Georgia
Clemency meeting to be held for Georgia man scheduled to be executed March 20
JACKSON, Ga. – The Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles has announced that on March 19, it will convene a clemency meeting for 59-year-old Willie James Pye, a condemned inmate facing execution.
Pye’s execution has been scheduled by the Spalding County Superior Court for March 20 at 7 p.m. at the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison in Jackson. The window for execution runs from March 20 to March 27.
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During the March 19 meeting, members of the Georgia Parole Board will listen to testimony both for and against granting clemency for Pye.
The meeting is slated to commence at 9 a.m. Following deliberations, the Board will decide whether to commute Pye’s death sentence to life imprisonment with or without the possibility of parole, issue a stay of execution, or deny clemency. In Georgia, only the Parole Board holds the authority to grant executive clemency to condemned inmates.
Pye’s conviction stems from the 1993 murder of his former girlfriend Alicia Yarbrough, for which he was found guilty of malice murder, kidnapping with bodily injury, armed robbery, burglary, and rape. He was sentenced to death for malice murder after a trial in June 1996.
The last execution in Georgia was January 2020.
Georgia
Packers Complete Safety Overhaul With Georgia’s Javon Bullard
Back in 2019, the Green Bay Packers revamped their safety position by signing Adrian Amos in free agency and using a first round pick on Darnell Savage.
Those two moves gave the Packers solid safety play during their run of three straight NFC North titles and two conference title appearances between 2019-2021.
The Packers have overhauled that position again, and hope it leads to high level production in 2024 — and beyond.
Green Bay signed safety Xavier McKinney in free agency last month. The Packers then selected Georgia safety Javon Bullard in the second round of Friday’s draft.
Now, there’s a good chance McKinney and Bullard will be Green Bay’s starting safeties when the Packers face Philadelphia in Week 1 in Brazil.
“Yeah, he’s a good football player. He’s very smart, knows how to play, knows how to make plays,” Pat Moore, the Packers’ Assistant Director of College Scouting said of Bullard. “I don’t think we took him with a specific spot in mind other than a good secondary player who can help us.”
Bullard is 5-foot-10 ½ and weighs 199 pounds. He ran the 40-yard dash in 4.45 seconds and had a terrific 20-yard shuttle time of 3.98 seconds.
Bullard played mostly slot corner in 2022 when the Bulldogs won the national championship. He had 3.5 sacks and seven tackles for loss that season, and was named Defensive MVP of the 2022 national championship game
The Bulldogs moved Bullard to safety in 2023 where he finished with career highs in tackles (56) and passes defensed (seven). He was also voted the top safety at the Senior Bowl.
While most teams view Bullard as a safety, his versatility made him attractive to the Packers.
“I can play all three positions in the secondary,” Bullard said. “Whatever you need me to play. I feel like I proved my versatility throughout this process, man, being able to cover slot guys and being able to cover tight ends and being able to get down in the box and get down-and-dirty with your running backs, things like that. so I feel like I can play all over.”
Georgia
Judge upholds disqualification of challenger to judge in Trump’s Georgia election interference case
Decatur, Ga. – A judge upheld the disqualification of a candidate who had had planned to run against the judge presiding over former President Donald Trump’s 2020 Georgia election interference case.
Tiffani Johnson is one of two people who filed paperwork to challenge Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee. An administrative law judge earlier this month found that she was not qualified to run for the seat after she failed to appear at a hearing on a challenge to her eligibility, and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger adopted that decision.
Johnson last week filed a petition for review of that decision in Fulton County Superior Court. After all of McAfee’s colleagues on the Fulton County bench were recused, a judge in neighboring DeKalb County took up the matter and held a hearing Thursday on Johnson’s petition.
At the end of the hearing, DeKalb Superior Court Judge Stacey Hydrick upheld the decision that said Johnson is not eligible, news outlets reported. A representative for Johnson’s campaign did not immediately respond to an email Friday seeking comment.
The ruling leaves McAfee with a single challenger, civil rights attorney Robert Patillo, in the nonpartisan race for his seat.
With early voting set to begin Monday for the May 21 election, it’s likely too late to remove Johnson’s name from the ballot. The law says that if a candidate is determined not to be qualified, that person’s name should be withheld from the ballot or stricken from any ballots. If there isn’t enough time to strike the candidate’s name, prominent notices are to be placed at polling places advising voters that the candidate is disqualified and that votes cast for her will not be counted.
Georgia law allows any person who is eligible to vote for a candidate to challenge the candidate’s qualifications by filing a complaint with the secretary of state’s office within two weeks of the qualification deadline. A lawyer for Sean Arnold, a Fulton County voter, filed the challenge on March 22.
Arnold’s complaint noted that the Georgia Constitution requires all judges to “reside in the geographical area in which they are elected to serve.” He noted that in Johnson’s qualification paperwork she listed her home address as being in DeKalb County and wrote that she had been a legal resident of neighboring Fulton County for “0 consecutive years.” The qualification paperwork Johnson signed includes a line that says the candidate is “an elector of the county of my residence eligible to vote in the election in which I am a candidate.”
Administrative Law Judge Ronit Walker on April 2 held a hearing on the matter but noted in her decision that Johnson did not appear.
Walker wrote that the burden of proof is on the candidate to “affirmatively establish eligibility for office” and that Johnson’s failure to appear at the hearing “rendered her incapable of meeting her burden of proof.”
Walker concluded that Johnson was unqualified to be a candidate for superior court judge in the Atlanta Judicial Circuit. Raffensperger adopted the judge’s findings and conclusions in reaching his decision to disqualify her.
A lawyer Johnson, who said in her petition that she has since moved to Fulton County, argued that Johnson failed to show up for the hearing because she did not receive the notice for it.
Without addressing the merits of the residency challenge, Hydrick found that Johnson had been given sufficient notice ahead of the hearing before the administrative law judge and concluded that the disqualification was proper.
Georgia
Body found during Georgia missing person investigation
ELBERT CO. – A body has been found during an investigation of a missing Georgia man by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
Release:
While conducting a missing person investigation, police have found a body in Elbert County on Wednesday, April 24, 2024.
The Baldwin County Sheriff’s Office asked the GBI to assist with a Baldwin County missing person case. Dawson Brandon Lee, age 24, from Milledgeville, GA, had been missing for several days. Records from Lee’s vehicle indicated he left Milledgeville and traveled to Elbert County on Wednesday, April 17. Multiple agencies and four GBI regional investigative offices have assisted with attempting to find Lee.
On Wednesday, at about 12:00 p.m., police found a man’s body in the woods near Lee’s abandoned vehicle in Elbert County.
A GBI medical examiner will perform an autopsy to dermine the cause and manner of death and positively identify the man found. Although the initial investigation indicates the man found is Dawson Brandon Lee, the results of the autopsy will confirm it.
The early investigation indicates no signs of foul play.
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