US AP: Man killed, trooper shot while ‘Cop City’ protesters cleared - Another Antifa bites the dust.

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Man killed, trooper shot while ‘Cop City’ protesters cleared
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By R.j. Rico
2023-01-19 01:12:55GMT

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DeKalb, Ga., and Atlanta SWAT members are pictured leaving the Gresham Park command post in Atlanta on Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2023. (John Spink/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)
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Georgia state troopers stand along Key Road in Atlanta on Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2023. (John Spink/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)

ATLANTA (AP) — Authorities said they killed a man who shot and injured a Georgia state trooper Wednesday morning as law enforcement officers tried to clear protesters from the site of a planned Atlanta-area public safety training center that activists have dubbed “Cop City.”

Officers from several law enforcement agencies were conducting an operation to clear people out of the area around 9 a.m. when someone fired at them and officers shot back in self-defense, Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Mike Register said during a news conference. A trooper was shot in the abdomen and the man who shot at the officers was killed at the scene, Register said.

The trooper was rushed to a hospital, where he underwent surgery, Georgia State Patrol Col. Chris Wright told reporters. The trooper’s vital signs are good and he’s in stable condition, but he is in the intensive care unit and “he’s still not out of the woods yet,” Wright said.

Register and Wright declined to identify the trooper or the man who was killed, citing the active investigation and the need to notify family members.

Register said the “clearing operation” was being conducted in the same area where a handful of people were arrested last month and charged with domestic terrorism. DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston said at the time that people attacked firefighters and police officers with rocks and weapons as the officers removed barricades blocking some entrances to the site.

The GBI and other law enforcement agencies “embrace a citizen’s right to protest, but law enforcement can’t stand by while serious criminal acts are being committed that jeopardize the safety of the citizens we’re sworn to protect,” Register said.

People are “illegally occupying” the area and are committing criminal acts that endanger the community, including arson, beating people up, using explosives and setting booby traps that have the potential to seriously hurt someone, he said.

Register said four people had been detained with possible charges to come and that the situation remains fluid.

More than 150 people gathered to mourn the man’s death during a candlelight vigil Wednesday evening in Atlanta’s Little Five Points neighborhood, an area known as a hub for counterculture movements.

Activists said they did not have much information about the morning’s incident and did not know the identity of the person who was killed. But they called for an investigation into the shooting, urging the public and the media to reject the police “narrative” that officers were shooting in self-defense.

The group then took to the streets, blocking a busy intersection and throwing scooters in front of cars as others held a large banner reading, “Trees give life. Police take it.”

“Stop Cop City!” the group yelled, followed by, “If you build it, we will burn it!”

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp released a statement earlier this month applauding the earlier arrests and saying “they will not be the last we will take down as this project moves forward.”

“Domestic terrorism will NOT be tolerated in our state, and we will not hesitate, we will not rest, we will not waver in ending their activities and prosecuting them to the fullest extent of the law,” he said in the statement posted on Twitter.

Opponents of the training center have been protesting for over a year by building platforms in surrounding trees and camping out at the site. They say that the $90 million project, which would be built by the Atlanta Police Foundation, involves cutting down so many trees that it would be environmentally damaging. They also oppose investing so much money in what they call “Cop City,” which they say will be used to practice “urban warfare.”

The 85-acre (35-hectare) property is owned by the city of Atlanta but is located just outside the city limits in unincorporated DeKalb County, and includes a former state prison farm.

In an email to news outlets Wednesday morning, opponents of the training facility said they gathered outside the DeKalb County courthouse on Monday, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, to demand that Boston drop the charges against people who were arrested at the site on Dec. 13 and 14. They “spoke about how the movement to stop cop city continues Atlanta’s history of resistance to state violence,” the email says.
 
"He was a pacifist,” Belkis Teran said"

Then he wasn't a very good one, don't know too many pacifists with a purchase history that includes a 9mm carry pistol.
There's a difference between being a man of peace and being a man of idiocy. Granted, this man is the latter what with trying to shoot a cop dead, but I'm sure plenty of us Kiwis at least lean pacifist simply because we're well aware that the best outcome when you get in a fight is losing less than the other guy. Doesn't mean we won't be prepared just in case a man of violence decides to interrupt our peace, though.
 
There's a difference between being a man of peace and being a man of idiocy. Granted, this man is the latter what with trying to shoot a cop dead, but I'm sure plenty of us Kiwis at least lean pacifist simply because we're well aware that the best outcome when you get in a fight is losing less than the other guy. Doesn't mean we won't be prepared just in case a man of violence decides to interrupt our peace, though.
Being a pacifist is a specific thing. It's not the same as just not chimping out at any opportunity.
 
There's a difference between being a man of peace and being a man of idiocy. Granted, this man is the latter what with trying to shoot a cop dead, but I'm sure plenty of us Kiwis at least lean pacifist simply because we're well aware that the best outcome when you get in a fight is losing less than the other guy. Doesn't mean we won't be prepared just in case a man of violence decides to interrupt our peace, though.
To me, "pacifist" means you'll stand there and take it, which might be wrong, but, it's what I think when I hear the word - you abhor violence to the point you won't retaliate even when your own life is at stake.

Being willing to let others live however they like right up to the point they threaten your life and then have a contingency to retaliate with force? That's not pacifism, that's called not being a suicidal pushover.
 
Training center activists arraigned, as others protest outside courthouse
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (archive.ph)
By Jozsef Papp and Riley Bunch
2023-11-06 20:24:04GMT

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Dozens gather in support of the 61 ‘Cop City’ activists being indicted for racketeering at Fulton County Courthouse on Monday, Nov. 6, 2023. Sixty one (Natrice Miller/ Natrice.miller@ajc.com)

A majority of the 61 defendants charged with violating the state’s RICO act in relation to protests against the Atlanta’s public safety training center made their first court appearance to be arraigned on those charges Monday.

The defendants, some dressed in suits and business attire and others wore casual clothing, were separated into groups of five to stand, along their attorneys, in front of Fulton County Superior Court Judge Kimberly Esmond Adams. One by one, they waived formal arraignment and were given directions to turn themselves in to the Fulton County Jail by 10 a.m. Tuesday.

The indictment was filed in Fulton County on Aug. 29. The majority of the defendants were charged with violating the state’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations act. Some face additional charges of domestic terrorism, arson and money laundering. Most are not from Georgia.

The vast majority of those indicted had legal representation but some needed to be qualified through the public defenders office. Only four defendants did not appear.

The state’s Attorney General’s Office, which is prosecuting, did not have an address to send notice to one of the absent defendants, who they believe is in France. A second is under custody of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, while another is out of the country in Canada and is not being allowed back in, her attorney said.

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Jamie Marsicano dances into Fulton County Courthouse to be arraigned on Monday, Nov. 6, 2023. Marsicano is one of 61 defendants named in Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr’s RICO indictment against Atlanta Public Safety Center protestors. (Natrice Miller/ Natrice.miller@ajc.com)

Judge Adams issued a bench warrant for Abigail Skapyak, after she failed to appear.

The majority of the defendants had already agreed to a $50,000 bond on the RICO charge before appearing Monday. A few of the defendants were already booked and released last week, but the majority still need to be processed.

Failure to do so, Adams said, would result in a warrant being issued and bond being revoked.

Before defendants were brought in, Deputy Attorney General John Fowler told Adams that the state had about 5 terabytes of discovery data for the case and transferring the information to each defendant would take 24 to 48 hours.

Adams ordered all discovery to be shared by the end of the year. All motions will need to be file by March 15, 2024, with final pleas expected to take place by the end of June.

Adams told defendants that she won’t accept any negotiated pleas after June 30, 2024.

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Dozens gather in support of the 61 ‘Cop City’ activists being indicted for racketeering at Fulton County Courthouse on Monday, Nov. 6, 2023. Sixty one (Natrice Miller/ Natrice.miller@ajc.com)

Attorney Suri Chadha Jimenez, on behalf of Ayla King, filed a speedy trial demand on Oct. 30. Under Georgia law, a jury has to be seated and sworn into service by the end of the speedy trial deadline. In Fulton County, that’s two terms of court, each of which are about two months long.

On Monday, some attorneys asked the court for an extension of that deadline.

Attorney Amanda Clark Palmer, representing Timothy Bilodeau, said in a statement that the indictment “criminalizes constitutionally protected activity that is at the core of what it means to be an American” and stated that the indictment is “legally invalid” and should be “dismissed before trial.”

The indictment mainly focuses on the Defend the Atlanta Forest group, describing it as an Atlanta-based organization that prosecutors say is an “anti-government, anti-police, and anti-corporate extremist organization.”

According to the indictment, the group’s purpose is to occupy parts or all of the 381 forested acres in DeKalb County owned by the city of Atlanta and leased to the Atlanta Police Foundation with the goal of halting the training center construction.

The training center has been one of the most divisive issues in the city this year. City officials and the Atlanta Police Foundation say the $90 million facility is key to police and firefighters getting first-rate training to protect citizens. Opponents argue the center will further militarize police, and worry about destruction of the urban forest in which it is being built.

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Dozens walk from Underground Atlanta to Fulton County Courthouse in support of the 61 activists indicted for racketeering on Monday, Nov. 6, 2023. Sixty one (Natrice Miller/ Natrice.miller@ajc.com)

Outside the courthouse, around 100 protesters gathered in support of the activists being arraigned. The crowd cheered as defendants and their families entered the front doors ahead of the hearing. Speakers urged supporters to stand with the training center opponents who face the possibility of lengthy jail sentences.

“We have to stand strong here with our organizers and activists and community members who are now facing legal charges,” said Kamau Franklin, with Community Movement Builders. “Because today it’s them and tomorrow it could be the rest of us.”

Belkis Terán, mother of Manuel ‘Tortuguita’ Terán — the environmental activist fatally shot by police near the construction site DeKalb County — also took to the mic to address protesters. The 26-year-old was shot and killed by Georgia state troopers after Terán first fired shots from inside his tent, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

“We have to be clear why we are doing this,” she said. “We are going to leave a legacy that Manuel was trying to share with everybody.”
 
Police and protesters clash at Atlanta training center site derided by opponents as 'Cop City'
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By R.J. Rico and Jeff Amy
2023-11-14 03:16:10GMT


(Youtube) (Preservetube)

ATLANTA (AP) — Police used tear gas and flash-bang grenades Monday to halt a march against building an Atlanta-area police and firefighter training center that opponents call “Cop City.”

More than 400 people marched about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) from a park to the site in suburban DeKalb County, chanting “stop Cop City” and “Viva, viva Tortuguita,” invoking the nickname of an activist who was fatally shot by state troopers while camping in the woods in protest earlier this year.

A wedge of marchers, including some in masks, goggles and chemical suits intended to protect against tear gas, pushed into a line of officers in riot gear on a road outside the training center site. Officers pushed back and deployed tear gas. One protester threw a canister back at officers.

Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum later said the protesters disobeyed orders to stop the march, noting they didn’t have a permit for it. He said marchers showing up with gas masks was one indication they sought to provoke police.

“This is not a group that has the best interests of Atlanta at heart. This is a group today that left Gresham Park prepared to reach the site, prepared to do harm, prepared to do destruction,” Schierbaum said.

Some protesters acknowledged they wanted to enter the construction site as an act of civil disobedience, but disputed any intention of violence.

“The police continue to show themselves to be a group that is weaponized against the larger public, particularly the larger public that has the nerve to protest against police violence and police actions,” said Kamau Franklin of Community Movement Builders.

Protests against the proposed training center have been going on for more than two years. Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr obtained a sweeping indictment in August, using the state’s anti-racketeering law to charge 61 protesters, characterizing them as “militant anarchists.”

Protesters called Monday’s march “Block Cop City” and events were held across the country in recent weeks to support the movement. It was the latest effort to stop construction of a project that has galvanized environmentalists and anti-police protesters across the country.

Some marchers retreated from the clash while others tried to wash away the effects of tear gas. Dozens of protesters ran into the woods near the property where the training center is being built and exited with their hands up. The marchers eventually retreated as a group without any arrests being made. Vomiting and irritation from the tear gas were the only apparent injuries.

Police agencies including the DeKalb County Police Department and Georgia state troopers were guarding the site, including with armored vehicles.

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens and other supporters say the 85-acre, $90 million facility would replace inadequate training facilities and help the police department recruit and retain officers. Opponents say the facility could lead to greater police militarization and that its construction in the South River Forest will worsen environmental damage in a poor, majority-Black area.

Ahead of the march, Franklin told the crowd they had a duty to practice civil disobedience against the project. Prior to the march, protester Sam Beard said activists had been urged not to bring weapons, use incendiary devices or destroy construction equipment.

But at the afternoon news conference, Schierbaum displayed what appeared to be handmade tree-planting spades with long sticks and metal blades that he alleged were intended as weapons, not garden tools. He also displayed bolt-cutters and a gas masks and said umbrellas carried Monday could be used by “professional protesters and anarchists” to shield themselves from tear gas and push through police lines.

“We see a number of devices that would appear innocent on the forefront that are actually used in a very aggressive and violent manner,” Schierbaum said.

Franklin, however, said some protesters planted trees while they were retreating after the confrontation.

Some protesters in Monday’s march had hoped to reoccupy the wooded area that includes the construction site and adjoining park. Activists spent months camping in the woods there until police pushed them out in January. That sweep included the fatal shooting of 26-year-old protester Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, known as Tortuguita.

A prosecutor last month declined to pursue charges against the state troopers who shot Paez Terán, saying the activist shot a trooper and that law enforcement’s use of deadly force was “objectively reasonable.”

Paez Terán’s parents spoke before the march. Previously, they have said they do not believe authorities’ version of events and have called for an independent investigation. The family commissioned an autopsy that concluded Paez Terán’s hands were in the air when the activist was shot.

“I see, in each one of them, my son,” Belkis Terán told The Associated Press of the crowd. “Manuel always said, ‘To fight the police, you have to be happy.’ So happiness is what we have brought.”

Resistance to the project has at times sparked violence and vandalism. Prosecutors now characterize the protest movement as a conspiracy, saying it has led to underlying crimes including possessing fire accelerants and throwing Molotov cocktails at police officers.

Most of those indicted in August on the racketeering charges had already been charged with other crimes in connection with the movement.

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Police disperse a crowd of protesters with gas during a demonstration in opposition to a new police training center, Monday, Nov. 13, 2023, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
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Protesters drive into a police line during a demonstration in opposition to a new police training center, Monday, Nov. 13, 2023, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
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A police officer runs out of a cloud of gas during a demonstration in opposition to a new police training center, Monday, Nov. 13, 2023, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
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Protesters drive into a police line during a demonstration in opposition to a new police training center, Monday, Nov. 13, 2023, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)
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Protesters drive into a police line as gas floats in the air during a demonstration in opposition to a new police training center, Monday, Nov. 13, 2023, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

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Press conference:

(Youtube) (Preservetube)

Drone footage:

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Heirs to $35 Billion Fortune Face Off Over Atlanta's Controversial ‘Cop City’
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Brett Pulley
2024-05-10 12:20:35GMT
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Illustration: Christian Blaza

Alexander Cox Taylor is the fourth-generation scion of a dynasty valued at $35 billion. He runs the family conglomerate, Cox Enterprises Inc., while supporting civic causes in his hometown of Atlanta, including a new $110 million facility to train police and other safety officials.

His first cousin, James Cox Chambers Jr., is using his own piece of the fortune to try to shut that very project down. Fergie, as he’s known to his family, is fervently against what he and other opponents deride as Cop City. A community organizer and self-proclaimed Marxist, Chambers for a time had an ACAB tattoo on his neck — an acronym for “All cops are bastards.”

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The training center under construction in Atlanta.Photographer: Elijah Nouvelage/Bloomberg

The dueling dollars over the Atlanta training center reflect an unprecedented rupture in a family that Bloomberg has ranked as the world’s 21st-richest. The clan with a long history of supporting widely palatable initiatives and mainstream political candidates now has one of their own lobbing counter-efforts in service of his grandiose vision for dismantling capitalism and its trappings.

Chambers’ activism — heavy on spectacle, haphazard in its execution — has thrown sand in the gears of the Atlanta project. And his financial resources were recently supercharged when he reached an agreement with Taylor to cash out his stake in Cox Enterprises, giving Chambers an initial payment of $250 million, with more to come.

Derailing the training center is a long shot, but Chambers is committed to last-ditch efforts — and, in turn, to thumbing his nose at the genteel relatives from which he is estranged.

“The mechanisms that allow my family to be one of the most powerful families in Atlanta, if not Georgia, are the mechanisms behind Cop City,” Chambers said in a telephone interview from Tunisia, where he has resided for several months. “It’s designed to create a society that’s further dominated by the bourgeoisie. It’s ruling class population control.”

The Cox family is a paragon of old money and society, especially in Georgia, where their company is headquartered and has wielded power since 1939. That’s when the cousins’ great-grandfather, James Middleton Cox — the 1920 Democratic nominee for US president — purchased the Atlanta Journal newspaper to add to what would become a vast array of media, telecommunications and automotive businesses.

Institutions across Georgia’s largest city bear the family name, including spaces at Emory University and the Atlanta History Center. Taylor, 49, is active in the Rotary Club and sits on numerous boards.

One of his civic pursuits is the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, now under construction on an 85-acre patch of land on the city’s outskirts. As chair of the Atlanta Committee for Progress, Taylor led an effort to raise $60 million in private dollars to fund the project. His company’s philanthropic arm, the James M. Cox Foundation, donated $10 million to a nonprofit that the city has partnered with for financing.

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The Cox Enterprises headquarters in Atlanta.Photographer: Elijah Nouvelage/Bloomberg

Atlanta, like other big US cities, saw an increase in some types of violent crime after the onset of the pandemic, highlighting a need to hire more police officers and better train them. But distrust of police also reached a peak after the May 2020 murder of George Floyd put law-enforcement tactics under greater scrutiny.

Taylor, when announcing his support for the police training facility in 2021, said the investment "will help our city move faster in fighting crime." He declined to comment for this story.

A Cox Enterprises spokesperson, Natalie Giurato, said that Taylor led the effort to raise the money for the public safety training center because as a local executive, “it was his turn” to chair the group that provided key funding. Since then, she said, “Alex has been pretty quiet on the issue.”

The project became the subject of demonstrations and confrontations. “We were working our plan to build this thing, and then once we got our permits, people who are violent and pretty noisy” started protesting against it, said Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens. “These are people who fight oil rigs, gas pipelines, and any kind of police facilities.”

Chambers was drawn into the saga when one such incident ended with police officers killing a 26-year-old activist, Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, who allegedly fired a gun at them and wounded a state trooper. An autopsy found Paez Terán was shot at least 57 times.

When the protester “was murdered in the forest, and I found out that my family had been a primary funder” of the project, Chambers said, “It made me feel more of a mandate to get involved in opposition funding.”

Chambers, 39, said that he has provided more than $1 million to fight the project.

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Family members hold a photo of Manuel Esteban Paez Terán in March 2023.Photographer: Alex Slitz/AP Photo

Construction has been underway for months, with initial occupancy planned for later this year. But Chambers hasn’t given up his opposition — and his agreement to liquidate his stake in Cox has given him more resources than ever to promulgate it.

He is bound from discussing the terms, but Chambers said he “sold out” of the company in a deal that provides him with “several hundred million” dollars over time.

“It was something I thought about for years, and went back and forth with Alex about,” Chambers said. “The whole point” of taking the money, Chambers said, “was to disrupt the systems that put my family in power.”

Taylor and Chambers have taken divergent paths from equally privileged beginnings. Growing up, they both coveted the affection of their grandmother, Anne Cox Chambers, whose father founded the company in 1898. A supporter of Democratic politics, she served as ambassador to Belgium in President Jimmy Carter’s administration, and was a board member of Atlanta-based Coca-Cola Co.

She and her sister, Barbara Cox Anthony, co-owned Cox Enterprises for more than three decades. Before Anne Chambers died in 2020 at the age of 100, she gave each of her three children, including Taylor’s mother and Fergie Chambers’ father, a share of her 49% stake in the company.

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Anne Cox ChambersPhotographer: Ron Galella/Getty Images

While Taylor was growing up in Atlanta and going on to graduate from Nashville’s Vanderbilt University, Fergie Chambers was living in New York City with his mother, who had split from his father. Chambers attended Bard College, an elite liberal arts school in New York, though he never graduated. His grandmother served two terms on the school’s board, and his father now serves as its chairman.

The father and son have not spoken to each other in over two years, according to Fergie Chambers. “And we didn’t talk a ton before that,” he said. James Chambers Sr., 67, is a co-owner of the Atlanta Hawks basketball team. He did not respond to attempts to reach him through Bard or the Hawks.

Taylor started his career at one of the family’s small newspapers in Grand Junction, Colorado. He went on to a senior leadership role at Cox Media Group and ran field operations for Cox Communications, a broadband business.

He now leads the closely held Cox Enterprises, which has $23 billion in annual revenue and employs 50,000 people. It includes Cox Communications, now the largest private broadband provider in the country, and Cox Automotive, which houses brands such as Autotrader and Kelley Blue Book. The Cox Media Group, in which the company maintains a minority stake alongside controlling partner Apollo Global Management Inc., counts dozens of radio and television stations.

Chambers only briefly dabbled in the family business. He moved to Atlanta in his early 20s and entered a management training job at Manheim, a used-car auction business that is part of Cox Automotive. But after just a year on the job, he realized that climbing the corporate ladder was not for him.

Instead, Chambers found himself drawn to activism. In 2015, when a naked and unarmed man named Anthony Hill was shot and killed by a police officer in Georgia’s DeKalb County, Chambers thrust himself into the backlash, helping to organize public disruptions. He was arrested twice while staging protests, he said. He donated money to help protesters with transportation, contributed to bail funds to get them out of jail, and helped with legal costs. “I was very connected to the anti-police movement in Atlanta,” Chambers said.

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Protesters gather in Decatur in March 2015 after the shooting death of Anthony Hill by a police officer.Photographer: David Goldman/AP Photo

Indeed, when Chambers operated a gym in Atlanta, it was infamous for not allowing police. Neighbors of land he owns in the Berkshires area of western Massachusetts reportedly have been fearful that a communist militia may be taking shape on his property — a suggestion Chambers has denied.

Chambers operates what he calls “a collective” of community organizations around the US that count on him for money. “Everyone in the collective is an organizer, but I’m the only one who was born rich,” he said.

He’s been orchestrating those efforts from Tunisia since he moved there last year to practice Islam. “I am Muslim,” he said. “I wanted to live in a Muslim country.” He is joined there by his wife Stella Schnabel, an actress and the daughter of artist Julian Schnabel, as well as their child.

Chambers is not only plowing his money into Atlanta. After Israel's invasion of Gaza following Hamas' October attacks, Chambers said that he has contributed over $1 million to Palestinian causes. When Chambers received a payment from the city of New York as part of settling a lawsuit with Black Lives Matter protesters who charged that they had been abused by police, he says he redirected his entire $24,000 settlement to pro-Palestinian groups.

The Atlanta public safety facility is being built on land that was once a prison farm and has long been a site for illegal dumping and a refuge for squatters and drug users. A contaminated river cuts through its dense woods.

A plan to restore the area includes hiking trails that will run from the training facility to nearby parks.

“Those who live around here are very much in support of the training facility,” said Alison Clark, an area resident who chairs a committee of community stakeholders for the training center.

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An Atlanta Police cruiser blocks the entrance to the construction site for the new training center.Photographer: Elijah Nouvelage/Bloomberg

Chambers said he decided that the anti-police movement needed more money than he had at this disposal. Since he was a young adult, he had received several “negotiated dividends” from Cox.

But early last year, he began pressing forward with his cousin, Taylor, to reach an agreement for him to cash out of the family business.

Even backed by more money, Chambers’ bid to stop the project faces significant hurdles.

Chambers said he gave $600,000 last year to two groups involved in the stop Cop City effort. That included funds to help gather signatures for a ballot measure aimed at blocking the project.

More than 100,000 signatures were collected, but an analysis by media organizations found that many of them may not be legitimate. Even if the measure is found to have garnered enough valid signatures to get on the ballot, the city of Atlanta has argued in court documents it is invalid for other reasons, and it’s hardly clear voters favor halting the development.

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Activists with the Stop Cop City Vote Coalition gather signatures to oppose the police and firefighter training center in Atlanta, on July 20, 2023.Photographer: Brynn Anderson/AP Photo

In 2023, over 60 activists were charged under the state’s anti-racketeering law for their efforts to stop Cop City.

The protesters’ approach often appears designed more as a show of defiance than a genuine effort at political persuasion.

In February, Cop City protesters gathered in Tucson, Arizona, for what was billed as a national summit to stop the facility. Local news reports said three people with ties to the protest were arrested for rioting and arson after two bank branches were vandalized. Activists had sought to call attention to corporations they say have financial connections to the project.

Andrew Morse, publisher of the Cox Enterprises-controlled Atlanta Journal-Constitution, recently wrote in the newspaper’s opinion pages that “We need the new public safety training center.”

Meanwhile, the Atlanta Community Press Collective, a scrappy online outlet, now routinely gives voice to those fighting to stop Cop City. The nonprofit website has received $350,000 in funding from Chambers’ collective, according to editor Matt Scott.
 
This cop city shit is affecting people all the way up in SC where I'm at. Some moron recently stole and set on fire some construction equipment that was supposedly in route to Cop City. He even spray painted some Cop City slogan all over the place where he stole it at. If you wanna play domestic terrorist, then you might end up with a slug in your brain.
Hmm...

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https://twitter.com/defendATLforest/status/1783253836758462515 (archive.ph)

Fingers crossed that it involves Biden's planned May 19th visit to Morehouse College as commencement speaker.
I will say Biden has finally bridged the Right/Left protestor gap, at a protest recently they took turns shouting Fuck Biden. Good job president for healing the nation by fucking it up worse then anyone in the last 70 years has
Police have repeatedly raided this public park, flattened community gardens and art installations,
Community Gardens lmfao we saw how well you leftists can make useful gardens in the CHAZ having to support the movement from Capitist Pizza Delivery. I wonder if Che whatever his name was would approve? I bet they didn't have Artesian Pizza Delivery in Cuba
 
On one hand, it's super gay that these protestors are getting ratfucked by the law, and it's absolutely punitive. On the other hand, show me one of them charged with a crime who hasn't posted derisively on Twitter about Trump, Jan 6ers, or MAGA chuds getting hit with similarly fake and gay charges, and I'll be a bit sympathetic, maybe. "NOooooo, you can only use RICO charges to fuck over Trump, not me!"
 
The indictment does not have the names of the grand jurors, which is common practice in Georgia. Fowler declined to comment as to why the names were not part of the indictment.

How would it be in the public interest to have Grand Juror' names published? Just admit you want to send hate mobs to their houses. Both to punish them and to intimidate future Grand Juries.
 
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