The Fayette Citizen-News Page

Wednesday, January 14, 2004

Dunn speaks out on lawsuit

By JOHN THOMPSON
jthompson@TheCitizenNews.com

In less than a week, a former Clayton County judge will conduct a historic hearing featuring the Fayette County Commission and the Fayette County Sheriff’s Department.

“There’s no ill will here. I still consider [Sheriff] Randall [Johnson] a friend,” said Fayette County Commission Chairman Greg Dunn.

In late December, the county filed suit against the department after the sheriff’s office refused to jail a DUI suspect the county’s marshals office arrested.

“We’re not asking for anything to change. We just want to know why after 20 years of incarcerating people, the sheriff has changed his mind,” Dunn said.

The lawsuit stems over the arresting power of the marshals office. County officials maintain the marshals office is a full-fledged law enforcement agency. The marshals are state-certified police officers, based on how they were created back in the 1980s, Dunn contends.

“They (former commission) formed a county police department back in 1983 because the county’s ordinances weren’t being enforced,” Dunn said.

But since the issue first surfaced in August, the sheriff’s department has been maintaining the marshals office does not have arrest capabilities.

The sheriff has said the marshals office cannot operate as a county police department because the county did not seek voter approval through a referendum required by Georgia law, but county officials say the marshals department was a law enforcement agency before that law was passed.

Dunn thinks sheriff’s officials are worried about the marshals taking over more of the sheriff’s functions.

“There has never been and never will be an attempt to dismantle that department. His department always gets more money and personnel, come budget time,” the commission chairman said.

The chairman maintains it would be an easy situation to monitor if the sheriff’s office felt threatened.

“Just look at the budget. The sheriff’s department is not being decreased, while the marshals office is being increased,” he said.

All the county is seeking in the lawsuit, he added, is for thing to remain the same as they have for the last 20 years.

If the judge rules against the county, Dunn is sure the county would appeal, but also wonders what sort of message it would send to the county’s residents.

“We’ve already gotten some response from the public about the marshal not having any powers, and that’s not a message that needs to be sent,” he said.

 

 


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