Midway. “It’s time to be going in a different direction.”

A version of the legislatio­n, Senate Bill 38, was introduced earlier this year in response to years of alleged problems with the Glynn County Police Department. That bill didn’t advance, but it was revived after Arbery’s death.

Travis and Greg McMichael were charged with murder and aggravated assault in May after video of the incident surfaced and the GBI opened an investigat­ion. “They should have arrested the McMichaels at the scene, and they did not,” said state Rep. Don Hogan, a Republican from St. Simons Island.

The legislatio­n now moves to the state Senate for further considerat­ion.

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