Biff_Poindexter
Diamond Member
Ex-sheriff recalls Bleckley County sheriff's alleged sexual battery of Judge Glenda Hatchett
Bleckley County Sheriff Kris Coody is charged with a misdemeanor after allegedly groping an Atlanta TV judge
www.13wmaz.com
"Authorities have charged a Georgia sheriff after allegations he groped a prominent judge at a sheriff's convention. Coody is accused of groping TV Judge Glenda Hatchett, and former DeKalb County Sheriff Thomas Brown told our sister station 11Alive he witnessed it all. Hatchett, star of the 'Judge Hatchett' show which ran for 8 seasons, founder of Atlanta-based the Hatchett Firm and a popular judicial commentator, was a guest at the event.
Brown says Hatchett asked Coody where he was from, to which Brown says he replied, "The heart of Georgia." "He wanted to emphasize 'the heart of Georgia,' and he did that by placing his left hand on her left breast, and he did it three times," the former sheriff explained. Brown says he stepped in. "When I saw his hand go down on her left breast and I reached over, grabbed his hand, took it off of her and basically said, 'What are you doing?' and, 'Get your hands off of her,'" he recalled.
Usually, a fight goes with something like that....if I invite someone to an event as my date and someone sexually gropes her in front of me; furniture will be moving around in that place...but since this guy is a sheriff, he was afforded a special privilege...a privilege that resulted in no arrest being made -- even tho the assault was witnessed by others including both another sheriff and the victim; who is an accomplished judge, emmy nominee and someone who sat on the boards of multiple Fortune 500 companies....and despite all of that, nobody arrested him, he was not charged until almost 5 months later....contrast that to the story I posted yesterday of a guy being arrested on the scene by a sheriff out of their jurisdiction because of his wife's claim that she was groped....As for Sheriff Coody, does he deny he did it? Nope....he released a statement saying "he takes these charges very seriously" and looks forward to "personally expressing his regrets for any offense."