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.
 
"assassinated"
Newsflash: you have to be important in order to be assassinated. This guy was yet another trust fund baby LARPing as a communist revolutionary, not by any means an important person.
It's the usual leftist perversion of language. Though I didn't know why they didn't just jump right to "omg nonbinary GENOCIDE by RACISTS"
 
Metro Atlanta college students protest police training center
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (archive.ph)
By Vanessa McCray
2023-04-24 22:24:02GMT

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Credit: arvin.temkar@ajc.com

Emory University students rallied against Atlanta’s planned public safety training center, one of several coordinated protests scheduled to take place Monday across seven local college campuses.

About 100 students gathered on one end of the grassy quad where they chanted “No justice, no peace” and strung a large sheet emblazoned with “#StopCopCity” between two light fixtures at the entrance to Emory’s administration building. They demanded that Emory condemn the training center project.

Jaanaki Radhakrishnan, a first-year student at Emory, said a wide coalition of students at her school and at other Atlanta colleges have worked together on the events.

“‘Cop city’ is not just a police training facility for Atlanta. It’s designed to serve as a model for the entire country, and I think Emory students are well aware of the way that the system of policing harms all of us,” she said. “It’s very easy to get caught up in like the ‘Emory bubble’..., but I think students recognize that we have a responsibility to our neighbors in order to uplift their voices.”

Emory spokeswoman Laura Diamond said the university respects and supports “the rights of our students, faculty, and staff to express their opinions on this issue and others.”

“As an institution, Emory does not have any ties to the Atlanta Police Foundation. The safety of our community is one of our top priorities and we work with and support law enforcement agencies and local and state officials on a variety of issues, including public safety,” she said in an email.

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Students want the city of Atlanta to back away from the $90 million facility to be built on city-owned forested land in DeKalb County leased to the Atlanta Police Foundation. Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens has said he is committed to building a training ground for Atlanta’s police and firefighters who have long endured inadequate facilities.

The students contend their schools “have been key propellers” of the project through research partnerships with the police foundation and because six of the colleges’ presidents serve on the board of the Atlanta Committee for Progress. The committee is a public-private partnership that includes several dozen key academic, civic and business leaders and was an early supporter of the training center as a way to reduce crime and boost public safety.

The coordinated actions Monday by students, in different parts of metro Atlanta, was rare.

Georgia Tech students met for study sessions, teach-ins and other activities at the large lawn of Tech Green, while some at Georgia State University planned a town hall. At Agnes Scott College, participants planned a rally and a potluck dinner.

At Clark Atlanta University and Morehouse and Spelman colleges, students intended to put up posters to highlight instances of local police brutality, according to the news release.

Spelman, in a statement, said Black communities in particular “remain justifiably concerned about public safety policies and how policing is administered.” The college also recognized the city’s responsibility “for maintaining public safety and the role that training can play in making needed improvements.”

“We will continue to follow this situation with hopes that the city will also think about using resources to tackle longstanding inequities in communities that are core to achieving a safer city that works for all,” said Spelman’s statement.

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Credit: arvin.temkar@ajc.com

At Emory, students expressed concern about the approach to policing, the use of a site that was once Native American land and environmental damage posed by the development.

Wittika Chaplet, an Emory senior who spoke using a megaphone, said the goal is to show “students are united on this issue.”

“The city of Atlanta... or the Atlanta Police Department, has barely even pretended that they are acting in the interest of anyone. They’ve been un-transparent,” Chaplet said.

The project has drawn opposition throughout the city and country. In January, the activist Manuel “Tortuguita” Teran was killed by Georgia State Patrol troopers at the site. Students talked about that incident and about police misconduct. An investigation into the shooting is ongoing.

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GBI report: ‘Particles characteristic of gunshot primer residue’ found on activist’s hands
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (archive.ph)
By Jeremy Redmon
2023-04-25 13:47:14GMT

“Particles characteristic of gunshot primer residue” were found in samples taken from the hands of an activist Georgia State Patrol troopers killed at the site of Atlanta’s planned public safety training center on Jan. 18, according to a Georgia Bureau of Investigation report.

Produced five days after Manuel “Tortuguita” Teran was killed, the report says the findings support the possibility that Teran “discharged a firearm, was in close proximity to a firearm upon discharge, or came into contact with an item whose surface bears” gunshot primer residue.

The report adds: “It should be noted that it is possible for victims of gunshot wounds, both self-inflicted and non-self-inflicted, to have” such residue on their hands.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution obtained the report from the DeKalb County Medical Examiner’s Office Tuesday. Last week, that office released an autopsy that said gunpowder residue was “not seen” on Teran’s hands. But that is not conclusive because gunpowder is not always visible to the naked eye. The autopsy also said Teran’s body had at least 57 gunshot wounds.

Teran’s family has disputed the GBI’s claim that Teran fired the first shot at troopers and has questioned the use of deadly force.

Weeks before Teran was killed, the state patrol’s SWAT team had been requested to assist the GBI and other law enforcement agencies in clearing the property of protesters who were “unlawfully occupying the land,” according to multiple Georgia Department of Public Safety use of force reports obtained by the AJC.

On the morning of Jan. 18, troopers began clearing the forest when they encountered dozens of tents, one of which belonged to Teran, the reports say. Teran was inside and briefly spoke to officers but refused to leave. Troopers fired pepper balls inside the enclosure in an attempt to drive Teran out and make an arrest for criminal trespassing. The reports say Teran fired the first shot, wounding a trooper, and that six officers then returned fire.

The GBI has said that the bullet that struck the trooper had been fired from a gun found at the scene and provided documents showing it had been purchased by Teran in September 2020. Teran’s family disputes that and questions the veracity of the use of force reports submitted by troopers.

Jay Jarvis, who worked as a forensic scientist for the Georgia State Crime Laboratory for more than 30 years, said the GBI reports confirm for him that Teran fired at the troopers. Being inside the tent, Jarvis added, would have kept gunshot residue from getting on Teran’s hands from the patrolmen firing.

“I would be 100% convinced that he is the one who fired the shot,” said Jarvis, who owns Armuchee-based Arma Forensics and who has testified as an expert witness in hundreds of court cases involving firearms. “The physical evidence is very conclusive in that regard.”

Chris Robinson, who directed the Atlanta Police Department’s Crime Lab and who worked as a firearms examiner for the GBI, pointed to how the GBI report says more than five particles characteristic of gunshot primer residue were found on samples taken from Teran’s hands.

“More than five only leaves you one thing: He fired the gun just moments before he died,” said Robinson, who owns Sharpsburg-based Chris Robinson Forensics and who has testified as an expert witness in court cases involving firearms for 25 years. “He fired that shot. He hit the state trooper.”

The attorneys representing Teran’s family released a statement Tuesday, calling the GBI test results “inconclusive” and pointing out that the bureau’s report says it is possible for gunshot victims to have such residue on their hands.

“Manuel Paez Teran received gunshot wounds to both hands,” the attorneys’ statement says. “The report does not address this fact. It merely claims that the evidence ‘supports the possibility that the individual discharged a firearm.’”

Teran’s family also called on the GBI to release its “full investigative file, including witness statements and complete forensic tests.”

“Now that these new reports of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation have been released, there is no longer any legitimate reason for further delay in the release of the entire GBI investigative file,” the family’s attorney said.

Asked about the gunshot residue test results Monday, a GBI spokeswoman said in an email: “We’ve given the case to the special prosecutor, so we’re not making any further comments or releasing additional information until after it completes the judicial process.”
 
At Emory, students expressed concern about the approach to policing, the use of a site that was once Native American land and environmental damage posed by the development.

Bull fucking shit! Imagine any of these reasons being used in any other context.. (for something of a similar scale) Not only would people just laugh and move on, but the people making the claims would be ridiculed.
 
GBI: 3 charged with financial crimes connected to public safety training site
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (archive.ph)
By Jozsef Papp

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Credit: John Spink / John.Spink@ajc.com

Three people have been charged with fraud and money laundering in connection with funds raised to support opposition against Atlanta’s planned public safety training center, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

SWAT, uniform officers and crime scene investigators from the Atlanta Police Department executed a search warrant Wednesday morning at a home owned by Marlon Scott Kautz, 39, and Adele Maclean, 42, on Mayson Avenue. Known as the Teardown House, it is covered in art, and slogans such as “Cop Watch,” “No Cops,” and “Black Lives Matter.”

Kautz and Maclean — along with Savannah D. Patterson, 30, of Savannah — were each charged with single counts of money laundering and charity fraud for alleged actions taken as executives with the nonprofit Network for Strong Communities, which in turn support the nonprofit Defend the Atlanta Forest, “a group classified by the United States Department of Homeland Security as Domestic Violent Extremists,” according to arrest warrants.

According to Secretary of State records, Maclean serves as the CEO, Kautz as the CFO and Patterson as the secretary for Network for Strong Communities, which was formed in August 2020 and the principal office address is the home on Mayson Avenue. The three were booked at the DeKalb County Jail.

Arrest warrants obtained from the GBI show the most serious charge of money laundering allegedly involved $48,000, transferred from Network for Strong Communities to an organization identified as Siskiyou Mutual Aid “the day after NFSC was mentioned as a funding source (for protesters) during a court hearing.”

Siskiyou Mutual Aid then returned the money “appearing to launder the funds,” according to the affidavit.

The fraud allegations involve Kautz, Maclean and Patterson reimbursing themselves for various expenses from contributions made to the nonprofit, including $29 for a safe; $37 for building materials; $115 in camping gear; $228 for adding “jail support” phone lines; $436 for expenses related to a town hall meeting; and a total of 6,657 for a variety of items such as gasoline, forest clean-up materials, totes, COVID rapid tests and yard signs.

According to the arrest warrants, the Defend the Atlanta Forest group is responsible for numerous acts of violence surrounding the training center site, including vandalism, throwing Molotov cocktails at police and arson of public buildings and equipment.

Opponents of the training center said the three are part of the Atlanta Solidarity Fund, an organization founded in 2016 that provides monetary and legal support for those arrested during protests.

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Credit: John Spink

Gov. Brian Kemp issued a statement applauding the work by the GBI, APD and other state and local agencies in the arrests. Kemp said law enforcement has been working for months in arresting those involved in violence at the training site.

“Today, we’re proud to share that those who backed their illegal actions are also under arrest and will face justice,” Kemp said. “These criminals facilitated and encouraged domestic terrorism with no regard for others, watching as communities faced the destructive consequences of their actions.”

The arrests brought swift condemnation from opponents of the training center.

“This is targeting of organizers and movements by the police and the state,” Kamau Franklin, of Community Movement Builders, said in a statement. “Bail funds have been a part of organizing the Civil Rights movement and labor movement. We will continue to fight back against Cop City and the political arrest of our friends and comrades.”

In a statement, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said the arrests were “about the violence that occurred at the site of the future Atlanta Public Safety Training Center and elsewhere.”

“As we have said before, we will not rest until we have held accountable every person who has funded, organized or participated in this violence and intimidation,” Carr, whose agency is jointly prosecuting the case with the DeKalb County District Attorney’s Office, said in a statement.

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Credit: John Spink

The Southern Center for Human Rights said in a statement they plan to continue to support “the human dignity inherent in the right to political dissent.”

“It’s ironic that Atlanta, a city whose Civil Rights heroes turned to bail funds after their repeated arrests, now supports human rights violations by attacking a bail fund in its latest effort to manufacture consent for cop city,” the statement says. “If anything, these arrests and attendant prosecutions show the dangerous ways law enforcement can be wielded to weaponize political rhetoric and criminalize the very legacy of civil disobedience our city leadership exploits.”

State Reps. Ruwa Romman and Saira Draper expressed concern that the arrests set a bad precedent.

“Are we going to see attacks on abortion funds, on bail funds, other types of funds that provide resources for those attempting to navigate our increasingly expensive and complicated legal system?” Romman said to the AJC.


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https://twitter.com/SairaForGeorgia/status/1663961599109890074 (archive.ph)

In a tweet, State Senator Josh McLaurin, D-Atlanta, expressed similar concern.

“I am ... working to learn the specific basis for these charges,” McLaurin tweeted. “What we can’t tolerate is any use of the criminal legal system to disrupt or chill lawful protest. If that’s what’s happening, I’m going to be loud about it.”

Atlanta councilmember Liliana Bakhtiari, who has been an outspoken critic of the training center, said in a tweet: “Given the heightened state of tension throughout our community related to the Public Safety Training Center, this action deserves the utmost scrutiny and sensitivity as it moves through the legal process.”

The arrests come three months after 23 people were charged March 5 with domestic terrorism by the GBI for allegedly throwing large rocks, bricks, Molotov cocktails and fireworks at officers guarding the site. Most of those arrested have been granted bond. Two were denied bond last week.

A condition of bond for some of them include having no contact with the Defend the Atlanta Forest Movement.

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Credit: John Spink

At least seven others were arrested and charged with domestic terrorism in January.

The weighty domestic terrorism charges, which can carry sentences of up to 30 years in prison, are at least in part supported by each suspect’s alleged involvement with the Defend the Atlanta Forest organization.

During a protest after Georgia State Patrol troopers shot and killed Manuel “Tortuguita” Teran, Kautz warned the media and others not to accept the police version of Teran’s death and vowed his organization would “pursue a vigorous legal strategy and investigation of (Teran’s) killing.”

“I just want to urge people to not allow this repression to give you fear, and to keep doing what you’re doing,” Kautz said at the January protest.

During Mayor Andre Dickens’ State of the City address in March, Kautz was one of the activists who spoke in an adjacent conference room voicing concerns about the proposed training center. Kautz said they’ve witnessed law enforcement hindering the right to protest, be it in the forest or elsewhere.

Next week, the Atlanta City Council will vote on legislation to fund $30 million of the training center construction, plus an additional $1.2 million over 30 years to lease the center for training. Construction on the property is ongoing, with Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum expecting to move into the facility by December 2024.

The National Bail Fund Network, a coalition of 90 local community-based bail and bond funds that free people from local jails and immigration detention centers, is collecting donations for the Atlanta Solidarity Fund on a temporary basis. All funds raised will be used to support bail and legal defense funds of those being arrested and prosecuted in Atlanta, according to the organization.

“I strongly condemn this attack on Atlanta organizers upholding people’s basic right to dissent. Community bail funds have existed in different ways for as long as people have been arrested and prosecuted in this country,” Pilar Weiss, director of Community Justice Exchange and one of the founders of the National Bail Fund Network, said in a release. “Georgia’s Attorney General is going after these organizers as the ultimate political stunt.”

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https://twitter.com/GBI_GA/status/1663913131720966150 (archive.ph)

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https://twitter.com/GovKemp/status/1663943106859786240 (archive.ph)

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Police in Atlanta arrest 3 behind bail fund supporting protests against police training complex
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Jeff Amy and Kate Brumback
2023-05-31 19:51:47GMT

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This house in Atlanta's Edgewood neighborhood is where police arrested three key organizers who have been aiding protesters against the city's proposed public safety training center on May 31, 2023. (AP Photo/Kate Brumback)

ATLANTA (AP) — Police on Wednesday arrested three Atlanta organizers who have been aiding protesters against the city’s proposed police and fire training center, striking at the structure that supports the fight against what opponents derisively call “Cop City.”

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation announced its agents and Atlanta police had arrested three leaders of the Atlanta Solidarity Fund, which has bailed out protesters and helped them find lawyers.

Charged with money laundering and charity fraud are Marlon Scott Kautz, 39, of Atlanta; Savannah D. Patterson, 30, of Savannah; and Adele MacLean, 42, of Atlanta.

State investigators said they found evidence linking all three to financial crimes. Police executed warrants Wednesday morning at a house owned by Kautz and MacLean that is emblazoned with anti-police graffiti in an otherwise gentrified neighborhood east of downtown Atlanta.

Attorney Don Samuel, who is representing the three activists, said Wednesday afternoon that he had not yet seen the arrest warrants and was trying to determine the basis for the charges.

“I know what the crimes are that are alleged, but I don’t know exactly what the state’s alleging that these three people did or how they supposedly engaged in charity fraud,” he said.

Prosecutors said the three would likely make their initial appearances before a judge on Thursday.

MacLean, Kautz and Patterson are respectively the CEO, chief financial officer and secretary of the Network for Strong Communities, which was incorporated in 2020 and runs the Atlanta Solidarity Fund.

Lauren Regan, executive director of the Civil Liberties Defense Center, called the arrests an “extreme provocation” in a statement.

“Bailing out protestors who exercise their constitutionally protected rights is simply not a crime,” Regan said. “In fact, it is a historically grounded tradition in the very same social and political movements that the city of Atlanta prides itself on. Someone had to bail out civil rights activists in the 60’s — I think we can all agree that community support isn’t a crime,”

More than 40 people have been charged with domestic terrorism in connection with protests over the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, a cause that has garnered international attention since authorities clearing the protesters’ camp in South River Forest fatally shot an environmental activist in January. Officials say the officers fired in self-defense after the protester shot a trooper. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is investigating.

Kautz himself predicted in a February statement that investigators were trying to build a criminal case against protesters using Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations law.

That law allows prosecutors to bring charges against multiple people accused of committing separate crimes while working toward a common goal. RICO is a felony charge that carries stiff penalties: A prison term of five to 20 years; a fine of $25,000 or three times the amount of money gained from the criminal activity, whichever is greater; or both.

“This is targeting of organizers and movements by the police and the state,” Kamau Franklin of Community Movement Builders said in a statement “Bail funds have been a part of organizing the Civil Rights movement and labor movement. We will continue to fight back against cop city and the political arrest of our friends and comrades.”

In a statement issued after the arrests, Gov. Brian Kemp said the state would “track down every member of a criminal organization, from violent foot soldiers to their uncaring leaders.”

“These criminals facilitated and encouraged domestic terrorism with no regard for others, watching as communities faced the destructive consequences of their actions.” the Republican said. “Here in Georgia, we do not allow that to happen.”

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, also a Republican, pledged to “not rest until we have held accountable every person who has funded, organized, or participated in this violence and intimidation.”

Activists nationwide have joined the protest movement, arguing that the 85-acre (34-hectare) center would train officers to become more militarized and quell dissent, all while hundreds of trees are cut down, worsening flooding and climate change.

The Atlanta City Council approved the training center in 2021, saying a state-of-the-art campus would replace substandard offerings and boost police morale, which is beset by hiring and retention struggles in the wake of violent nationwide protests against police brutality and racial injustice in the summer of 2020.

The city is tasking the private Atlanta Police Foundation with building the complex, promising to pay $67 million over time. The remainder of the $90 million complex would come from private funds. Foundation work is ongoing, with the complex projected to be completed in 2024. —-

An earlier version of this story was corrected to show the spelling of one arrestee’s last name is Adele MacLean, not Maclean.
 
Feds: No ‘violent extremist’ label on Defend the Atlanta Forest group
Atlanta Journal-Constitution (archive.ph)
By Tia Mitchell
2023-06-07 20:09:59GMT

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Credit: Jason Getz/AJC

WASHINGTON — Charges of domestic terrorism against activists connected to protests of Atlanta’s proposed public safety training facility have repeatedly been justified by a U.S. Department of Homeland Security designation that does not exist.

Arrest warrants for dozens of people affiliated with the Defend the Atlanta Forest group, and three individuals who operate a charity that provided bail money for protestors, all has similar language tying the movement to extremist behavior. The three individuals arrested last week had their home raided by a SWAT team and are charged with financial crimes.

Each of their arrest warrants had a sentence tying their charity to extremism, saying it raised money to “fund in part the actions of Defend the Atlanta Forest, a group classified by the United States Department of Homeland Security as Domestic Violent Extremists.”

But Homeland Security officials have said that is not the case.

The agency has released national terrorism alert bulletins that described some of the protests of the Atlanta facility as exhibiting the characteristics of domestic violent extremists, but no individuals or organizations are named.

“The Department of Homeland Security does not classify or designate any groups as domestic violent extremists,” a spokesman said in a statement shared with The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

The FBI, which tracks domestic terrorism threats nationwide, also said it “does not and cannot designate domestic terrorist organizations.” In a statement to the AJC, the FBI cautions against using group affiliations to condemn individuals’ behavior.

“It’s also important to note that membership in groups that espouse domestic extremist ideology is not illegal in and of itself,” the FBI statement said. “Membership in a group alone is not sufficient basis for a domestic terrorism investigation.”

The Georgia Bureau of Investigations said it is standing by the “domestic violent extremists” justifications used in the arrest warrants.

“Although DHS reports that they do not classify or designate any groups as domestic violent extremists, the description provided by DHS for a domestic violent extremist does in fact describe the behavior of the individuals of the group in question which is being investigated by the GBI multi-agency task force,” GBI spokeswoman Nelly Miles said.

DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston, who has assisted the GBI in its investigation, deferred questions to the GBI.

Gov. Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr, who have both condemned violence at the protests and pledged to crack down it, both released statements that did not directly respond to questions about why arrest warrants by Georgia officials misinterprets or exaggerates what Homeland Security said.

“Our office will continue to defend the First Amendment right to peacefully protest,” Carr said. “However, we will not tolerate acts of violence to person or property.”

Kemp in his statement referenced acts of violence that have been tied to the protests.

“Members of this militant group have committed acts of violence and significant damage to property with Molotov cocktails and other weapons designed to injure law enforcement,” Kemp said. “That will not be allowed to stand in Georgia.”

U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock on Wednesday asked Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas to weigh in on whether Defend the Atlanta Forest should be described as a known “domestic violent extremist” group.

“I am seeking clarification about whether DHS has designated any group in Georgia as a DVE, and if not, I request that DHS share this policy clarification with any relevant state and local law enforcement partners,” Warnock said in a letter to Mayorkas.

The Atlanta Democrat also asks Mayorkas to provide guidance to state and local law enforcement agencies on how to address threats of violent extremism without infringing on rights to assemble and protest.

“The First Amendment protects the freedom of speech and the freedom of peaceful association,” Warnock wrote. “Consistent with these principles, I am concerned by any misunderstandings regarding a federal DVE designation and seek clarification for the public and our valued law enforcement partners.”
 
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More than 60 Atlanta training center activists named in RICO Indictment
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (archive.ph)
By Jozsef Papp and Shaddi Abusaid
2023-09-05 21:16:15GMT

More than five dozen activists were indicted on RICO charges last week over the ongoing efforts to halt construction of the city of Atlanta’s planned public safety training center in DeKalb County.

The sweeping indictment, filed in Fulton County, is being prosecuted by the Georgia Attorney General’s Office.

A total of 61 protesters have been 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.

“Our job is to enforce the laws of this state. As you can tell in this indictment, this is about violent acts plain and simple,” Attorney General Chris Carr said in a press conference announcing the indictment.

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.

At least six pages of the indictment are used to define “anarchist” in the group’s context.

“As the indictment asserts, members of Defend the Atlanta Forest subscribe to a philosophy of anarchy. They hold a core belief that society should abolish police, government and private business and as further alleged, they’re willing to bring about such changes ‘by any means necessary,’” Carr said.

Prosecutors alleged the Defend the Atlanta Forest movement began in 2020 after the police killings of George Floyd by Minneapolis Police Officers and Rayshard Brooks by Atlanta Police in a Wendy’s Parking lot, which took place months before the training center was announced.

The Cop City Vote Coalition, a group of organizers trying to force a public vote on the training center, released a statement condemning the indictments and accusing Carr of seeking to “intimidate protesters, legal observers, and bail funds alike, and send the chilling message that any dissent to Cop City will be punished with the full power and violence of the government.”

“We will not be intimidated by power-hungry strongmen, whether in City Hall or the Attorney General’s office,” the statement says. “Chris Carr may try to use his prosecutors and power to build his gubernatorial campaign and silence free speech, but his threats will not silence our commitment to standing up for our future, our community, and our city.”

A total of 225 “overt acts” are cited in the indictment — starting with two defendants throwing objects and a Molotov cocktail at the Georgia State Patrol headquarters on July 5, 2020 and ending with incidents that occurred two weeks ago.

Most of the acts mentioned in the indictment involved Marlon Kautz, Adele Maclean and Savannah Patterson transferring money from the Network for Strong Communities to allegedly reimburse and fund those occupying the forest. The three are also accused of being involved, along with unindicted co-conspirators, with threatening and promoting violence and property damage towards companies involved in the construction of the training center.

“While the Network for Strong Communities portrays itself as a legitimate charitable social justice organization, we contend that this group is operating several bank accounts, commingling funds from various causes and raising money to establish and maintain the autonomous zone within the forest,” Carr said.

Most of the monetary transfers cited in the indictment are for nominal amounts of less than $100.

One defendant “received $15.18 in reimbursement from Network for Strong Communities for goods to further living in the forest,” the indictment says. That language is repeated dozens of times.

All three are also accused of posting multiple times on the Scenes from the Atlanta Forest website, which is cited as part of the alleged conspiracy to stop construction. The website is used by opponents of the training facility to claim responsibility for attacks and destruction of property.

The Southern Center For Human Rights issued a statement Tuesday saying they are working to find lawyers for those indicted who do not have counsel.

“We are urgently seeking licensed Georgia attorneys available to represent community members and fulfill our mission to protect the right to dissent,” the statement says.

The five defendants charged with domestic terrorism — Nadja Geier, Madeleine Feola, Emily Murphy, Francis Carroll and Ivan Ferguson — are accused of attempting to “destroy and disable critical infrastructure” by committing arson and setting ablaze Atlanta Police vehicles, a bank and the 191 Peachtree Tower, where the Atlanta Police Foundation is located.

There have been numerous acts of violence and arrests over the past year and half at the training center site.

Arrests date back to July 2020, where Andrew Carlisle was arrested for allegedly vandalizing the GSP headquarters. In May 2022, protesters were taken into custody at the training center site and accused of throwing Molotov cocktails towards officers and causing a small fire as police officers tried to clear the site.

In December, five protesters were charged with domestic terrorism and other offenses after officials alleged they “threw rocks at police cars and attacked EMTs outside the neighboring fire stations with rocks and bottles.”

Protests turned violent in Downtown Atlanta in January, when protesters set a police car on fire and broke businesses windows. Five people were arrested that night and are the only co-defendants in the recent indictment that face charges of domestic terrorism and arson in the first degree, in addition to the RICO charge.

The January protest was in response to the death of Manuel “Tortugita” Teran, who was shot and killed by Georgia State Patrol troopers during a “clearing operation” on Jan. 18. Officials allege Teran shot at officers first, wounding a trooper. The GBI turned over the case file to the Mountain Circuit District Attorney’s Office in April.

The bulk of the defendants named in the indictment are protesters arrested on March 5 at the training center site. Twenty-three protesters were arrested and charged with domestic terrorism after allegedly throwing large rocks, bricks, Molotov cocktails and fireworks at police officers. All 23 only face one count of RICO in the indictment.

Three people accused of handing out flyers in April identifying one of the troopers involved in Teran’s death were also indicted. The flyers were distributed in Bartow County, which is the area where the trooper is believe to live, according to The Intercept.

The indictment also names bail fund organizers, Kautz, Maclean and Patterson, who were arrested in May 2023 during a raid at a home on Mayson Avenue for alleged actions taken as executives with the nonprofit Network for Strong Communities, which supported the nonprofit Defend the Atlanta Forest. All three face one count of RICO and 15 counts of money laundering in the indictment.

In June, DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston announced that she would withdraw her office from prosecuting cases relating to the training center, citing differences in “prosecutorial philosophy” with the AG’s Office.

Deputy Attorney General of the AG’s Prosecution Division John Fowler said they decided to present the case to a Fulton County grand jury because the state’s RICO law allows them to do so based on the location that any of the alleged acts took place. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution was able to confirm that the grand jury that indicted former President Donald Trump and his allies on RICO charges also was involved in this case.

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.

Carr declined to comment on whether they expect to try the 61 defendants together.

Fulton Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee was originally assigned to the case but an order of recusal was filed by McAfee on Tuesday. According to the order, McAfee regularly collaborated with the Prosecution Division of the Attorney General’s Office during his time at the Georgia Office of the Inspector General, and discussed aspects of the investigation that led to the indictment.

The case has been reassigned to Fulton County Superior Court Judge Kimberly Adams.


https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/23936410/23sc189192-criminal-indictment.pdf (archive.org)

edit: from the indictment
An extremist anarchist website known as the "Scenes Blog" raises money for the Network for Strong Communities and promotes violent anarchy. The Scenes Blog is a website that claims responsibility for violence and property damage done in furtherance of the movement to stop the building of the Training Center. The site advocates and calls for additional violence against government and corporations, encourages violence ahead of government meetings, posts personal information and photographs of law enforcement, court officials, and private citizens and calls upon anarchists to visit these individuals and engage in intimidation, property damage, and violence. The site is tied to the Defend the Atlanta Forest movement in many ways, including raising money for the Network for Strong Communities, acknowledging that it is based in Atlanta, and centering itself around the "Stop Cop City" movement. Most tellingly, in a posted extremist video, Defend the Atlanta Forest acknowledges that it operates the Scenes Blog.
 
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Far be it from me to defend commie shitheads, but this absolutely seems like the government using the criminal justice system to enact revenge.

Since when does the GBI give a shit about $6k worth of "charity fraud", spread out over 3 people?

It seems like this state just railroads the shit out of anyone it doesn't like, whether that's Trump or trANTIFA.
 
ANTIFA are way overdue for their own version of Night of the Long Knives.

This is what they get for being useful idiots to the Dems. Forgive me if I’m not crying over the tranny shitheads with nothing to lose but their own lives.

If they want to do a real protest, they should just set themselves on fire for our entertainment. That’s what the anti-Vietnam war protestors did, it was pretty rad and hardcore.
 
This turn gets nothing but an "oh well" as i've got very little fucks to gave with so many other cases of fucks needing to be given. (usually as a result of the same types of stupid fucks getting fucked here now... just like we warned them)

Personally this all seems like a ridiculous way to get around doing what really needs to be done. Go in, tell them to get off of the land and drag them to prison if they refuse.. bust some heads if they violently resist.
 
Far be it from me to defend commie shitheads, but this absolutely seems like the government using the criminal justice system to enact revenge.

Since when does the GBI give a shit about $6k worth of "charity fraud", spread out over 3 people?

It seems like this state just railroads the shit out of anyone it doesn't like, whether that's Trump or trANTIFA.
Those three people are bankrolling an army of violent anarchists though. Charity fraud is just the means with which they do so.
 
No charges will be filed in shooting of Atlanta training center protester
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (archive.ph)
By Alexis Stevens
2023-10-06 14:03:08GMT

scc01.jpg
The handgun the GBI said was in Manuel Teran’s possession is described as a Smith & Wesson M&P Shield 9mm. Credit: GBI

No criminal charges will be filed against the Georgia State Patrol troopers involved in the fatal shooting of a protester at the site of Atlanta’s planned public safety training center, a district attorney said Friday.

Manuel Teran, 26, was killed in January during a “clearing operation” on the wooded property in southern DeKalb after first firing shots at troopers, according to investigators.

“The use of lethal (deadly) force by the Georgia State Patrol was objectively reasonable under the circumstances of this case,” George Christian, DA pro tempore for the Stone Mountain Judicial Circuit, said in a statement. “No criminal charges will be brought against the Georgia State Patrol Troopers involved in the shooting of Manual Paez Teran.”

Teran’s family wants the state to release all evidence to allow an independent investigation; Christian said those records won’t be released until the case has been closed.

“If there is nothing to hide, then show us the evidence,” attorney Jeff Filipovits, who represents the family, said in a statement. “We were told that once the DA’s report was released, the GBI would release all of the underlying evidence. But now, the District Attorney has stated that his office will not produce the underlying evidence.”

Teran’s mother, Belkis Teran, also released a statement.

“We have waited eight months for the truth,” she said. “We are in pain. We want to hear the interviews. We want our experts to review the lab tests. We want our questions answered. This report does not answer our questions. How long must we wait?”

On the morning of Jan. 18, troopers began clearing the forest when they encountered dozens of tents, one of which belonged to Teran, according to investigators. Teran was inside and briefly spoke to officers but refused to leave.

“No, I want you to leave,” Teran said, according to a 31-page report released by Christian.

Troopers then fired pepper balls inside the enclosure in an attempt to drive Teran out and make an arrest for criminal trespassing. Teran fired four shots from the tent, seriously injuring a trooper. Other troopers then returned fire, the GBI has said.

Six troopers were involved in the incident and all were dressed in green with patches indicating “police” and “SWAT” affiliation, according to investigators. The troopers told investigators they feared for their lives, as well as those of their colleagues, the report states. They also feared Teran had released an improvised explosive device or IED.

When a trooper was hit by gunfire, he dropped to a knee and fired back, the report states. He tried to then walk away from the area, but then collapsed and was treated at the scene before being taken to Grady Memorial Hospital. The injured trooper underwent emergency surgery to remove a bullet lodged near his spine, according to investigators.

After the shootings, the GBI also said that ballistics testing showed the gun found at the scene of Teran’s death fired the bullet that struck the trooper. A GBI spokeswoman said the agency confirmed via transaction records that Teran legally purchased the Smith & Wesson in question in September 2020.

In a statement after his death, Teran’s mother said he was an environmental activist.

“Manny was a kind person who helped anyone who needed it. He was a pacifist,” Belkis Teran said in a statement at the time. “They say he shot a police officer. I do not believe it. I do not understand why they will not even privately explain to us what happened to our child.”

There is no body camera footage of the shooting, as state troopers are generally not equipped with cameras. Several other agencies were involved in the operation, including the Atlanta Police Department, which released a set of four videos in February.

An autopsy commissioned by the family showed Teran had raised hands when he was shot, the family’s attorney said. The DeKalb County Medical Examiner’s Office also conducted an autopsy.

In April, that report was released and stated that gunshot residue was “not seen” on the hands of Teran. His body had at least 57 gunshot wounds, which included entrance and exit wounds, as well as re-entry and re-exit, the report stated.

In June, DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston announced that she had withdrawn her office from prosecuting cases relating to the public safety training center. Christian, who serves as the DA in the north Georgia counties of Habersham, Rabun and Stephens, was assigned to the investigation.

On Friday, activists opposed to the training center released a statement blasting the decision and saying Teran’s “memory and the memories of all those stolen by police killings demand that we all continue the collective struggle for a future without state violence.”
 
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