The champion newspaper. (Decatur, GA) 19??-current, November 21, 2019, Image 9
THE CHAMPION, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21 - 27, 2019 • PAGE 9 Lifelong DeKalb resident to assume sheriff’s role BY ASIA ASHLEY Asia@dekalbchamp.com It all started with a dare. Melody Maddox said her daughter’s uncle dared her to try out for the Atlanta Police Academy in 1988, not thinking she’d make the cut. But she did, after extensive training and the admiration she’d had for law enforcement came from watching shows and movies such as Adam-12, Jackie Brown and Sheba Baby. Now, more than 30 years later, Maddox is about to start her role as presumably DeKalb County’s first female sheriff on Dec. 1. DeKalb County Sheriff Jeffrey Mann announced his retirement Nov. 13, 13 months before his term was slated to end. He appointed Maddox, currently DeKalb’s chief deputy sheriff, to be his successor. The lifelong DeKalb County resident, who ran for sheriff against Mann in 2014, said making it to the sheriff’s seat has been her greatest accomplishment. “Becoming sheriff has been a passion of mine. It’s been a dream since I stepped out in 2013 to run,” said Maddox. “That was just a test to be where I am today.” She began her law enforcement career in 1996 as a detention technician for DeKalb County Sheriff’s Office before moving on to the DeKalb County Police Department where she held several positions over the course of 10 years. Maddox left there to help form the police department for Georgia Piedmont Technical College where she later became chief of police until she was appointed to her current position of DeKalb County’s chief deputy sheriff in June 2019. She holds a bachelor's degree from Morris Brown College and a master's degree from Central Michigan University. Her experience over the years has shaped her into a leader who “leads from the rear.” “I look at it as the same model as with your children... you don’t walk in front and put your children behind you, you put your children in front because you want to see where they are and make sure they’re OK, to protect them in case anything should happen,” she said. “I want to see my team and make sure they’re OK and have what they need.” She said in her pending role as sheriff, she wants to continue being a leader in the community, while making sure the courts, jail and administration are running properly. Most importantly, she said, she wants to ensure inmates are treated with respect and dignity. “I want [citizens] to know that their loved one, if they are here, is OK. I want them to know I am transparent,” she said. “I’ve learned that it takes a village. We have our own village. This jail is huge. It is a huge responsibility here, but we have a great team. We sympathize and we empathize with the inmates. We put the concern of the citizens first.” Maddox said her vision as sheriff is to build trust in the community by ensuring deputies are more visible in the community and to continue several programs that were started under Mann, including CHAMPS (Choosing Healthy Activities and Methods Promoting Safety), which is intended to help young people address social issues. In her spare time, she is “nana” to her grandchildren, teaches women’s self-defense classes and attends community events. “I love meeting people. I love touching people. I love helping people,” said Maddox. “I love the everyday life in law enforcement. Everyday is different. I love the interaction with the citizens.” While Maddox does plan to run for a full four-year sheriff’s term next year, she said she plans to focus the next few months on observing instead of campaigning. DeKalb County Board of Registration & Elections has yet to announce a date for a special election to fill the sheriff’s position. DeKalb officials look for next step following rejection of ethics proposal BY KATHY MITCHELL FREELANCE REPORTER DeKalb voters apparently took to heart warnings from several observers that proposed changes in the structure of the county’s Board of Ethics would not be good for the county. A total of 33,555 voters, 61 percent of those participating in the Nov. 5 election, voted “no” to the referendum, which was drafted in response to a Georgia Supreme Court ruling that all members of the ethics board must be appointed by elected officials. The DeKalb Citizens Advocacy Council, which before the election declared that the proposed structure “places the fox in the henhouse,” has offered an alternative solution to the one voters rejected. Although the question appeared on the ballot as “Shall the Act be approved which revises the Board of Ethics for DeKalb County?” the full referendum would have allowed the county CEO to appoint ethics board members and empowered the CEO and board of commissioners to review and approve board of ethics policies and procedures. Among other provisions, it also would have replaced the ethics officer with a clerical, non-legally trained ethics administrator. DeKalb Citizens is recommending that DeKalb County’s legislative delegation adopt legislation that addresses only the appointment process to get the county’s ethics board back to a quorum. DeKalb Citizens Chair Mary Hinkel in a news release said, “The best fix is a simple fix. What gets legislation in trouble with voters is when issues that would best be taken up by the Charter Review Commission find their way into a bill.” In a letter to the delegation, the county CEO, and the county commissioners, DeKalb Citizens offered to work with the delegation in creating a straightforward bill to address the appointment process alone. The proposed bill would assign the four positions on the ethics board that were previously appointed by community groups to elected officials not under the purview of the board of ethics. DeKalb Citizens also called on the delegation for transparency in its efforts to develop a bill, “given the well-documented lack of transparency that resulted in the previous legislation.” Among the critics of the proposal that appeared on the Nov. 5 ballot was Commissioner Kathie Gannon, who before the election stated on her website, “The Blueprint to Redefine DeKalb, which I initiated several years ago to help our citizens determine how they could improve DeKalb County was very clear about the need for an independent, strong Board of Ethics. Citizens from all of DeKalb voted for that in 2015. Since that time another former commissioner has been indicted. We need strong ethics as much now as we did then. Why would we want to slide backwards?” Paul Root Wolpe, director of the Emory University Center of Ethics, also commented before the election, “The bottom line is that this bill is clearly meant to weaken and dilute the excellent policy passed in 2015, without any convincing reasons to weaken the bill. DeKalb is slipping back to a former posture that got it in trouble in the first place.” DeKalb Citizens and others agreed that swift action is needed in creating an ethics board that would meet the approval of DeKalb residents. State Sen. Emanuel Jones (D - Decatur) issued a statement following the balloting results. “It is clear the DeKalb County delegation still has work to do to produce a reasonable solution to ethics reform in our county. Doing nothing is not an option, as the Georgia Supreme Court has already ruled that changes to the DeKalb Board of Ethics must take place.... Therefore, the Joint Senate and House DeKalb County delegation will appoint a taskforce whose goal will be to gather information and provide recommendations on legislation to be introduced in the 2020 Legislative Session. Rep. Karla Drenner (D - Avondale Estates) said, “My colleagues and I, along with members of the public and DeKalb County officials, will be working together in the coming months to create a new ethics policy that will address the concerns that were brought up during our town hall meetings. I hope that together we can create impactful legislation that everyone can support.”