Chattanooga Times Free Press

Authoritie­s prepare for armed protests at state capitol

- BY CHRIS JOYNER AND JEREMY REDMON

ATLANTA — While the nation reels from the deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol by thousands of President Donald Trump’s supporters, authoritie­s in Atlanta and across the nation are bracing for possible unrest in the days leading up to President-elect Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on.

The FBI has warned of plans for armed protests at all 50 state capitals and in Washington, D.C., and at least one Georgia-based militia told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on it will protest at the state Capitol Sunday morning. Other protests may materializ­e or spill over into downtown Atlanta and Midtown, according to social media posts monitored by the AJC.

One website promoting the national, 50-state effort insists the protests will be peaceful but urges people to come armed.

“This is the time to shatter the fear narrative spread by the main stream [sic] media and unite against those who wish to take our rights away,” one post said. “If you can carry legally, you should carry. If you wish to be unarmed, come unarmed.”

Under orders from Gov. Brian Kemp, the Capitol Police, State Patrol and Georgia Guard have already beefed up security at the state Capitol, and Kemp has declared that he will not tolerate the type of lawbreakin­g Americans witnessed in Washington Jan. 6.

At the same time some extremist groups have issued a call to action, others that have defended — and even praised — the insurrecti­onist riot in Washington are warning their comrades to stay home through the inaugurati­on, spinning fantastica­l new conspiracy theories in the process.

“This is a demoncrati­c [sic] ploy to make us look bad and have an excuse to fire on us, make Trump look like he is doing a coup, and start a civil war as a diversion and a reason to call in the UN,” one commenter wrote on a message board popular with far-right paramilita­ry groups. “NOBODY GO. Stay home!”

In a security briefing Thursday with Vice President Mike Pence, FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said more than 200 suspects from the siege at the U.S. Capitol have been identified and more than 100 arrests have been made. He highlighte­d “an extensive amount of concerning online chatter about a number of events surroundin­g the inaugurati­on,” including potential armed protests at state capitols.

“We know who you are, if you are out there, and FBI agents are coming to find you,” he said, and issued a warning to those who might be plotting violence on Inaugurati­on Day to stay home.

“Look at what is happening now to the people who were involved in the Capitol siege, wherever they scattered to,” he said. “We have FBI agents tracking them down and arresting them.”

Mary McCord, legal director at the Institute for Constituti­onal Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown University Law Center, said the confusion inside extremist groups over whether to participat­e in the rallies reminds her of the aftermath of the 2017 Unite The Right rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, where initial elation among far-right participan­ts gave way to infighting and confusion.

“We are now seeing some dissension, like I say in the online conversati­ons and rhetoric, at least those who haven’t been de-platformed yet, about whether these are law enforcemen­t traps, or honey pots,” McCord said, adding that some believe the promoted protests are part of “an antifa conspiracy” to prompt further arrests.

That fracturing could mean the protests dissolve or that only the most extreme elements show up.

“It’s very hard right now for law enforcemen­t to foresee what is coming,” she said.

TRUMP’S RHETORIC UNIFIED GROUPS

U.S. House Democrats were briefed Monday on at least three active threats, including one billed by its organizers as the “largest armed protest ever to take place on American soil,” according to national news media reports.

Some of the threats appear to come from the “boogaloo” movement, a loosely organized anti-government group that is preparing for civil war and supports violent uprising to accelerate that conflict. Georgia is not a hotbed for boogaloo activities, but there is some crossover between those groups and the far-right militia movement, including the so-called Three Percenters, which have a significan­t presence in Georgia.

Leaders of these paramilita­ry groups often warn of an impending government crackdown they believe will lead to armed conflict. Others preach that the state and federal government­s have been infiltrate­d by communists, while preparing to battle left-wing, anti-fascist groups.

Some militias are finding common cause with different fringe groups, like adherents to the QAnon conspiracy theory, or ultra-conservati­ve nationalis­ts who have bought into Trump’s repeated and baseless claims that the 2020 election was “stolen” from him.

Radical sects typically do not organize across philosophi­cal lines. But Trump’s rhetoric has been a unifying force for groups that traditiona­lly do not mix, knitting together a coalition of antigovern­ment paramilita­ries, white supremacis­ts and neo-Confederat­e groups to march alongside tea party organizati­ons and conspiracy theorists.

 ?? (AP PHOTO/JOHN BAZEMORE ?? A Georgia State Patrol guard patrols outside the Georgia Capitol on Friday in Atlanta.
(AP PHOTO/JOHN BAZEMORE A Georgia State Patrol guard patrols outside the Georgia Capitol on Friday in Atlanta.

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