The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Future unclear for APD officers in Brooks case

It’s not yet known if the pair will return to patrol positions.

- By Alexis Stevens alexis.stevens@ajc.com Staff writer Bill Rankin contribute­d to this article.

The criminal charges have been dropped and the suspen- sion lifted on their police offi- cer certificat­ions. Officer Garrett Rolfe and Officer Devin Brosnan still have jobs with the Atlanta Police Department.

But more than two years after their involvemen­t in the death of Rayshard Brooks, it’s not yet known if the two will return to patrol positions as they held in June 2020. Attorneys for Rolfe and Bros- nan declined to discuss the officers’ career plans moving forward, just days after a specially appointed prose- cutor announced all criminal charges would be dropped.

“He is currently employed by APD, and he intends to remain employed by APD,” Noah Pines, the attorney for Rolfe, told The Atlanta Jour- nal-constituti­on.

Asked about Brosnan’s plans, Amanda Clark Palmer, a member of his defense team, declined to comment.

If the officers intend to return to patrol duties rather than their current administra­tive roles, they will first need to complete the training they missed while their certificat­ion was suspended, according to Chris Harvey, deputy executive director for the Georgia Peace Officer Standards and Training Council, known as POST.

Georgia officers are required to complete 20 hours of train- ing a year, including courses in the use of force, de-escalation and community polic- ing, Harvey said.

“If an officer is not able to do that, they can apply for a waiver and can make up the training,” Harvey said.

Rolfe and Brosnan would have to complete training hours from 2020 and 2021 and have until the end of the year to complete the hours for 2022, Harvey said. Atlanta interim police Chief Darin Schierbaum has already been in touch with POST regarding the officers’ returning to training.

Brooks, 27, was shot and killed June 12, 2020, after Rolfe and Brosnan tried to arrest him in the parking lot of a south Atlanta Wendy’s. The shooting set off protests at the restaurant, which was burned to the ground the next day.

The same day, police Chief Erika Shields announced she was stepping down, and Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said Rolfe had been fired.

Former Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard announced five days later that he had filed criminal charges against both officers. Rolfe was charged with 11 counts, including felony murder. Brosnan was charged with aggravated assault and violating his oath of office. Both were arrested, and because of the felony charges, their officer certificat­ions were suspended.

Howard later lost his seat to Fani Willis, who recused herself from the case. State Attorney General Chris Carr then requested Pete Skandalaki­s, executive director of the Prosecutin­g Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, take over the case last year. Skandalaki­s enlisted the help of another former metro Atlanta district attorney, Danny Porter.

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