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Tag: georgia news

  • Kemp signs Georgia law reviving prosecutor sanctions panel. Democrats fear it’s aimed at Fani Willis

    Kemp signs Georgia law reviving prosecutor sanctions panel. Democrats fear it’s aimed at Fani Willis

    ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed a law Wednesday that lets a state commission begin operating with powers to discipline and remove prosecutors, potentially disrupting Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ prosecution of former President Donald Trump.

    “This legislation will help us ensure rogue and incompetent prosecutors are held accountable if they refuse to uphold the law,” Kemp said before signing the bill, flanked by Republican legislative leaders. “As we know all too well, crime has been on the rise across the country, and is especially prevalent in cities where prosecutors are giving criminals a free pass or failing to put them behind bars due to lack of professional conduct.”

    Though Kemp signed legislation last year creating the Prosecuting Attorneys Qualifications Commission, it was unable to begin operating after the state Supreme Court in November refused to approve rules governing its conduct. The justices said they had “grave doubts” about their ability to regulate the duties of district attorneys beyond the practice of law. Tuesday’s measure removes the requirement for Supreme Court approval.

    Jeff Amy and Associated Press

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  • Fulton County Judge dismisses six charges in Trump’s racketeering case, leaving him with ten charges

    Fulton County Judge dismisses six charges in Trump’s racketeering case, leaving him with ten charges

    Fulton County Superior Court Judge McAfee ruled that six of the charges in the 41-count indictment related to former President Trump and some co-defendants allegedly soliciting the violation of oath by a public officer lacked the required detail about what underlying crime the defendants were soliciting. Essentially, Donald Trump now faces ten charges.

    The charges dismissed have to do with soliciting elected officials to violate their oaths of office. McAfee says the indictments were not detailed enough. However, the order leaves intact many other charges in the indictment and the judge wrote that Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis could seek a new indictment on the charges he dismissed.


    Itoro Umontuen currently serves as Managing Editor of The Atlanta Voice. Upon his arrival to the historic publication, he served as their Director of Photography. As a mixed-media journalist, Umontuen…
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  • Judge Scott McAfee says he’s on track to rule this week on whether to remove DA Fani Willis from Trump election case

    Judge Scott McAfee says he’s on track to rule this week on whether to remove DA Fani Willis from Trump election case

    (CNN) — The presiding judge in former President Donald Trump’s Georgia election subversion case says he is on track to order this week on whether to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

    In an interview last week on WSB Radio in Atlanta to discuss the challenger he will face in his reelection bid, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee briefly spoke about Willis and his pending order on whether to remove her from prosecuting Trump and the remaining co-defendants.

    “I gave myself a deadline because I knew everyone wanted an answer. And I’ll tell you that an order like this takes time to write,” McAfee said in the interview.

    Nick Valencia, Jason Morris and CNN

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  • Georgia state Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick champions diversity and access to investment capital

    Georgia state Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick champions diversity and access to investment capital

    During a typical day during the legislative session, Georgia State Representative Dar’shun Kendrick is usually walking around the House Chamber as she speaks to different lawmakers. It doesn’t matter if they’re from Elberton or East Atlanta. Decatur or Dacula. Kendrick, a Democrat from Lithonia, will speak to anyone in order to build consensus in order to get bills passed. 

    Last week, Kendrick qualified to run for House District 95, an area that includes portions of Lithonia, eastern Dekalb, southern Gwinnett, and western Rockdale counties. After the 12:00PM deadline on March 8th, Kendrick found out she would not have an opponent in the upcoming 2024 elections. Before she embarks on her eighth term in the Georgia House, the financial securities attorney would sit for an interview with The Atlanta Voice, from her legislative office. 

    “We’re only down here for 40 days, even though it’s not consecutive, it goes by really fast,” explained Kendrick. “So it’s almost like the time period, which we’re down here, forces you to be fearless because you don’t have all day. And I think I’ve developed some really good relationships.  I try to control the things I can control. It gives me such peace.”

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Automaker Rivian pauses construction of its $5 billion electric truck plant in Georgia

    Automaker Rivian pauses construction of its $5 billion electric truck plant in Georgia

    ATLANTA (AP) — The CEO of Rivian Automotive announced Thursday that the electric truck maker is pausing construction of its $5 billion manufacturing plant in Georgia to speed production and save money.

    California-based Rivian had planned to start building its new R2 midsize SUVs at the Georgia site east of Atlanta. State and local governments offered an incentive package as large as $1.5 billion, one of the largest ever offered for an American auto plant.

    But as the company unveiled the new SUV and made the unexpected announcement of additional R3 and R3X crossover models at an event Thursday, CEO RJ Scaringe said production of the R2 will instead begin at Rivian’s existing plant in Normal, lllinois.

    Jeff Amy, Russ Bynum and Associated Press

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  • James Beverly steps down from Georgia House Minority Leader role after four years on the job

    James Beverly steps down from Georgia House Minority Leader role after four years on the job

    Dr. James Beverly, the Minority Leader in the Georgia House of Representatives, has announced he’ll step down from his role at the end of 2024 Legislative Session, which ends on March 28. Additionally, Beverly, a Democrat from Macon, will not run for re-election. Beverly represented the 143rd District since his election in 2013. He also has been Minority Leader for the last four years. But, Beverly’s district entirely shrunk after the special session on redistricting in December 2023.

    “50% of my district is new within a new county, Houston County,” explained Beverly during an exclusive conversation with The Atlanta Voice. “Which means that I have to go down to Houston County to shake hands, have town hall meetings in order to be elected in a space where I don’t know anybody down there. Because there’s never been a Democrat to represent that district at all for the last sixty years.”

    Beverly led the House Democrats with a pragmatic approach. Being the party in the minority, he felt as though incremental progress is better than an outright aggressive approach. But, as the demographics in Georgia are currently shifting to a more progressive-minded electorate, the Georgia Democrats were able to pick up seats. As a response, Beverly says Georgia Republicans have been co-opting their agenda. 

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Georgia congresswoman Lucy McBath remains focused on the tasks at hand

    Georgia congresswoman Lucy McBath remains focused on the tasks at hand

    Despite being drawn out of her district for the second time, U.S. Congresswoman Lucy McBath, D-Georgia, once again flashed a smile as she filed papers to run for Congress. This time in the newly-drawn 6th Congressional District. 

    In December, Georgia Republicans claimed they spent a lot of time and effort putting forth a redrawn map that complies with Judge Steve C. Jones’s order. 

    McBath, who has been representing the 7th Congressional District the last two years, immediately responded to Jones’ ruling by declaring her intention to run in the 6th Congressional District this year. The redrawn 6th is much friendlier turf for a Democrat. It includes portions of Cobb, Douglas, Fulton, and Henry Counties, plus a few Atlanta neighborhoods.

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Georgia Politics: The Crossover Day Odyssey

    Georgia Politics: The Crossover Day Odyssey

    Crossover Day in Georgia means it’s the final day for any proposed laws that must move from one legislative chamber to the other for consideration. If a bill doesn’t pass, it is dead for that session. Here are some bills (and topics) of consequence that either passed or stalled on Crossover Day. 

    Georgia Republicans pass controversial illegal immigrant bill  

    House Bill 1105 passed along party lines, 97-74 after lengthy debate. According to the legislation, it requires Georgia law enforcement to cooperate with federal authorities in the administration and adjudication of immigration laws. This bill came to light after Georgia Governor Brian Kemp blamed President Joe Biden’s administration for the death of Laken Riley, a 22-year-old Augusta University student in Athens on Friday, February 23rd. 

    The alleged suspect, Jose Antonio Ibarra, 26, is not a U.S. citizen. He resides in the Athens area. Ibarra faces charges of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated battery, aggravated assault, false imprisonment, kidnapping, hindering a 911 call, and concealing the death of another. 

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Georgia Democrats propose bills seeking to protect access to contraception and IVF

    Georgia Democrats propose bills seeking to protect access to contraception and IVF

    Georgia Democrats announced they’ll introduce similar bills in both legislative chambers designed to protect access to contraception and in vitro fertilization (IVF). Wednesday morning, state Senator Elena Parent, D-Atlanta, announced her bills Senate Bill 564, titled “The Right to Contraception Act” and Senate Bill 565, titled “The Right to IVF Act.” 

    Concurrently, state Rep. Marvin Lim, a Democrat from Norcross and state Rep. Teri Anulewicz, a Democrat from Smyrna, has filed a bill, House Bill 1424 with the same intentions as state Senator Parent’s bill.

    The Democrats have filed these bills due to the Alabama Supreme Court decision on IVF. On February 16th, the Alabama Supreme Court declared that embryos created through IVF should be considered children, according to the application of Alabama’s Wrongful Death of a Minor Act. 

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Bill that creates Community Impact Districts near Georgia’s HBCUs passes out of Georgia Senate

    Bill that creates Community Impact Districts near Georgia’s HBCUs passes out of Georgia Senate

    Senate Bill 235 passed the Georgia Senate by a margin of 46-7 Monday afternoon. The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Sonya Halpern, a Democrat from Atlanta, seeks to establish the Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) Innovation and Economic Prosperity Planning Districts Commission under the University System of Georgia. The bill is a byproduct of a recommendation from the bipartisan 2022 Excellence, Innovation and Technology at Georgia’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities Study Committee.

    According to the bill, HBCU planning districts can transform these institutions and surrounding communities in numerous ways related to housing, digital infrastructure, small business development, environmental upgrades, campus upgrades, economic development, and workforce development. The proposed commission would consist of eleven appointed members. Plus, the legislation would establish smaller, localized advisory committees to better understand the needs and experiences of individual universities. 

    The bill was co-sponsored by Georgia Senate Republicans Jason Anavitarte and Brandon Beach. 

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff discusses foster care and immigration in surprise visit to Georgia State Capitol

    U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff discusses foster care and immigration in surprise visit to Georgia State Capitol

    Monday morning, U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff visited the Georgia State Capitol to speak to the ongoing crisis concerning the state’s foster care systems. In testimony from October 2023, Ossoff disclosed that an internal audit. It stated Georgia’s Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS) failed to address risk and safety concerns in 84% of reviewed cases. Ossoff also mentioned an analysis that found 1,790 children in state care were reported missing between 2018 and 2022. 

    The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) testified on November 6, 2023, that 410 children who were reported missing from care in Georgia to NCMEC were identified by NCMEC as likely victims of child sex trafficking, according to their analysis. 

    “I know the safety of vulnerable children is a top priority for so many in this body. In light of the dangerous conditions that prevail in foster care systems nationwide, including here in our own state, I hope that the urgency of reform will lead to meaningful legislative progress to protect Georgia’s most vulnerable children. I thank all of you who have been engaged in leading that effort,” said Senator Ossoff during his speech in the Georgia Senate Chamber.

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Keri Hilson, Ahmaud Arbery’s parents among honorees at Georgia Legislative Black Caucus 42nd Annual Heritage Dinner

    Keri Hilson, Ahmaud Arbery’s parents among honorees at Georgia Legislative Black Caucus 42nd Annual Heritage Dinner

    During the Georgia Legislative Black Caucus’s (GLBC) 42nd Annual Heritage Dinner, Marcus Arbery explained his passion for justice has not wavered. Friday was the fourth anniversary the death of Marcus’s son, Ahmaud Arbery. Held at the Georgia International Convention Center in College Park, Marcus Arbery told the crowd he still believes in his children and wouldn’t step on anyone’s toes.

    “Let’s join together and fight this war because racism isn’t going anywhere,” says Arbery.

    During his remarks he singled out former district attorney Jackie Johnson. In November 2023, Senior Judge John R. Turner refused to dismiss charges levied against Johnson. Johnson was indicted on September 2021. She was charged with a felony count of violating her oath of office and with hindering a law enforcement investigation, a misdemeanor. 

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Georgia Senate backs $5 billion state spending increase, including worker bonuses and roadbuilding

    Georgia Senate backs $5 billion state spending increase, including worker bonuses and roadbuilding

    ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia’s Senate is supporting changes to the state budget that would add $5 billion in spending, including money for bonuses already paid to state employees and teachers, additional roadbuilding, new dental and medical schools, and paying down some state debts.

    The Senate voted 54-1 on Thursday to pass House Bill 915, which adds money to the current budget running through June 30. The House and Senate will now seek to work out their differences, sending the measure to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp once they agree.

    Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Blake Tillery, a Vidalia Republican, told senators that there were relatively few differences between Kemp’s proposal and those of the House and Senate. “For 95% of the budget, there’s agreement,” Tillery said.

    Jeff Amy and Associated Press

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  • Georgia Democrats push to get abortion rights on November ballot

    Georgia Democrats push to get abortion rights on November ballot

    This week, the Georgia Democrats have pounded the drum in support of reproductive care and abortion rights. Wednesday, State Representative Kim Schofield held a press conference to highlight her House Resolution that would codify abortion rights into state law. House Resolution 836 would establish ‘a fundamental right to reproductive freedom and such right shall not be denied, burdened, or infringed upon.’ If it passes both chambers, it would go to the voters in November.

    According to Schofield’s bill, it says every individual has a fundamental right to reproductive freedom that entails the right to make and effectuate decisions about all matters relating to pregnancy, including, but not limited to, prenatal care, childbirth, postpartum care, contraception, sterilization, abortion care, miscarriage care, and fertility care.

    In states that have put abortion rights on the ballot, the voters have overwhelmingly turned out in favor of each initiative. For example, Ohio voters supported a measure that codified abortion rights up until the fetus is viable in November 2023. The right to abortion is available until 22 weeks. Also in Kansas, voters defeated a constitutional amendment by a 60-40 margin that, if it were successful, would have banned reproductive care and abortions. 

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Georgia Gov. Kemp reveals he was interviewed by special counsel in 2020 election interference case

    Georgia Gov. Kemp reveals he was interviewed by special counsel in 2020 election interference case

    (CNN) — Georgia Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, who resisted intense pressure from former President Donald Trump to overturn the 2020 election results in his state, revealed Tuesday that he has been interviewed by special counsel Jack Smith’s office.

    “I basically told them the same thing I told the special grand juries: that I follow the law and the Constitution and answered all their questions truthfully,” Kemp told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on “The Source,” noting that the conversation took place “months ago” and “really didn’t last that long.”

    A spokesman for the governor told CNN in July that Smith’s team had contacted Kemp but it was not previously known that he sat for an interview. The special counsel has since brought federal charges against the former president, alleging that Trump and six unindicted co-conspirators orchestrated a plot to overturn the election results on and leading up to January 6, 2021.

    Itoro N. Umontuen

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  • Police: 2 Ford Mustangs totaling nearly $200k stolen from Upson County dealership

    Police: 2 Ford Mustangs totaling nearly $200k stolen from Upson County dealership

    ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Thomaston police are investigating after thieves allegedly stole two Ford Mustang cars totaling nearly $200,000 from the Southern Ford of Thomaston dealership.

    A Ford Mustang GT500 Heritage and a blue Ford Mustang GT500 were both taken overnight Friday.

    “It’s really a special car, we are one of the lucky dealers that have it,” General Manager Chip Richardson said. “The Heritage was a numbered car; less than a thousand of them were built and everything was certified on it.”

    According to Thomaston Police, the thieves broke into the showroom and took not only the cars but the keys to most of the cars in the lot.

    “I don’t think this was someone coming to do a joyride, they knew what they were looking for,” Chief Mike Richardson said. “And I don’t think these are going to be chopped up anywhere, they’re heading somewhere.”

    The thieves disabled the security cameras, according to police.

    For those that run the dealership, it’s incredibly disappointing.

    “We’re a small country town and normally nothing happens,” Chip Richardson said.

    Investigators are asking anyone with information to call Thomaston Police.

    There is a $1,000 reward for any information that leads to an arrest.

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  • Months elapse before a veteran’s cancer is diagnosed by the Atlanta VA

    Months elapse before a veteran’s cancer is diagnosed by the Atlanta VA

    ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Calvin Jordan’s family is filled with relatives who answered the nation’s call for military service.

    Jordan himself served in the U.S. Army and fought in 1968 during the height of the Vietnam War.

    “We dropped Agent Orange,” the 73-year-old recalled. The now-banned chemical was dropped during the war, killing vegetation and crops, and has since been linked to cancers among American veterans.

    This past March, Jordan went to the emergency room at the Atlanta VA Medical Center to have a lump on his neck checked out. Jordan eventually got a scan of his neck while at the hospital, but said after his discharge, he never heard anything back.

    In July, Jordan scheduled another appointment, but the VA doctor said the hospital did not have a copy of his original scans. The images were later found, according to Jordan, but new scans were required.

    In August, Jordan received a second scan and biopsy. In September – seven months after his original visit to the VA – a doctor diagnosed him with cancer.

    Jordan said he learned the VA is so backlogged the facility can’t do the surgery or perform the required radiation treatments. He will undergo surgery to remove the mass at Emory Hospital on Nov. 18 and then receive further radiation treatments through his VA coverage.

    Delays in diagnosis and even longer waits for treatments are examples of the dilemmas local veterans allege against the Atlanta VA. They consider access to healthcare in Atlanta as their greatest battle.

    Atlanta News First Investigates found veterans could be waiting nearly half a year for appointments. And when their lives depend on early detection, some cancer patients fear untimely care could be life-threatening.

    “You [treat] cancer when its young; you don’t let it spread,” Jordan said. “This wasn’t even noticeable when I had my first CT scan. Now it’s like I’m growing a second head out the side of my neck.”

    These scans show the growth of the cancerous lump in Calvin Jordan’s neck.(WANF)

    Scans of the veteran’s neck show the cancerous mass is now nearly the size of a fist. The latest images were taken in August, but according to his March scans, he said the mass “was no bigger than maybe a thumbnail.”

    “This is the U.S., and veterans should be taken care of. I’m not doing this for me. I’m doing it for the young guys, the young girls that served. And they don’t deserve it. Atlanta VA just cannot handle the load,” he said.

    After Atlanta News First Investigates told Atlanta VA officials about Jordan’s case, the hospital reached out to him.

    When asked about backlogs and delays, a VA spokesperson said the facility offers same day walk-in care for mental health and primary care treatment. “One of VA’s top priorities right now is recruiting, hiring, and retaining clinical staff,” the spokesperson said.

    As of Oct. 23, according to data obtained by Atlanta News First Investigates, the average wait time to see an Atlanta VA specialist was 60 days. The longest was 162 days.

    Veterans are facing potentially deadly delays at the Atlanta VA.
    Veterans are facing potentially deadly delays at the Atlanta VA.(WANF)

    The location also faced a paperwork backlog last year. The Office of the Inspector General confirmed in an April 27, 2022, report, more than 17,000 mailed documents related to veteran care and claims went unopened last year.

    Veterans are facing potentially deadly delays at the Atlanta VA.
    Veterans are facing potentially deadly delays at the Atlanta VA.(WANF)

    Advocates say veterans deserve more but they end up with the least access to timely healthcare.

    “For them to come back and all they hear is, ‘thank you for your service,’ they don’t want to hear that from us,” said Scott Johnson, CEO of The Warrior Alliance, an organization helping serve metro Atlanta’s nearly 250,000 vets. With more than triple that number across the state, Johnson said, “collaboration is the only way.”

    Johnson advocates more private-public partnerships and funding will strengthen medical care options. Groups like his are acting as veteran liaisons, navigating healthcare, housing, education, and legal aid post-service in the army.

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  • ‘It needs to stop’ | Parents accuse coach of improper player recruitment

    ‘It needs to stop’ | Parents accuse coach of improper player recruitment

    DOUGLAS COUNTY, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Any parent of an athlete knows how competitive high school sports can be and how upsetting it can be when your child doesn’t get playing time.

    But parents at one metro Atlanta high school said their football program is recruiting and playing athletes who don’t even live in the district.

    Some Douglasville parents are alleging that Olten Downs, head football coach at Alexander High School, is recruiting teens who don’t live in the district. One parent even admitted she is allowing a recruit to use her address, even though he does not live with her.

    The Douglas County School System has confirmed an internal investigation was conducted. As a result, the district determined some conversations with prospective athletic parents had been “inappropriate” and said “appropriate corrective action” would be taken.

    Recruiting allegations

    Kimberly Churchill’s son has been playing football in Douglasville since he was old enough to walk.

    “He started off on the peewee football team, playing rec and then when he got to high school, he started playing on the JV level and varsity level,” Churchill said.

    As he entered junior year at Alexander High School, Churchill’s son had dreams of being a starter. But as the season unfolded, his mom said he was replaced by kids he had never seen in school before.

    “One kid is driving an hour to school and an hour from school each day,” Churchill said.

    After Churchill’s son quit the team, she sent a complaint to the Georgia High School Association (GHSA), which oversees extracurricular activities for nearly 500 public and private schools in Georgia, alleging Downs was “recruiting out-of-district players for his football team.”

    After Churchill’s son quit the team, she sent a complaint to the Georgia High School Association or GHSA, alleging that Coach Olten Downs was “recruiting out of district players for his football team.”(Rachel Polansky)

    Churchill is not the only Douglasville parent making these claims.

    Another mother who, fearing backlash, did not want to be identified because her son still plays for Alexander, admitted she is allowing Downs to use her address for one of his recruits, even though the recruit does not live with her.

    Downs, the mother said, “called me on the phone. He said, ‘I have a student that lives in Atlanta, and he wants to come out here to have a better life for himself and to play football and I was wondering if you would be okay allowing this kid to use your address?’

    “I said, that’s fine,” the mother recounted. She said she didn’t know at the time GHSA’s bylaws prohibited such an arrangement. “Even now, I don’t know if I’m gonna get in trouble,” she said. “I don’t know the ramifications.”

    Downs did not respond to Atlanta News First Investigates’ emails. When asked directly about the allegations during halftime at Alexander High football game, Downs did not respond and ran off the field.

    When Atlanta News First Investigates tried to get Coach Downs' side of the allegations, he ran...
    When Atlanta News First Investigates tried to get Coach Downs’ side of the allegations, he ran away.(WANF)

    While Downs did not speak, another parent recorded a call between her and one of Downs’ assistant coaches. That call was shared with Atlanta News First Investigates.

    During the call, the assistant coach asked if she’d provide her address for an incoming recruit to use.

    “He needs to have the address; he can live with me. I have no problem with that but, if he has an address, he’ll be able to go to that school; he’ll be able to go to Alexander,” the coach said.

    When the parent appeared to hesitate, the assistant coach added this: “I’m the type of person like you scratch my back, I scratch your back.” The mother who recorded the call took that to mean her son would be given more playing time.

    “I don’t want any of the kids to get in trouble,” the mother said. “I just want it [recruiting] to stop happening.”

    Recruiting or undue influence

    The GHSA defines recruiting or undue influence as “the use of influence by any person connected directly or indirectly with a GHSA school to induce a student of any age to transfer from one school to another … for athletic or literary competition purposes.”

    GHSA also has the ability to impose penalties including fines, probations, suspensions or forfeiture of games. That’s what happened in 2020 when south Georgia’s longtime football powerhouse, Valdosta High School, was hit with $7500 in fines for recruiting violations. Five of their players were deemed ineligible, they were made to forfeit season wins, and banned from playoffs.

    Atlanta News First Investigates uncovered GHSA investigated 93 claims of recruiting or undue influence over the last three years. Only 23 of them resulted in disciplinary action.

    Atlanta News First Investigates uncovered that GHSA investigated 93 claims of recruiting or...
    Atlanta News First Investigates uncovered that GHSA investigated 93 claims of recruiting or undue influence over the last three years. Only 23 of them resulted in disciplinary action.
    This handwritten list was provided by GHSA. (Rachel Polansky)

    While accusations are common, GHSA Executive Director Robin Hines said his staff rarely has enough evidence to punish programs.

    “You can’t really move forward if it’s not going to pass legal muster,” Hines said. “It’s a shame you have to look through that lens but if you can’t support it in court, then you probably don’t need to be moving forward.”

    Atlanta News First Investigates also learned 13 employees make up GHSA’s office. Only one of them is responsible for investigating misconduct.

    Nonetheless, Hines said his office is properly staffed. “Ninety-nine out of 100 times, it’s [complaints or allegations] usually by disgruntled members of the community that send those things. Some of them may turn out to be true but that’s few and far between.”

    Hines also said when allegations are deemed credible, GHSA will send a “letter of inquiry” to the district and ask the school to conduct its own internal investigation.

    When Atlanta News First Investigates asked if such an inquiry had been sent to Alexander High School, GHSA said it does “not comment on on going investigations.”

    “I’ve complained,” Churchill said. “Other moms have complained. Again, nothing has been done.”

    With one month left in the season, Churchill believes tactics like recruiting have taken the game out of athletes’ hands.

    “It’s just a mess and it needs to stop,” Churchill said.

    Local school system responds

    Atlanta News First Investigates has requested additional complaints regarding Downs since February 2021 from the Douglas County School System. The system said the public records would cost $3,360. We reduced the scope, and the price tag still remains more than $3,000. Atlanta News First is continuing to follow up on that public records request.

    Meanwhile, Atlanta News First Investigates also requested an interview with Trent North, the Douglas County School System superintendent. System spokesperson Portia Lake sent this statement:

    More on this investigation

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  • ‘It hurts. It itches. It’s painful’: Woman loses eye after being tased by deputies

    ‘It hurts. It itches. It’s painful’: Woman loses eye after being tased by deputies

    BUTTS COUNTY, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – A woman being held in a middle Georgia jail is now blind in her right eye after being tased. The deputy responsible for it, isn’t facing criminal charges, because police allege Ashanti Walls lunged at them.

    Walls’ attorney, however, is arguing his client’s mental health medication was withheld and then was punished for having a psychotic episode.

    The case represents the myriad challenges law enforcement personnel face when dealing with the mentally ill in Georgia’s prisons.

    The incident happened on Sept. 10, 2021; Walls had been in the Butts County jail for five days already. She had also been tased twice before, according to jail records. Incident reports and Walls’ medical file revealed jail staff described aggression, delusions and yelling. Staff also said Walls urinated on herself and defecated in her cell.

    Walls, 58, has been diagnosed as bipolar schizophrenic, according to her medical records, but despite the incidents while she was in the Butts County jail, she was not offered medication over those five days. In fact, her medical file shows she only received medication for her mental illness after the loss of her eye.

    The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) investigated the incident and interviewed the sergeant who tased Walls in the eye; Atlanta News First Investigates obtained the video of the interview.

    The third tasing happened as jail staff were entering Walls’ cell to serve a meal. In the video interview, the sergeant said Walls was in a “crouched down” position when she entered Walls’ cell and “I couldn’t see her.”

    “As soon as the door popped … [Walls] just forcefully pushed it open,” the sergeant said.

    The sergeant told state investigators her body camera malfunctioned, so it did not record the moments leading up to the incident or the tasing itself, only the scene after. Jail surveillance obtained by Atlanta News First investigates only shows one angle and has no audio.

    The sergeant said she “already had my taser out, prepared … based on [Walls’ history].

    “Something was wrong, mentally,” the segreant said.

    On Sept. 12, 2021, according to records, a Grady Memorial Hospital doctor requested Walls take Zyprexa once a day, among other medications. Zyprexa is the brand name for Olanzapine, used to treat mental health disorders.

    “Without the medication, [being] confined in a space only worsens the conditions,” said Aaron Durden, Walls’ attorney.

    According to Butts County Sheriff’s office policy, after someone is arrested and arrives at the jail, inmates should be classified “to enhance safety and humane treatment,” using “behavioral patterns … and any special needs.” The classification, which is a measure to minimize risks, is done when staff complete an objective classification form.

    However, when Atlanta News First Investigates asked for records to determine if jail staff completed that process for Walls, the agency said there were no records.

    “What’s disturbing is why have a policy if you’re not going to follow it,” Durden said.

    Instead of following and implementing protocols for responding to inmates with symptoms associated with psychotic episodes, Durden said the mentally ill are met with the punishment of a prong. “So, it seems as if protocol was walk in [and] be ready to tase her, let’s just go with that,” he said.

    The GBI asked about the type of force used as well.

    “What would be a circumstance you would use pepper spray instead of a taser,” the GBI asked the sergeant in the interview.

    “I’m not really sure,” the sergeant said. “In my opinion, I don’t think pepper spray would have been successful due to her being so violent already and in an altered mental state.”

    “I was a mess … a nervous wreck,” the sergeant said. “I would never mean to do that to anyone. It really hit me hard.”

    Walls feels differently. “It was point and shoot,” she said. “It hurts. It itches. It’s painful. There’s no eyeball there at all.”

    According to her medical records, Walls underwent an emergency surgery called enucleation, the removal of the eye globe.

    “When I cry, it burns,” Walls said. “And it’s just very uncomfortable so I try not to cry.”

    Jonathan Adams, who serves as district attorney for the Towaliga Judicial Circuit, is not filing criminal changes against the sergeant.

    “After careful review of the case I believe the Butts County Sheriff’s Office acted lawfully under the applicable statues,” Adams, whose circuit includes Butts, Lamar and Monroe counties, wrote in a letter.

    Adams’ decision came after the GBI conducted its investigation to determine criminal wrongdoing.

    Atlanta News First has been attempting to contact the Butts County Sheriff’s Office for comment on this incident for several months, to no avail. However, after this story first aired during our 4 p.m. newscast on Oct. 4, a spokesperson for the office contacted Atlanta News First and apologized for the delay. The spokesperson also confirmed Butts County Sheriff Gary Long is now available for an interview.

    At the core, experts argue types of use of force is all about training.

    “When I do my training courses, I ask what’s the best way to prevent tragedies. I write on the blackboard or PowerPoint, I.T.T.S.,” said Dr. Laurence Miller, a nationally recognized clinical and forensic psychologist. “That stands for ‘It’s the training, stupid.’ “People do what they’re trained to do.”

    Miller is also a use-of-force expert, and said law enforcement personnel – particularly those assigned to jails – should have more training on force without a weapon.

    “You can have several personnel, there or four or five personnel who can physically but safely, restrain an inmate,” he said.

    However, he maintains the best line of defense is evaluation and treatment. “If this lady had been having her psychotic symptoms controlled in a medical way, she probably wouldn’t have been in that situation to have gotten out of control, to have been in that fearful anger state to begin with,” Miller said.

    Miller noted even when medication is offered, staff cannot force inmates to take it in most cases.

    In June 2022, the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council released its state study, reporting on identifying predictors of mental illness in Georgia’s county jails. The study found mentally ill people are represented in county jails at twice the rate they are in the general population.

    Additionally, the average stay for mentally ill is roughly double the average stay of those without mental illness.

    If there’s something you would like Atlanta News First Investigates to dig into, fill out this submission form.

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  • Author Vivian M. Fong Announces the Release of Tricking the City

    Author Vivian M. Fong Announces the Release of Tricking the City

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 19, 2021

    With thousands of small cities and towns in the United States and scarce resources to oversee them behind the rose-draped sidewalks, corruption wreaks havoc on innocent citizens. But some citizens will not go quietly in the night to let unscrupulous behaviors go unchecked.

    Vivian M. Fong’s book, TRICKING THE CITY, spotlights a year in the life of Demorest, Georgia, where municipal affairs are becoming as good of a plot as any for a Southern gothic novel. The only thing is, the author is a curator of the truth. Therefore, this is a biological work—and she will not stop writing until the truth sets her city free of corruption. 

    TRICKING THE CITY is appropriate and engrossing for any reader interested in, or desperate for, a helpful guide in bringing peace and order to their community.

    All proceeds from this book will be donated to the Demorest Springs Park renovation project.

    Purchase Now!

    “If you could listen to the heartbeat of a city, you would hear the constant pounding from traffic, people, rattling of infrastructure, even nature vying for space among the innovative crevices of humankind. No wonder city dwellers are dreaming in New York City, sinning in Las Vegas, and falling in love in Paris. Cities are the pulse of life. I am a first-generation Asian American from Taipei, Taiwan, which has a strong heart, with gleaming structures among the tallest in the world, lightning-speed elevators, and bustling night markets. My home has been the city of Demorest, Georgia, for decades, however. Its heartbeat used to be pretty steady, never too fast, yet sometimes slow. More recently, its chambers are disrupted, damaged, and compromised.” –Vivian M. Fong 

    On Sale: August 23, 2021
    Price: $18.99
    ISBN: 978-1-7376189-0-4 
    Contact: mfong@prodigy.net 
     

    Source: Vivian M. Fong

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