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Trial of 12 set to begin in Atlanta cheating case

By The Associated Press
Posted 5:53PM on Sunday 10th August 2014 ( 9 years ago )
ATLANTA (AP) -- More than a year after 35 Atlanta Public Schools educators were indicted in a school cheating scandal that rocked the system, 12 people are set to go to trial Monday.<br /> <br /> The former administrators, principals, testing coordinators and teachers all face racketeering charges. Individual charges include influencing witnesses and lying to state investigators.<br /> <br /> Prosecutors have said that more than 30 educators participated in a conspiracy to cheat on standardized tests dating back to 2005, motivated by pressure to meet federal and APS standards and receive bonuses or keep their jobs.<br /> <br /> Prosecutors have agreed to plea deals with 21 defendants also included in the initial indictment, and several could testify against their former colleagues. Prosecutors expect jury selection to take two to four weeks and the entire trial to last from four to six months.<br /> <br /> Former district superintendent Beverly Hall will not be among the defendants on Monday. Judge Jerry Baxter ruled in July that the trial would continue without Hall, who is battling cancer. Hall has long denied any knowledge of cheating.<br /> <br /> But the number of defendants involved and the use of a law designed to combat organized crime still could lead to a lengthy and complex trial, legal experts said. Georgia's Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations statute, or RICO, can be used when prosecutors want to demonstrate a pattern of activity within either an illegal or legitimate organization, said Caren Morrison, an associate professor of law at Georgia State University and a former assistant U.S. attorney.

http://accesswdun.com/article/2014/8/278123

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