What are Eugene Brantley’s plans for Richmond County Sheriff’s Office? (2024)

By Staff and Sydney Hood

Published: Jun. 16, 2024 at 10:41 AM EDT|Updated: 4 hours ago

AUGUSTA, Ga. (WRDW/WAGT) - The people have spoken, and now there’s going to be a new Richmond County sheriff.

While its not guaranteed that Eugene Brantley will become the next sheriff, he did not knock Richard Roundtree out of office after 12 years.

The race was neck and neck for most of the night as results came in, but Brantley eventually pulled ahead and won with 53% of the vote to Roundtree’s 47%.

“It’s really good to be on this side of it,” said Brantley.

With all precincts reporting, Brantley held the lead in the runoff with 52.77% of the vote, while incumbent Roundtree had 47.23% votes.

“We had a lot of obstacles to overcome,” he said.

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What are Eugene Brantley’s plans for Richmond County Sheriff’s Office? (1)

The biggest obstacle for Brantley was beating the incumbent.

”Once you go against an incumbent, of course there’s name recognition. You have people who like to vote a certain way. Just trying to get people to think differently, to not be afraid of change, and to take a chance and give someone else another opportunity to see what they have to offer,” said Brantley.

While it’s not guaranteed that Brantley will become the next sheriff, he did knock Roundtree out of office after 12 years.

The sheriff’s race was the highest-profile one on the ballot locally – and the events of the past couple of weeks may only have helped Brantley.

What are Eugene Brantley’s plans for Richmond County Sheriff’s Office? (2)

Two weekends ago, a shooting terrified downtown, led the mayor to ask for help from state law enforcement and put Roundtree on the defensive against business owners who complained at a news conference about safety concerns.

On the heels of that tense weekend, Augusta saw two homicides and a suspicious death this past weekend. Those victims are among more than 150 who’ve lost their lives in the past two years as an outbreak of violent crime grips communities large and small across the CSRA.

Brantley says one of his top priority’s is a comprehensive audit.

“The first thing was a comprehensive audit to look at where we are, financially, where we are staffing wise, and basically just how we could move a little more efficiently to help fight crime and do things that are conducive to producing a safer Augusta,” said Brantley. “I think it’s important that we understand what that looks like, how many deputies we actually have, in different places, working in the jail working on rope patrol, administratively, where we are, and just how we could if we need to move some people around and make sure we’re getting the most out of the resources that we have.”

Brantley made this celebratory post Tuesday night on Facebook:

Brantley could face independent candidate Richard Dixon in November – although Dixon is still working on collecting enough signatures to get on the ballot.

Dixon has until July 9 to collect the needed signatures, but on Monday he urged voters to put their support behind Brantley.

Brantley says his victory shows that people want change.

“I think it’s still reflected that we need change and we want a safe Augusta,” he said after winning the runoff. “So, you know, I was just encouraging people to get back to the polls, get out and vote, and make sure that their voice was heard. And that’s all we did. Get out and encourage people to get back to the polls.”

It’s been a long road, and he said he has his supporters to thank.

“Every morning, we were standing on corners for like eight weeks now. Every morning after we tood on corners, we got out, we canvassed neighborhoods,” he said. “Then in the evening we canvassed some more. We did that for like eight weeks straight. I mean, nonstop. And, you know, going to the candlelight vigils every Sunday. ... I went to church for four different churches on one Sunday. So it was just go, go, go, go, go.”

And when people told him he couldn’t win, that just motivated him more.

“For my supporters. I’d just like to say thank you. I couldn’t have done it without you,” he said.

“I just want to thank the supporters and thank everyone who went to the polls and voted. It says a lot more than thank them for trusting me with the next four years of law enforcement here.”

Going forward, he wants to see more community policing from the Richmond County Sheriff’s Office.

“We went away from working beats, where the deputies are more engaged in the community. If you’re able to see, feel talk to, that engages with people and allows them to have a certain amount of trust within law enforcement,” he said ahead of the vote.

That idea plays a big part in these initiatives he unveiled earlier this week:

Among his strategies, Brantley said, is having a strong officer presence.

“I’ve been on this department, on that department at the sheriff’s office, I worked for 16 years. I remember when First Friday, we used to have a deputy on every block, we used to park our cars and we used to walk the blocks to ensure that people were safe and we didn’t have the gun violence and the things that we have now. So that approach works,” he said.

“One of the things we’re going to do is, is target recruitment. If you create an atmosphere, where the guys who will work and don’t mind coming to work. They will, in turn, encourage others to come and be a part of what we’re trying to do.”

Gangs have been blamed for many of Augusta’s crime problems, and Brantley seems to agree that it’s important to target gangs.

“Gangs start in neighborhoods, they are territorial. And we want to get back to community-oriented law enforcement because it’s very important that we are out there and we are able to communicate with the kids,” he said. “And we are able to know and understand what goes on in each neighborhood.”

Copyright 2024 WRDW/WAGT. All rights reserved.

What are Eugene Brantley’s plans for Richmond County Sheriff’s Office? (2024)

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