The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett honors beloved correction­s officer killed in 2022

Officer Scott Riner, now in county’s Fallen Heroes Memorial, mentored many inmates he oversaw.

- By Drew Kann drew.kann@ajc.com Staff writer Tyler Estep contribute­d to this report.

A beloved Gwinnett County correction­s officer gunned down last year in the parking lot of the Gwinnett County Comprehens­ive Correction­al Complex was honored by the county on Memorial Day as a “Fallen Hero.”

Officer Scott Riner was inducted into Gwinnett County’s Fallen Heroes Memorial during a ceremony on Monday, the county sheriff’s office said in a social media post.

Riner’s killing in December stunned his family, friends and co-workers. At his memorial service at Lawrencevi­lle’s North Metro Baptist Church, hundreds of people gathered to remember him as a one-of-a-kind character with a terrific sense of humor, who was well-liked even by the inmates in his custody during his time working in correction­s.

Riner had a pet catfish and was known to spend weekends driving a tractor on his farm in Monticello with nothing on but a pair of camo cargo shorts.

In the 12 years he spent working at the Gwinnett County Comprehens­ive Correction­al Complex, he mentored many of the inmates he oversaw and tried to steer them toward productive lives after prison, former co-workers told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. John Starks, a former inmate who was on one of Riner’s work details, said the pair became hunting and fishing buddies after he got out of prison. He credited Riner with helping him build a solid foundation to start a new life.

Yahya Ali Abdulkadir of Dacula was arrested days after the shooting and later indicted on charges of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.

Riner worked in sales and marketing before becoming a correction­s officer, a job he took because he relished the chance to help folks out of tough situations.

He was also adored by his wife of 22 years, Elana, and her two children, whom he embraced as his own.

“A hundred years from now,” Riner once wrote on Facebook, “it won’t matter what my bank account was, the sort of house I lived in or the kind of truck I drove. But the world will be a better place because I was important in the lives of my two kids.”

 ?? GWINNETT COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S ?? Scott Riner, 59, was shot and killed in December as he arrived for his shift at the Gwinnett County Comprehens­ive Correction­al Complex.
GWINNETT COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S Scott Riner, 59, was shot and killed in December as he arrived for his shift at the Gwinnett County Comprehens­ive Correction­al Complex.

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