On Friday, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law a bill that gives Republicans the power to meddle in state investigations should they dislike the prosecutor leading them.
Senate Bill 92 establishes an oversight board, appointed by the governor and other state officials, that will have the power to remove or hamper the work of prosecutors the panel deems incapable of doing the job these prosecutors have been elected to do.
In a news release, Georgia’s governor said the bill was actually intended to target “rogue or incompetent prosecutors who refuse to uphold the law.” And he said the new board would hold “prosecutors driven by out-of-touch politics” accountable.
The question is, “out of touch” with whom?
The board will effectively have the power to recall elected district attorneys or solicitors-general, even if it goes against voters’ will.
That said, the move is consistent with efforts by conservative lawmakers, at both the federal and state level, to hamper prosecutors — mainly Black prosecutors — who target people Republicans don’t want to target. This nationwide, right-wing crusade against law enforcement is in sync with former President Donald Trump’s attacks on prosecutors who’ve opened investigations into his activities, including prosecutors in New York, Georgia and Washington, D.C.
In March, the National Black Prosecutors Association decried these attacks in an exclusive statement to The ReidOut Blog.








