Former Sen. David Perdue held a press conference centered around the issue of crime on Tuesday, the same day Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed pivotal Second Amendment legislation into law.

Perdue’s remarks on crime came hours before Kemp’s signing ceremony of Georgia’s new constitutional carry law, which allows law-abiding Georgians to carry firearms without a permit.

Perdue said during his press conference he supported the passage of the legislation but that “it’s too bad it took four years to get it done,” according to a video of the press conference provided to Breitbart News.

The former senator, who is challenging Kemp in a heated gubernatorial primary election, highlighted during his press conference issues he felt contributed to crime, including the tabled Buckhead cityhood legislation, illegal migration, and a State Patrol that he said has “been led to deteriorate.”

Gov. Brian Kemp hands a pen to Rep. Mandi Ballinger after he signed a bill which will allow permitless carry in Georgia Tuesday, April 12, 2022. (Bob Andres/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)

“I’m just astounded that the people in Buckhead were not allowed to have that vote,” Perdue said of the dormant legislation that would have allowed a ballot referendum for residents of Buckhead, a wealthy Atlanta neighborhood, to vote on if Buckhead should become its own city with its own police department.

Perdue cited Atlanta crime statistics as he said, “Crime is out of control. People want to take their own safety into their own hands.”

Homicide and rape occurrences have increased 43 percent and 39 percent, respectively, in Atlanta over last year, according to Atlanta Police Department data through April 2. The same data shows aggravated assaults have decreased by one percent, while property crimes have decreased by four percent.

Perdue said another issue exacerbating crime rates is illegal migration. Perdue charged that the illegal migrant population in Georgia has “exploded” during Kemp’s tenure and that it now exceeds that of Arizona. Perdue compared Georgia to Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis has led multiple efforts to crack down on illegal migration, a crisis that has grown in the U.S. largely because of the Biden administration’s open-borders posture.

“I would help our counties and work with our counties to develop a closer working relationship with ICE [U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement] to make sure the detention process is there and the deportation process is there,” Perdue said.

On the issue of Georgia’s state police, Perdue said, “We’ve got to get our State Patrol back to the elite level that it always was. Somehow it’s been led to deteriorate by a lack of leadership from the governor’s office in the last three years in my opinion.”

Later in the conference, Perdue again reiterated Kemp “let the State Patrol deteriorate. Talk to anybody in uniform right now. It’s a lack of leadership. … It’s not considered the elite group that it always was. When I was a kid growing up in Georgia that’s what all the county sheriffs deputies and everybody wanted to aspire to. They wanted to become a State Patrol. This needs to be rebuilt.”

Kemp’s campaign was compelled to respond to Perdue’s State Patrol remarks, issuing a statement Tuesday afternoon characterizing them as an “unhinged rant.” The campaign also listed out arrests, citations, and other statistics from the state’s Crime Suppression Unit, which was created by the Kemp administration in 2021 as a state-level response to crime waves.

“The heroic men and women of the Georgia State Patrol set the standard for integrity, excellence, and dedicated service for law enforcement organizations. Period,” Kemp campaign spokesman Cody Hall stated. “For David Perdue to suggest otherwise in order to score political points during campaign season is dangerous and beneath the office he seeks.”

Hall added, “If Perdue wants to attack law enforcement, he should switch primaries and run to the left of Stacey Abrams,” a reference to the Democrat gubernatorial candidate the winner of the May 24 Republican primary will face in the general election.

Kemp himself also responded later Tuesday in a local interview with Fox 5 Atlanta, calling Perdue’s comments “outrageous”:

Write to Ashley Oliver at aoliver@breitbart.com. Follow her on Twitter at @asholiver.