(Associated Press)
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Tuesday, July 14, 2009
2,500 Ibs of Pot Off the Streets
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Name
at
7/14/2009 01:20:00 PM
Labels: marijuana
Monday, July 6, 2009
Residents in Augusta Protest Drug Activity
Posted by
Myriam Levy
at
7/06/2009 06:38:00 AM
Labels: Augusta, drug activity, Harrisburg community, Independence Day, marched, residents
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Former Georgia Rep. Charged in Connection with Illegal Campaign Contributions
Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard says former Rep. Pat Swindall and two business associates were charged with one count of felony conspiracy to commit a crime and four felony counts of false statements.
Swindall was a two-term congressman whose political career ended in 1988 after he was convicted of perjury charges linked to a federal money-laundering investigation.
Prosecutors say the three men sought political favors by contributing $8,000 to the campaign of Atlanta City Councilwoman Joyce Sheperd in her run-off bid for re-election. The law allowed a maximum contribution of $1,000 at the time.
(AP)
Posted by
Rebecca Paris
at
6/24/2009 03:48:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta Georgia, campaign funds, Fulton County, Georgia, money laundering, Paul Howard, swindall
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Senator: Make Tampering w/ CRCT Scores a Crime
"If you cheat and change answers... there should be criminal sanctions for that," said Senator Weber(R-Dunwoody), "These people, they're professionals. They're put in a position of trust and these families and our state rely on them to do the right thing or else the kids are cheated."The Republican from Dunwoody is calling for the new law after a state audit of four schools revealed answers were changed on 5th grade CRCT tests to improve scores.
The Governor's office is evaluating whether a new law is necessary.
"There's clearly a law on the books that makes it illegal to tamper with government documents," said Governor's spokesperson Bert Brantley. "There's not one specifically for school documents and if we need to look at that we'll be glad to work with Senator Weber."The investigation continues. So far, one principal has resigned from a Dekalb County school where tampering is suspected.
Posted by
Melissa Stiers
at
6/16/2009 04:05:00 PM
Labels: bert brantley, CRCT, state senator dan weber
State Senator: CRCT Cheating Should Be Crime
The head of Georgia’s Senate education committee says it should be a crime for educators to change answers on students’ standardized tests. Dunwoody Republican Senator Dan Weber wants the new law in the wake of an audit last week that showed answers had been changed on some fifth-grade CRCT’s at a handful of elementary schools. The Governor’s office says Sonny Perdue may be open to supporting such a measure if prosecutors feel current statutes are not enough. A Perdue spokesman tells the Atlanta Journal-Constitution those found cheating could be charged under an existing law prohibits tampering with state documents.
Posted by
Myriam Levy
at
6/16/2009 07:48:00 AM
Labels: CRTC, elementary school testing, Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue, state senator dan weber
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
ATL Demolishes Last of Large Public Housing
When Bowen was created 45 years ago, it started as a model development, but later become an enclave of poverty, drugs and crime.
Renee Glover, the president of the Atlanta Housing Authority, says, "On reflection, there's no question that this is the right direction, and Atlanta, the families will be the better for it."
Bowen's 900 former residents have found new housing. Most use a voucher system where they pay the same as they did when they lived here.
Today’s demolition is symbolic of what’s happening with public housing in major cities across the state. It’s a national effort to get rid of large stacks of rows upon rows of the 1960’s buildings and to create mixed income developments in their place. Georgia is one of the pioneers in this effort. Atlanta wants to be the first to do away with all of them by 2010.
Posted by
Melissa Stiers
at
6/03/2009 02:11:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta Housing Authority, Bowen Homes, public housing
Friday, May 29, 2009
Historic Public Housing Demolition
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Name
at
5/29/2009 04:25:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta, public housing
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
GBI Nabs Top Pot Prize
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
5/20/2009 12:50:00 PM
Saturday, May 16, 2009
GOP National Committee Chairman in Savannah
Steele, who's in charge of boosting the Republican Party's image nationally after election losses in 2008, will address about 2,000 Georgia delegates Saturday at the state convention in Savannah.
The party chief has suffered some recent missteps, such as critizing conservative talk host Rush Limbaugh and telling a magazine writer that abortion is "an individual choice."
But Steele seemed to speak more in tune with core conservatives Friday when he told the National Rifle Association's convention in Phoenix that Democrats want to take away American's gun rights in order to suppress drug crime in Mexico.
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Melissa Stiers
at
5/16/2009 09:13:00 AM
Labels: 911 Savannah, GOP Convention, Michael Steele, NRA
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Perdue Signs Victims' Rights Bills
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Name
at
4/29/2009 02:56:00 PM
Labels: Governor Sonny Perdue, victims' rights
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Georgia Executes Condemned Killer
State authorities last night executed by lethal injection a man who stabbed his neighbor who spurning his sexual advances. 65-year-old Robert Newland was put to death for killing Carol Sanders Beatty of Saint-Simons Island. Beatty was a 27-year-old former state and national amateur diving champion. Authorities say Newland went to Beatty's Saint-Simons Island duplex in May 1986 after a drinking binge and tried to kiss her. They say he drew a knife and stabbed her repeatedly after she refused his advances. The woman died hours later, but not before identifying Newland as the killer. Newland was convicted of the crime in 1987. Authorities at the state prison in Jackson last night pronounced Newland dead at 7:36pm.
Posted by
Orlando Montoya
at
3/11/2009 06:28:00 AM
Sunday, February 8, 2009
2 Crime Victims Kill Suspected Assailants
Police say two crime victims in metro Atlanta killed their attackers in separate incidents on Saturday.
Cobb County police say a Marietta resident, who was shot in his own garage Saturday night, grabbed the wound-be robber's gun and shot and killed the man.
Officials identified the would-be robber as 33-year-old John Harrison of Palmetto. Harrison shot and wounded 38-year-old homeowner, Richard Ellis, in the leg.
In Atlanta, police say a woman fatally stabbed a robbery suspect who broke into her apartment while her 11-year-old child slept.
The suspect was identified as 34-year-old Jerome Davis of Atlanta. The woman's name was not released.
No charges were filed in either case.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation says over 120 thousand gun applications were submitted in 2008, an almost 80-percent jump from the roughly 68 thousand the year before.
Click here for more GPB News crime coverage.
(AP)
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Savannah Property Crimes Spike
Police officials in Savannah today took responsibility for a sharp rise in property crime. Savannah-Chatham Metro Police Chief Michael Berkow released preliminary crime numbers for 2008. And they show that while the economy tanked, thieves and burglars had a good year
Property crimes in Savannah jumped an eye-popping 14% last year. Chief Berkow went before microphones and senior staff and didn't even try to downplay the numbers in year-end crime statistics.
"I can't and I won't sugar-coat the property crimes," he says. "We got our butt kicked this year."
Car thefts, purse snatchings and that bicycle that someone took from your yard in broad daylight -- they're all up. Even while violent crimes decreased about 3%, Chatham County residents lost all types of things to criminals who refuse to get their own. Michael Shortt's laptop and camera were stolen from a locked car in two-separate burglaries.
"It's the same problem that Savannah's always had," Shortt says. "It's property crimes."
Shortt is an anti-crime activist who hosts a local television show on legal issues. He admits, he virtually invited the thief to take his stuff by leaving it in plain sight, a common complaint by police.
"By the same token, you can't help but feel violated," he says. "I mean, your car's parked in your neighborhood and you went to the trouble to lock your car and you can't leave the tiniest thing in there."
Other crimes showed better numbers. Homicides remained relatively steady at 26, rapes decreased by more than half to 37 and a five-year trend showed all violent crimes going down, even while population increased. Rolfe Glover is a money manager who leads a city crime task force. He credits Chief Berkow for improving police operations since he came to office about two-years-ago, but says he's withholding judgement on the property crime numbers.
"What we have seen recently of this police force is that it seems to be organized in a way that can react and be responsive to crime trends," Glover says. "And it'll be a test for this new organization to see if they can react quickly and deal with this issue."
For his part, Chief Berkow is both stopping and passing the buck.
"We accept responsibility for that. We're addressing that. We're attacking it," he says. "But, we're part of the criminal justice system. And we are dramatically impacted by the reality that over 40% of the individuals we've arrested for burglary are still out on the street.
Berkow blames increased property crimes on the down economy and budget cut backs in state crime labs, parole offices, federal grants and the corrections department. He says, the real eye-popping figure is the number of repeat offenders being let loose.
Posted by
Orlando Montoya
at
2/03/2009 03:53:00 PM
Monday, February 2, 2009
Jump in Gun Permit Applicants 2008
The GBI reports 121 thousand applications were submitted in 2008. That’s up almost 80 percent from the roughly 68 thousand the year before.
The reasons for the jump may vary. Some people say they thought it would be harder to get a gun under the Obama administration. Others say they just want to be able to protect their families especially in high crime areas. The Atlanta Journal Constitution shows the numbers in Georgia are consistent with national trends.
Posted by
Melissa Stiers
at
2/02/2009 07:45:00 AM
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Lawmaker proposes giving cops foreclosed homes
The typical mortgage is 30 years. But walk a beat in Atlanta, and that house could be yours in half that time — and for just a little money down.
As a solution to metro Atlanta’s foreclosure crisis, a lawmaker plans to propose giving foreclosed, abandoned homes to county police officers, who usually can’t afford to live in the neighborhoods they’re sworn to protect.
Of course, the deal would come with a catch: officers must agree to serve 15 years on the force before they get the property deed. And the board of commissioners would have to persuade lenders holding the liens to give several shuttered homes to the county in exchange for tax breaks.
“I thought somebody should be in these homes,” said Fulton County Commissioner Robb Pitts, who plans to introduce the idea to the board. “Here’s a way to help a group of people who put their lives on the line for us on a daily basis at a relatively minor cost.”Cities across the country are trying to find solutions to filling up houses abandoned by people who couldn’t afford their mortgages. Several are using federal money to buy foreclosed properties and sell them at cut-rate prices or interest rates. Georgia has consistently been in the top 10 in foreclosed properties, with the nation’s sixth highest foreclosure rate in November, according to RealtyTrac, a Web site that tracks foreclosures.
Pitts said he thought of the plan after looking at all the empty homes in his southwest Atlanta neighborhood. The national foreclosure epidemic presents a bittersweet opportunity, he said.
“I think we have a short window because this probably won’t be the situation four or five years from now. If we can take advantage of it now, I think we’ll have a receptive audience,” he said.For their part, officers would have to come up with $2,500 down payment and be responsible for all taxes, insurance, utilities and maintenance. Pitts said he plans to meet as soon as next week with several “major lenders,” whom he declined to name, to discuss his plan.
“Here’s an opportunity for them to have some goodwill coming from the community in which they do business by helping with public safety,” Pitts said. “If we could get 200 (homes), that would be a good start.”Some say the idea is a creative and original solution to a crisis.
“I’d think lenders would be very interested in stabilizing neighborhoods in which they have mortgages on other properties,” said Bruce Seaman, an economics professor at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.Programs that subsidize housing for public servants are being tried in other places. Grand Prairie, Texas, is offering foreclosed properties the city acquired with federal bailout money to government or district school employees, with the city helping with the down payment and closing costs.
The “Ohio Heroes” program offers a 30-year fixed mortgage at a reduced interest rate to first-time homebuyers in that state to military, firefighters, paramedics, police and teachers.
But free homes in exchange for years of public service seems to be a new idea.
And while it sounds like it would require financial institutions to be philanthropic, that is hardly the case, Seaman said.
“How many properties can it be?” Seaman said. “The departments aren’t huge. Lending agencies being asked to participate will find this, upon reflection, a very wise move on their part.”The Fulton County Police Department has 130 officers, 18 fewer than its target number of 148. The starting salary is $32,646 for high school graduates, and $38,000 for officers with a bachelor’s degree, so finding houses they can afford in the city is tough.
Department spokesman Lt. Darryl Halbert said the agency is excited about the proposal.
“The officers are able to obtain a home for very little down, the community gets a police officer and the department can use this as a recruiting tool,” he said.If it’s successful, firefighters or others could later be added.
“We can’t be everything to everybody in the beginning,” Pitts said.Moving police into the neighborhood could help reduce crime and attract buyers to other abandoned homes, Seaman said.
Pitts also still must get the idea past the commission. Chairman John Eaves declined to comment on the issue through his spokesman, Darryl Hicks, who said there is not yet a proposal to consider.
Samuel F. Daniel said he would feel much safer in his northwest Atlanta home with an officer in the neighborhood, where many homes sit dark and are havens for drugs, prostitution, burglary and other crimes.
“I would like for one to move next door to me,” said the 85-year-old veteran. “That way, he’d see a lot of things I see and can’t do nothing about. The crime would probably go further down the street somewhere.”(AP)
Posted by
Dave
at
1/11/2009 12:00:00 PM
Labels: Atlanta police, foreclosure, Georgia legislators, realtytrac.com
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Bibb Co. to get high-speed lisc. tag scanner
Deputies in Bibb County are about to get a little high-tech help from a device that will allow them to scan license plates into a crime database at a rate of one plate per second.
The Automated License Plate Recognition System uses cameras to photograph license plates, said Tony Rousey, the county's director of information technology.
The data is fed into a computer that compares the plate to records of stolen vehicles, stolen tags and other offenses, Rousey said.
"It's another tool that we can use that will make us more effective and more efficient," said Sheriff Jerry Modena.Modena said he expects the vehicle with the scanner will spend a lot of time monitoring major traffic arteries, but deputies also will meander through crowded parking lots, according to a report appearing in the Macon Telegraph newspaper.
(AP)
Posted by
Dave
at
12/28/2008 11:53:00 AM
Labels: Bibb County, car licence, traffic tickets
Monday, December 22, 2008
Benning soldier charged in slaying
Police have arrested and charged a Fort Benning soldier in the slaying of 45-year-old Bobby Ramsey in Columbus. Columbus Police Sergeant Matt Blackstock says 21-year-old Justin
Daniel Scribner was charged with murder and possession of a knife during the commission of a crime. Ramsey's body was found early Saturday in a grassy lot. Scribner is set for a court hearing at 2 p.m. Monday. A motive for the slaying was not immediately available.
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
12/22/2008 02:51:00 PM
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Fort Benning: A day at WHINSEC training (photo essay)

Backpacks at the ready for the 'Day Navigation Examination" out in the field for trainees at WHINSEC, held at Fort Benning, near Columbus, Mar. 2007. (Dave Bender)
This weekend marks 18th anniversary of the protest against a school on Fort Benning that teaches soldiers from Latin America. Protest organizers expect a smaller turnout because of the economy. But they are hopeful that the incoming Obama administration will work in their favor.
Trainees check water, and have a fast lunch of MRE field rations before setting out on the examination. (Dave Bender)
WHINSEC trainees getting final instructions from their trainer before setting out on the land navigation field examination. (Dave Bender/Mar. 2007)
Several dozen Latin American soldiers in camouflage, and holding maps and compasses are tearing through the brush and piney woods of the sprawling army post.
Two trainees check compass readings against a map of the area, during a land navigation portion of a medical field training course held at Fort Benning in March, 2007. (Dave Bender)
Instructors are putting them through the final exam of a land navigation course.
The soldier's are taking the class at the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. It's housed at Fort Benning.
Two trainees make one last check of a map of the area, during a land navigation portion of a medical field training course held at Fort Benning in March, 2007. (Dave Bender)
Just outside the post demonstrators are gearing up for an annual protest marking the killing of six Jesuit priests, and others in El Salvador in 1989.
WHINSEC trainees during a classroom lecture on administration, held at Fort Benning in Mar. 2007. (Dave Bender)
Some of those responsible for the killings had attended the school – then known as the U.S. Army School of the Americas.
Lee Rials is WHINSEC's Public Affairs Officer. He says there's no direct correlation between their training and the graduate's deeds:
"There is not a single example of anyone who has taken a course at the School of the Americas or at WHINSEC, who has used that information to commit a crime. Not a single example has ever been shown. This whole movement is based on the false premise that mere attendance at a U.S. course has a cause-effect relationship on later behavior. And that's not been indicated; no evidence of that anywhere."For the U.S. the school is an important foreign policy tool. But opponents are adamant about closing it down. They say WHINSEC's mandatory human rights courses are only cosmetic.
Their protest has been growing from year to year – organizers say 20,000 took part last year.
But a deepening recession may rein in those numbers.
Father Roy Bourgeois is a Maryknoll priest and founder of School of the Americas Watch. He's worried about the turnout this year:
"I have a little concern with the economy, as we all do. I was in Austin recently giving a talk. For eight years they've brought a chartered bus here filled with people from Texas. Well, the cost has doubled. Some, simply, out of Des Moines, Iowa, cannot get on that chartered bus, so they're bringing a couple of vans. I mean people are struggling."On top of that, Bourgeois is in the midst of a wrenching personal struggle. He's facing excommunication for publically supporting women joining the Catholic priesthood.
But despite the clouds hanging over the event, supporters are still preparing workshops, giant puppets and posters, crosses and caskets for a symbolic funeral procession commemorating the deaths.

SOA Watch organizer instructs marchers in mock funeral procession outside the gates of Fort Benning during 2007 protest. (Dave Bender)
While fewer protesters may be lining the streets for that solemn event, Bourgeois feels that President-Elect Barack Obama's inauguration on January 20 will bring his goal a little closer:
"One thing I admire about President-Elect Obama is his openness to other leaders. I think he's got much more respect for other countries coming from his own background and experiences. I think he's much more sensitive to other cultures, their leaders, their people, their histories, and less aggressive as a leader."

Fr. Roy Bourgeois, at his office-apartment located in a small complex several hundred feet from one of Fort Benning's entrance gates, and the site of the annual protest. (Dave Bender/file)
SOA Watch hopes an online petition calling on Obama to issue an executive order closing WHINSEC will gain steam.
But school officials say WHINSEC is established by law and it would take a lot more than an online petition to change that fact.

Lee Rials during a tour of the former WHINSEC headquarters at Fort Benning. (Dave Bender)
Spokesman Rials is also doubtful that Obama will have any time or interest, in the face of a morass of problems awaiting him in the Oval Office on January 21st:
"I would think a national petition would require millions of signatures to get any serious thought, and I just don't believe this organization - because it seems to be getting smaller in the last year or so - will have the ability to draw those kinds of numbers."There's been talk by organizers of moving the annual rally from Columbus to Washington, D.C., where they might have a better chance of reaching those numbers.
But Bourgeois believes that the soul of the protest should remain where it began in 1990 - at ground zero: outside his tiny apartment at the gates of Fort Benning.
The protest concludes this afternoon.
Click here for more GPB News coverage about SOA Watch and Fort Benning.
(All trainees shown in this photo essay are intended as an illustration of WHINSEC operations, and are unconnected to the events described in the article)
Posted by
Dave
at
11/23/2008 12:22:00 PM
Labels: : Fort Benning, protests, SOA Watch, Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Families, children focus of Atlanta confab
Keeping families together and kids out of the state's courtrooms was the focus of a two-day workshop underway in Atlanta earlier today. Governor Sonny Perdue addressed the group at the start of the conference. Quoting statistics from a University of Chicago study, Perdue says the breakdown of the traditional family is tied to rising juvenile delinquency rates.
"You look at so many of the problems in our society, the ones we see in schools, in courtrooms, and you can trace those problems to the family or rather more specifically to the breakdown of the American family. On a societal level, you get truancy, high school drops outs, substance abuse and crime."Georgia's top judge -- Supreme Court Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears -- created the Summit on Children, Marriage and Family, bringing together social workers, family court judges and lawyers from around the nation.
"All I'm trying to do and all this summit is trying to do is involve government at the outset on a minimal basis to enhance this not wholly private institution so that doesn't government doesn't have to end up being the third parent in so many of our families."Sears hopes the group will help shape public policy -- a sentiment echoed by Governor Perdue. One major issue is absentee fathers.
"Our fathers are becoming less engaged from their families, either through divorce or as a result of families that never really take hold and the fathers drift apart. But children need both a mother and father with them, and they need both of those parents with them, preferably in their homes, that is not always possible, and I know that but we need to do a better job."The final day of the conference will examine what experts call a crisis in the African American community ... the sharply declining rate of traditional marriages.
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
11/19/2008 03:00:00 PM
Labels: families, Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue, juvenile delinquency, Leah Ward Sears, Marriage and Family, Summit on Children
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Fulton County courthouse shooter guilty
A jury has found 36-year old Fulton County courthouse gunman Brian Nichols guilty of murder in a 2005 shooting spree that left a judge and three others dead and turned Atlanta's seat of justice into a crime scene. Nichols confessed to the killings. But he pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. He claimed he was gripped by a delusional compulsion that he was a slave rebelling against authority.
(Associated Press)
Posted by
Valarie Edwards
at
11/08/2008 08:14:00 AM