Protesters hold up signs at a press conference by Athens-Clarke County Mayor Kelly Girtz on Feb. 28, 2024.

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Protesters hold up signs at a press conference by Athens-Clarke County Mayor Kelly Girtz on Feb. 28, 2024, in the wake of Laken Riley's death days earlier.

Credit: WUGA

Athens-Clarke County Mayor Kelly Girtz announced that he would be pushing county commissioners for additional funding for public safety in the wake of the murder of Laken Riley on the University of Georgia campus last week.

Speaking at a Wednesday morning press conference, Girtz said he wants local officials to invest more than $500,000 into new public safety initiatives.

"Among the first things you're going to be seeing rolling out for endorsement by the Commission this Tuesday is advancing our real time crime center," Girtz said. "We took the first step toward this real time crime center in the last budget year, and we're going to be advancing this to completion, including making sure that we tie all our publicly accessible cameras and the private cameras that have engaged with us into a unified system and staffing that real time crime center on each shift so that we can rapidly pursue cases."

The expansion would come with a price tag of $300,000. Girtz also said he wanted Athens-Clarke County to invest in heavy-duty surveillance trailers to operate during major events, like UGA football games. Also on Girtz’s list is $100,000 for additional cameras in high traffic and high crime areas and the purchase of all-terrain vehicles to help patrol hiking and biking trails in the county.

Girtz also highlighted several measures taken in recent years, including the creation of the real-time crime center he wants to expand, as well as improved ballistics identification capacity.

"For many years, we'd have to send off ballistics to the state," he said. "Sometimes it would take us days or weeks to get back good information. We have that in-house now, and so we have been able to actively and successfully pursue many dozens of cases because of having this right here on this campus."

Girtz was interrupted several times by a small but vocal group of protesters, especially when he addressed whether Athens was a “sanctuary city,” a charge the mayor denied.

"There's been no legislation from this government that has created sanctuary city status," he said.

Protesters distributed a copy of an August 2019 resolution passed by ACC lawmakers and signed by Girtz which says in part that “all people, including those without documentation” should feel safe interacting with local government and law enforcement. Girtz defended that measure.

"What we wish to do is dignify everybody's humanity," he said.

The words “sanctuary city” do not appear in the 2019 resolution.

This story comes to GPB through a reporting partnership with WUGA