The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Deal suspends DeKalb sheriff for arrest

Mann also faces trial, investigat­ion for incident in park.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Gov. Nathan Deal on Monday suspended DeKalb County Sheriff Jeff Mann from office for 40 days after an investigat­ion into his arrest for allegedly exposing himself, then running from police in Piedmont Park.

Deal suspended Mann for a shorter period than the 60-day maximum allowed under state law. The 40-day suspension was recommende­d by an investigat­ory committee made up of two sheriffs and Attorney General Chris Carr.

The suspension with pay doesn’t end Mann’s legal ordeal. He faces a July 7 trial in trial in Atlanta Municipal Court, and he’s also being investigat­ed by the Georgia Peace Officer Standards and Training Council, which could suspend or revoke his license. A revocation of Mann’s license would result in his removal from office.

Mann pleaded not guilty but

hasn’t provided an explanatio­n. He previously has said he will clear his name.

An incident report said a police officer saw Mann expose himself May 6, then flee when the officer identified himself and turned his flashlight on Mann. He was apprehende­d about a quarter-mile away after leading the officer on a foot chase through Midtown Atlanta streets.

The governor’s investigat­ive committee relied on the incident report, as well as statements from the arresting officer, Mann and Mann’s attorney, according to Deal’s executive order.

Mann’s attorney, Noah Pines, didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment Monday.

Mann tried to stop Deal’s investigat­ion several times. Mann’s attorney argued that the state law authorizin­g the investigat­ion only covers alleged misconduct in his official capacity of sheriff, and that the city ordinance violations he was charged with didn’t amount to criminal charges that would justify an investigat­ion.

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Eric Dunaway ruled May 31 that the investigat­ion could move forward.

Mann pre-emptively suspended himself for one week for violating the code of conduct of the DeKalb Sheriff ’s Office. Mann wrote in a memo to employees that he wasn’t admitting guilt, but he said he deserved to be discipline­d for “placing myself in a position to be arrested.”

Under state law, governors have the power to suspend sheriffs up to 60 days, extend that suspension by another 30 days, order another investigat­ion by the GBI and request that a district attorney initiate proceeding­s to remove the sheriff from office.

 ??  ?? DeKalb County Sheriff Jeffrey Mann, arrested for allegedly exposing himself, then running from police in Piedmont Park, was suspended for 40 days by Gov. Nathan Deal.
DeKalb County Sheriff Jeffrey Mann, arrested for allegedly exposing himself, then running from police in Piedmont Park, was suspended for 40 days by Gov. Nathan Deal.
 ??  ?? DeKalb Sheriff Jeff Mann suspended himself for a week, saying in a memo to employees that he wasn’t admitting guilt.
DeKalb Sheriff Jeff Mann suspended himself for a week, saying in a memo to employees that he wasn’t admitting guilt.

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