LaFayette Man Sentenced to 68 Years for Brutal Assault, Kidnapping, and Animal Cruelty
Featured Stories September 29, 2025 , by Emma Dunn
LaFayette, Ga. — A Walker County man has been sentenced to nearly seven decades in prison after being convicted of a string of violent crimes that left one woman severely injured, another terrorized, and a family pet dead.
Jarvis Jackson, 43, was found guilty in Walker County Superior Court following a bench trial before Judge Christopher Arnt. Prosecutors presented evidence of two separate incidents of violence that occurred in 2024, both investigated by Detective Robby Tate of the LaFayette Police Department.
The first case stemmed from a February 3, 2024, attack in which Jackson doused his longtime girlfriend in rubbing alcohol and set her on fire. Blinded and badly burned, she managed to escape to a neighbor’s home for help. The woman later testified about years of abuse at Jackson’s hands.
The second case involved Jackson’s new wife, whom he married in May 2024. On August 18, prosecutors said, Jackson spit on her as she slept, accused her of infidelity, then shot her dog while it lay on its bed. He forced her into a vehicle at gunpoint and threatened to kill her and her adult son if she contacted police. After hours of intimidation, he compelled her to help clean the scene before fleeing to relatives in Alabama. She reported the incident two days later.
Jackson was convicted of multiple charges, including aggravated assault, aggravated battery, aggravated animal cruelty, kidnapping, and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. On September 24, 2025, Judge Arnt sentenced him to 68 years in the Georgia Department of Corrections.
District Attorney Clayton M. Fuller praised the work of law enforcement and victim advocates Donna Howell and Brittany Bruce. He also emphasized his office’s commitment to aggressive prosecution of violent offenders.
“My thanks to Lafayette Chief of Police Stacey Meeks and his team for their relentless work and leadership in fighting for the public safety of our Main Streets,” Fuller said in a statement. “From Charlotte to Seattle, too many soft-on-crime prosecutors would send a defendant like this back onto the streets for fourteen more arrests. Not in Northwest Georgia. We fight for victims, and we put violent criminals away until the 2090s.”

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