An Atlanta police officer, released after being charged with murder, has been reinstated Black Lives Matter News
City officials gave the reason to Garrett Rolfe Atlanta police, who shot Rayshard Brooks and removed him a day later.
The city’s employment committee has dismissed the shooting of a former Atlantean police officer on charges of killing an African-American man.
Atlanta police officer Garrett Rolfe was removed in June after being shot in the parking lot of a fast-food restaurant by Rayshard Brooks. Rolf approached the Atlanta Civil Service Directorate and decided that he should be reinstated on Wednesday.
“Due to the City’s failure to comply with the information contained in the various provisions and testimonies of the Code, the Commission concluded that the appellant was not given the right to due process,” the management said in its decision under the Atlanta Constitution. -Journalist and other news.
The Atlanta Civil Service Board found Garrett Rolfe was not afforded his right to due process when he was fired over the shooting of Rayshard Brooks in a Wendy’s parking lot.
Children take in a burned Wendy’s location in Atlanta on June 15, 2020, three days after Rayshard Brooks, a 27-year-old Black man, was fatally shot in the parking lot by a white police officer. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)
ATLANTA (CN) Atlanta police officer Garrett Rolfe, who was fired and charged with murder after fatally shooting Rayshard Brooks last summer, has been reinstated by the city’s Civil Service Board.
Former Georgia state lawmaker indicted for financial fraud Follow Us
Question of the Day
By JEFF AMY - Associated Press - Tuesday, May 4, 2021
ATLANTA (AP) - Former Georgia state lawmaker and university regent Dean Alford has been indicted on racketeering, fraud and forgery charges relating to allegations that he faked contracts while seeking money from a financial company.
Tuesday’s indictment in Rockdale County follows Alford‘s original arrest on the charges in October 2019. Katie Byrd, a spokesperson for Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, said it took time to investigate Alford‘s acts, and the judicial system was delayed due to the pandemic.