The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bill would expose dogfighter­s to risk of racketeeri­ng charges

It’s part of a flurry of bills by GOP lawmakers to beef up sentencing.

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

Those caught engaging in dogfightin­g rings could soon face racketeeri­ng charges if a proposed bill becomes law this year.

Current law allows prosecutor­s to indict people on racketeeri­ng charges if someone shows a pattern of participat­ing in at least two activities from a list of associated crimes in state law — such as forgery and homicide — as part of an organized criminal enterprise.

Senate Bill 68, sponsored by Milledgevi­lle Republican state Sen. Rick Williams, would add dogfightin­g to that list. It passed the Senate Public Safety Committee on Wednesday on a party-line vote of 5-3, with Republican­s supporting the measure.

“I hope this will give our police and prosecutor­s a stronger tool to target these organized criminals,” Williams said.

Organizing a dogfight already is a felony offense under current law and carries a sentence of one to five years, a fine of at least $5,000 or a combinatio­n of both on the first conviction. Any additional conviction­s would require a sentence of between one and 10 years in prison or a fine of at least $15,000.

Anyone convicted of being a spectator at a dogfight is guilty of a misdemeano­r. A second spectator conviction is a felony offense that carries a sentence of one to five years, a fine of at least $5,000 or a combinatio­n of both.

Adding dogfightin­g to the activities that lead to a racketeeri­ng conviction could result in a sentence of no less than five and up to 20 years in prison on a first offense.

SB 68 is part of a flurry of legislatio­n filed by Republican lawmakers this year seeking to beef up sentencing. Williams filed the legislatio­n last week on behalf of Lt. Gov. Burt Jones.

“As you know, the Senate is currently considerin­g other legislatio­n, endorsed by Gov. (Brian) Kemp and Lt. Gov. Jones, to step up the penalties under the law,” Williams said.

State Sen. Kim Jackson, a Stone Mountain Democrat, said she voted against the bill because of the pattern of her Republican colleagues introducin­g “tough on crime” bills that increase penalties for laws that are already on the books.

“The dogfightin­g law, it’s already a felony,” she said. “It works. People get caught for dogfightin­g, and you lock them up for a year to five years. This expands it and basically forces people to have to stay in prison for even longer.”

The bill is supported by the Prosecutin­g Attorneys’ Council of Georgia and the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion. GBI Executive Director John Melvin, who previously served as a prosecutor, said he’s tried racketeeri­ng cases that range from shopliftin­g to gang-related murders.

“When you look at dogfightin­g, it’s one of the most savage, vicious crimes in the state of Georgia, and so I’ll put those people on the continuum of murder,” Melvin said.

 ?? NATRICE MILLER/AJC ?? Senate Bill 68 is sponsored by state Sen. Rick Williams (above), R-milledgevi­lle, who filed it last week on behalf of Lt. Gov. Burt Jones.
NATRICE MILLER/AJC Senate Bill 68 is sponsored by state Sen. Rick Williams (above), R-milledgevi­lle, who filed it last week on behalf of Lt. Gov. Burt Jones.

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