Fulton Judiciary Weaponizes Project ORCA

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Judge Adele P. Grubbs (top left), Judge G. Grant Brantley (bottom left), Judge Melynee Leftridge (top right), Pod of Orca Whales (bottom right)

Cobb Judges Abandon Constitution to Protect the Establishment

Fulton County's Project ORCA recently recruited two Cobb County Senior Judges, the Honorable G. Grant Brantley and the Honorable Adele P. Grubbs, allegedly to assist in managing the Fulton County Superior Court backlog of cases. The timing of the recruitment and their resulting rulings leave little to conjecture. Cobb Senior Judges are being used as mere cover fire for the improprieties of Fulton judges, and for what?

This article comes as an unanticipated 5th Part in a series of articles following an array of retaliatory actions of the Fulton County judiciary and law enforcement against a man not backing down to the system, Power vs. Truth. Derrick Jackson, a resident of Fulton County was robbed of his due process rights under the Constitution just days before Christmas of 2022 by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Melynee Leftridge. "After Jackson took to the media about the situation, his family was thrown out of their home located in The Country Club of the South by the Fulton County Sheriff's SCORPION Unit without a proper court order."[1][2][3][4]

Project ORCA

"On June 30, 2021, during a Fulton County Board of Commissioners meeting with the county’s mayors at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, County Manager Dick Anderson said Fulton’s court case backlog had gotten out of control."[5]

Fulton Leaders 'Brainstormed'

Just over five months later, when Fulton’s courts finally reopened, county leaders embarked on a plan to address the backlog—which, after being inventoried, totaled 148,209 open and active cases. Fulton, the state’s largest and most populous county with Georgia’s largest court case backlog, chose a name just as big for the strategy: Project Orca.[6]

According to an article written by Everett Catts of the Daily Report (available at law.com):

Orca Pod

For Fulton, 'orca' has been synonymous with 'solution.' As of July 31, about a year and a half after launching Project Orca, the county had disposed of 108,661 cases, becoming a model for justice systems across the state and nation. In July, Fulton won one of the National Association of Counties’ Achievement Awards for its innovative methods of whittling down the backlog. In May it won an Association County Commissioners of Georgia County of Excellence Award for the same reason.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

The Honorable G. Grant Brantley

In a story by Bryan Mims of WSB-TV, it was reported that Zimmerman acted as both lawyer and judge in at least six cases dating back to 2008. Zimmerman denied the accusations. According to the investigation by the City of Alpharetta: "Instead of removing the case from the Municipal Court of Alpharetta to the State Court of Fulton County, Judge Zimmerman would negotiate the case with Solicitor Fran McQueen, use attorney Keith Brandon as a ‘straw man’ defense attorney on a plea in absentia and then have another Judge for the Municipal Court sign the orders."

"It was just devastating to think that the person in charge of making sure our court system worked well and worked legally was also the person who seems to have let us down," said city attorney Randy Rich.

Follow the Money

It is clear from above that both Judge Grubbs and Judge Brantley had very prominent careers on the bench and were regarded as assets to the Cobb County justice system. However, at some point in their golden years, in their respective retirement tenures as Senior Judges, they appear to have waivered and fallen from their pedestal foundations build on principles into a pool of self sabotage, like unsuspecting hobbits clasping tightly to the Ring of Power. But for what? Here's what we know:

Short-Sighted Swan Song

It appears that heavily distinguished and once well respected Cobb County judges (Grubbs and Brantley) have in retirement abandoned their principles and have willingly taken on the role of enabling the Fulton injustice system at the expense of their own good names. But why? What changed (if anything) that transformed these once highly regarded Cobb County judicial leaders into mere henchmen of the Fulton County establishment?

The most obvious answer prevails: How senior judges make their money.

By Andy Lee White
Coauthor of Atlanta Pop in the '50s, '60s & '70s: The Magic of Bill Lowery

October 14, 2023

See also

References