Nashville,
Tennessee became the fifth city to invite fugitives to turn
themselves in at church. At the end of the fourth day, 561 persons
surrendered. The Galilee Missionary
Baptist Church in Nashville hosted the surrender days. Pastor
William R. Harris with strong support from the Interdenominational
Ministers Fellowship welcomed those who stepped across the threshold
of the church-turned-courthouse.
Fugitives from several states came to surrender. Fugitive Charles
Thomas flew to Nashville from Texas on Saturday to turn himself in.
Although wanted in a county outside of Davidson, U.S. Marshal King
stepped in to help. Contact was attempted with Sumner County Judge
Dee Gay who was out on the golf course. Judge Gay’s wife brought him
a cellular telephone so that he could hold court. A new court date
was set, the arrest warrant was lifted, and Thomas was released. A
vast majority of those who entered in fear, left feeling relief and
joy.
“Nashville is the fifth city in the nation to host Fugitive Safe
Surrender and put its program together faster than any other city,”
Marshal King said. “After four long days, I am extremely pleased
with the results. The 4,000th person from the five cities involved
in this program surrendered in Nashville.” “The logistics of turning
Galilee Church into a fully functional booking room and courthouse
was a phenomenal undertaking,” Nashville Police Chief Ronal Serpas
said. “This program could not have succeeded without the strong
mutual trust and respect between law enforcement and Nashville’s
clergy.”
Fugitive Safe Surrender was organized with public and private
partnerships which include Galilee Missionary Baptist Church,
District Attorney General’s Office, Davidson County Public Defender,
Board of Probation and Parole, General Sessions Court, Criminal
Court, Davidson County Sheriff’s Office, Davidson County Criminal
Court Clerk, Metro Nashville Police Department, Comcast Spotlight,
Purity, Chick-Fil-A, Walmart, Sprint-Nextel, Lamar Outdoor
Advertising, Fraternal Order of Police, Central Parking, Meharry
Medical College, Tennessee Department of Transportation, and the
Office of Emergency Management.
Fugitive Safe Surrender will be moving to Memphis, September 19-22
with its 39,000 outstanding warrants. U.S. Marshal David Jolley from
the Western District of Tennessee was in Nashville to observe the
program. He is excited about the coming of Fugitive Safe Surrender,
and he is looking forward to giving thousands of people the
opportunity for the first step toward a second chance. |