CrossRoadsNews, May 12, 2018

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INSIDE

Every voter counts With early voting underway, voters can turn to our Election Section to learn more about key contested races in our area. SECTION B

EAST ATLANTA • DECATUR • STONE MOUNTAIN • LITHONIA • AVONDALE ESTATES • CLARKSTON • ELLENWOOD • PINE LAKE • REDAN • SCOTTDALE • TUCKER • STONECREST

Copyright © 2018 CrossRoadsNews, Inc.

May 12, 2018

Volume 24, Number 2

Remembering fallen comrades

www.crossroadsnews.com

Bill to weaken Stonecrest mayor vetoed By Rosie Manins

DeKalb County Police officers place a wreath at the Law Enforcement Officers Memorial bearing the names of county and municipal officers who have died in the line of duty. Colleagues, friends and family members attended the ceremony behind the historic DeKalb County Courthouse.

Photos by Rosie Manins / CrossRoadsNews

DeKalb honors 42 officers killed in the line of duty By Rosie Manins

DeKalb Police has not lost an officer since September 2015, but that did not prevent about 200 family members, former colleagues and county officials from showing up on May 9 to remember the county’s fallen officers. Officer Kevin Toatley, who was killed on Sept. 19, 2015 when a wrong-way driver crashed into his police cruiser, remains the last of 42 DeKalb officers killed while on duty. During the solemn ceremony, held annually in front of the county’s granite Law Enforcement Officers Memorial, representatives of every law enforcement department in the county and its cities paused to remember their fallen comrades who served the county, Clarkston, Decatur, Stone Mountain, MARTA, Pine Lake and Doraville police departments. Colleagues, friends and family members sat silently behind the historic DeKalb County Courthouse as the names and ranks of the officers were read aloud. A bell rang after each name. County officials in attendance included DeKalb Commissioners Jeff Rader, Larry

Johnson, Steve Bradshaw and Gregory Adams; Sheriff Jeffrey Mann; District Attorney Sherry Boston; and Solicitor-General Donna Coleman-Stribling. After the laying of a wreath at the memorial inscribed with the names of all 42 officers – killed since 1852 when DeKalb began keeping record – seven officers fired a three-round gun salute. Five helicopters flew overhead. DeKalb Police Chief James Conroy said the sacrifice made by the officers will never be forgotten. “Each of us owes a great debt to these fallen law enforcement officers and our repayment of that debt is to continue the mission they started,” said Conroy. “We owe it to them to continue serving each day with pride, honor and integrity.” Noting that the crowd of about 200 people was one of the largest he had seen at the annual event, Conroy thanked the relatives of the fallen officers, known within the profession as police survivors, for “sharing this time with us.” “Your loved ones are dearly missed and I hope that by honoring them here today we’re able to bring you a sense of comfort,” Conroy said.

Joseph “Jack” Lumpkin, DeKalb’s deputy chief operating officer of public safety, spoke of the character and integrity of the fallen officers. “These souls were heavily involved in situations that requested courage, skill and tenacity,” he said. “The credit belongs to the man or woman who’s actually in the arena, whose face is marked by dust and sweat and blood, and who strides valiantly through.” DeKalb CEO Michael Thurmond said it was everyone’s responsibility to ensure that sacrifice was not in vain. “Because of these peacemakers, we have a safer, more secure DeKalb County,” Thurmond said. “Because of our everyday heroes our crime rate has dropped to some of the lowest levels in the last 30 years.” Thurmond said his government is responding in kind by providing better training and increased salaries for law enforcement officers. “It’s been exactly two years and eight months since we’ve had the unfortunate task of adding a new name to this memorial,” he said. “It’s my earnest prayer, it’s my ongoing prayer, that we will never have to add another name.”

Gov. Nathan Deal has vetoed the bill that was seeking to curtail the powers of the mayor of the city of Stonecrest. House Bill 600, which Deal vetoed on May 8, would have set term limits for the Stonecrest mayor and removed the mayor’s voting power, except in the event of a tie on the five-member Stonecrest City Council. The city’s current charter does not give the mayor veto power, and HB 600 would have rendered the position powerless. Stonecrest Mayor Jason Lary was very pleased with Deal’s decision. “HB 600 would have taken us backward instead of forward,” he said. The bill was introJason Lary duced in April 2016 by House District 92 Rep. Doreen Carter (D-Lithonia), before Stonecrest residents had the opportunity to vote on the city’s incorporation in November that year. It was co-sponsored by District 91 Rep. Vernon Jones (D-Lithonia), District 90 Rep. Pam Stephenson (D-Decatur), District 93 Rep. Dar’shun Kendrick (DLithonia), and District 94 Rep. Karen Bennett (D-Stone Mountain). HB 600 was tabled while Senate Bill 208 passed, allowing for the voters to decide on the creation of the city with its current charter. This year, on March 14, HB 600 passed in the Senate, having also passed in the House. Deal said the bill lacked support among members of the Stonecrest delegation, as it was not initially signed by District 87 Rep. Earnest “Coach” Williams (D-Avondale Estates), and did not get votes this year from Williams, Stephenson or Jones. “These amendments to a city charter that has been in effect for less than two years have not, apparently, received the proper amount of discussion during the legislative session as legislators from the delegation could not reach a consensus,” Deal said.


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