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Muscogee County Sheriff s Office buys 300 copies of novel on the life of former inmate

Muscogee County Sheriff’s Office buys 300 copies of novel on the life of former inmate Muscogee County Sheriff’s Office buys 300 copies of novel on the life of former inmate By James Giles | March 12, 2021 at 6:03 PM EST - Updated March 14 at 7:40 PM COLUMBUS, Ga. (WTVM) - The Muscogee County Sheriff’s Office wants inmates to focus on turning the page on their life of crime and focus on hope and making a better future for themselves as they pay their debt to society. Norman Quarles is someone, who’s paid his debt to society and now wants to make sure today’s generation doesn’t have to go down the same destructive path he was once on.

Organizations and city leaders in Columbus creating methods to reduce crime

Organizations and city leaders in Columbus creating methods to reduce crime Organizations and city leaders in Columbus creating methods to reduce crime By Olivia Gunn | March 6, 2021 at 12:24 AM EST - Updated March 6 at 12:24 AM COLUMBUS, Ga. (WTVM) - With violent crimes becoming consistent in the Chattahoochee Valley, city leaders and crime prevention organizations are coming up with solutions to put an end to the crimes. Dr. Eleem Hud, president and CEO of Project Rebound, Inc., said it starts at home with your children first. “People have been seduced into crime because crime pays,” said Hud. “Invest today in solutions for tomorrow. And so I’m trying to say invest in our children today so that they won’t be a problem tomorrow.”)

Georgia protest laws could trample free-speech rights

Wide-ranging legislation aimed at cracking down on rioting protesters in Georgia that criminal-justice advocates say could trample on free-speech rights faced debate in the General Assembly Tuesday. The bill, sponsored by state Sen. Randy Robertson, R-Cataula, contains several proposals to punish vandalism and violence during protests such as those seen last summer in response to high-profile fatal shootings by police. It seeks to “look at and redefine what peaceful assemblies were,” Robertson said, by making it a felony with fines and prison time to commit violent acts in gatherings of seven people or more, block a highway or road and deface public structures like monuments and cemeteries.

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