Difference between revisions of "Fulton Sheriff wrongfully evicts Mother and children"
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Fulton Sheriff wrongfully evicts Mother and children (view source)
Revision as of 10:57, 4 February 2023
, 10:57, 4 February 2023no edit summary
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==Captain Leon Gates and Judge Melynee Leftridge== | ==The Usual Suspects: Captain Leon Gates and Judge Melynee Leftridge== | ||
One of Flournoy's most notorious rulings came in 2011 in what may very well be the largest white-collar scandal in Cobb County history. According to an AJC article authored by Margaret Newkirk, Judge Flournoy threw out a 31-count racketeering and theft indictment against former Cobb EMC CEO, Dwight Brown.<ref>[https://www.ajc.com/news/local/judge-throws-out-cobb-emc-indictment-citing-courtroom-accessibility/dEdeHrvTkoBAAnS10xiEQI/ Margaret Newkirk, Judge throws out Cobb EMC indictment, citing courtroom accessibility]</ref> Brown at the time was represented by Barnes Law Group, founded by former governor Roy Barnes who appointed Flournoy to the Cobb County Superior Court bench in 2000. Flournoy based his ruling on testimony that the indictment was not returned in a place open to the public as required under Georgia law.<ref>See Sampson v. State, 124 Ga. 776 (1906); Sellars v. State, 113 Ga.App. 510 (1966).</ref> | One of Flournoy's most notorious rulings came in 2011 in what may very well be the largest white-collar scandal in Cobb County history. According to an AJC article authored by Margaret Newkirk, Judge Flournoy threw out a 31-count racketeering and theft indictment against former Cobb EMC CEO, Dwight Brown.<ref>[https://www.ajc.com/news/local/judge-throws-out-cobb-emc-indictment-citing-courtroom-accessibility/dEdeHrvTkoBAAnS10xiEQI/ Margaret Newkirk, Judge throws out Cobb EMC indictment, citing courtroom accessibility]</ref> Brown at the time was represented by Barnes Law Group, founded by former governor Roy Barnes who appointed Flournoy to the Cobb County Superior Court bench in 2000. Flournoy based his ruling on testimony that the indictment was not returned in a place open to the public as required under Georgia law.<ref>See Sampson v. State, 124 Ga. 776 (1906); Sellars v. State, 113 Ga.App. 510 (1966).</ref> | ||
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