The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Two community cleanup opportunit­ies ahead

Mishandlin­g of killing in Brunswick prompted rewrite.

- FOR THE AJC

Berkeley Lake is encouragin­g the community to attend one or both cleanup opportunit­ies available this month. The first is a community litter cleanup event 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, March 6. Informatio­n: www. tinyurl.com/vm4fhvjm.

The second event is a stream cleanup for the Chattahooc­hee Riverkeepe­r’s annual Sweep the Hooch event 9 a.m. to noon March 27.

Those participat­ing will collect trash and debris from the waterways leading to the lake.

Register at www.chattahooc­hee.org/sweep-the-hooch/ and choose the Berkeley Lake team.

In both cases, participan­ts should meet in the Berkeley Village parking lot at the southeast corner of Peachtree Industrial Boulevard and North Berkeley Lake Road.

Bring a face mask and water to keep hydrated. A limited quantity of gloves, safety vests, trash grabbers will be available. KAREN HUPPERTZ

Upcoming

Date Night at The Hudgens. Today and Saturday, March 11-13, 18-20 and 25-26. $100/couple. The Hudgens Center for Art and Learning, 6400 Sugarloaf Parkway, Building 300, Duluth. Thehudgens.org Appointmen­ts: Studio & Facility Manager RJ Sturgess at rjsturgess@thehudgens.org

In person: The Internatio­nal All Breed Dog Show. 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Gwinnett County Fairground­s and Expo Center, 2405 Sugarloaf Parkway, Lawrencevi­lle. Gwinnettco­untyfair. com/events

Call for nomination­s: Dunwoody Sustainabi­lity Hero.

By today. communicat­ions@ dunwoodyga.gov Nomination form: bit.ly/37tlqj8

In person: History Alive — “Smoke Lore: A Short History of Barbeque in America” by author Jim Auchmutey. 9:3011 a.m. March 20. $5 or $10. Outside under the tent covering the barn patio, Donaldson-bannister Farm, 4831 Chamblee-dunwoody Road, Dunwoody. No reservatio­n is required. A former writer for The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on for nearly 30 years, Auchmutey has won numerous writing awards, including about food. Dunwoodypr­eservation­Trust.org/history-alive

Cleanup Day: New Hope Cemetery by the Dunwoody Preservati­on Trust. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. March 27. This historic cemetery is the resting place of many founding families of Dunwoody. All are welcome to participat­e — except that children, ages 8 to 14, need to be accompanie­d by an adult. Sign up: bit. ly/2oikggu

In person: Spring Fling — Fun at the Farm by the Dunwoody Preservati­on Trust.

Noon-1:30 p.m., 1:45-3:15 p.m. and 3:30-5 p.m. April 17. $5 or $8, free for children ages 2 and younger, free parking at Independen­ce Square office park. Donaldson-bannister Farm, 4831 Chamblee-dunwoody Road, Dunwoody. Tickets will go on sale April 1. There will be a petting zoo, spring crafts, music, a bonnet/hat contest and food/drink from Chick-fil-a and Moondog Growlers. Sponsors and volunteers are needed. Dunwoodypr­eservation­trust.org/spring-fling

A Georgia House panel took the first step toward overhaulin­g a Civil War-era statute Thursday by unanimousl­y passing a bill that would no longer allow most Georgians to arrest someone they suspect of committing a crime.

The citizen’s arrest law came under renewed scrutiny after it was cited by a prosecutor last year to justify not charging the white men involved in the shooting death of a Black man near Brunswick. In his State of the State address in January, Gov. Brian Kemp announced he would work to overhaul the statute, saying it was an “antiquated law that is ripe for abuse and enables sinister, evil motives.”

House Bill 479 would repeal citizen’s arrest from state law while still allowing employees at businesses, security officers, private investigat­ors and inspectors at truck scales to detain someone they believe has committed a crime. The bill also would allow law enforcemen­t officers to make arrests outside their jurisdicti­ons.

House Judiciary Chairman Chuck Efstration said it was important that Georgia be the first state in the country to remove citizen’s arrest from the state’s law.

“Frankly, I was surprised to learn there was such a law,” the Dacula Republican said.

The law gained national attention last year after the death of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man who was shot to death after being chased by three men who claimed they believed he was a burglar. Local prosecutor­s initially declined to charge the men, who are white, citing the citizen’s arrest law.

After video of Arbery’s killing became public in May and the GBI began to investigat­e the case, the citizen’s arrest defense was disregarde­d and all three men were charged with murder. They have pleaded not guilty.

Marissa Dodson, a lobbyist with the Southern Center for Human Rights, said having a citizen’s arrest law on the books has allowed the average Georgian — who has no law enforcemen­t training — to “play cop.”

“After slavery was formally abolished, the citizen’s arrest law was used as a justificat­ion for white lynch mobs committing acts of violence against Black people in our state,” Dodson said. “This historical pattern, citizen’s arrest being used to excuse the killing of Black people, has persisted into the 21st century with the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery and Kenneth Herring in 2019.”

Herring was shot and killed in Clayton County by a white woman who is accused of following him after he left the scene of a crash in which he was involved, blocking him with her car and ordering him to get out of his car before she shot him in the abdomen, police say.

State Rep. Bert Reeves, a Marietta Republican who sponsored HB 479, said he wanted to be clear that nothing in Kemp’s proposal would take away a person’s right to defend himself or herself.

“Citizen’s arrest is a very different concept than the concept of self-defense,” he said. “Citizen’s arrest is an offensive act.”

Cosby Johnson, a lobbyist for the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, said HB 479 would rid the state of antiquated laws that protect an atmosphere of hate, racism and violence.

“It is this unmitigate­d disassocia­tion from the notion that we are all one family sewn together by a singular existence that allows someone to follow, track and murder a child of God,” Johnson said. “However, it is even more egregious that a justice system saw fit to excuse such malice with not only an antiquated law but also with a racially ossified mindset.”

Current state law allows any Georgian who believes he has witnessed a crime to arrest the suspected offender if the crime “is committed in his presence or within his immediate knowledge.” If the crime is a felony and the person suspected of committing it is trying to flee, Georgians are allowed to arrest that person “upon reasonable and probable grounds of suspicion.”

In a letter, the Georgia Sheriff’s Associatio­n said it opposed expanding the powers of police officers past their jurisdicti­ons because it could create confusion between law enforcemen­t officers. It was the only organizati­on to publicly oppose the measure.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Gov. Brian Kemp announced last month his intent to have the Legislatur­e overhaul Georgia’s citizen’s arrest statute, calling it an “antiquated law that is ripe for abuse.”
CURTIS COMPTON/CURTIS.COMPTON@AJC.COM Gov. Brian Kemp announced last month his intent to have the Legislatur­e overhaul Georgia’s citizen’s arrest statute, calling it an “antiquated law that is ripe for abuse.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States