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Showing posts with label search warrants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label search warrants. Show all posts

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Cobb EMC Offices, Board Member Homes Searched

State authorities joined those with Cobb County Wednesday in searching the offices of Cobb Electrical Membership Corporation. As part of an ongoing investigation, the homes of the CEO and board members were also searched. In all, Cobb County’s district attorney say warrants were issued for five locations. The DA declined to give details, but the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports agents were looking for evidence connected to theft and racketeering at the electric cooperative. Customer-owned Cobb EMC has about 190,000 customers in four northeast suburban counties in metro Atlanta.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Senate committee approves limits on "no-knock" warrants

Police say "no-knock" search warrants are a critical crime-fighting tool at times when regular search warrants do not work.
“We have served search warrants before where, as soon as they see you coming, they’re running to the bathroom to either hide evidence or destroy evidence,” says Fayetteville Police Chief Steven Heaton. “And in the case of a gang house, where you’ve got weapons at home, or potentially have weapons at home, they’re hiding weapons and they’re hiding other evidence.”
Heaton says "no-knock" warrants give police a fighting chance in those instances.
But Atlanta Senator Vincent Fort says police are using them "wily nily." He belives if a judge had not given Atlanta police a no-knock warrant, 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston might be alive today.
Johnston died in a gun battle with police in November. The police had obtained a no-knock warrant, although evidence indicates that they had no real proof of crime occuring in Johnston's home.
Fort has offered a bill stating that officers could only obtain no-knock warrants if they could show a judge probable cause that lives would be in danger, and evidence would be destroyed otherwise. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved the measure by an unanimous vote. Police say the measure limits their ability to obtain no-knock warrants, but not to the point where it would hinder their work.

GPB News Team: