The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
AGENCY DENIES KKK PERMIT TO BURN CROSS
Association denies permit request for KKK cross-burning.
The Stone Mountain Memorial Association has denied a Ku Klux Klan request to burn a cross at the park, citing trouble at a “pro-white” rally last year.
Joey Hobbs, a Dublin man with the Sacred Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, wanted to hold a “lighting” ceremony Oct. 21 with 20 participants, according to the application. This would have been to commemorate the KKK’s 1915 revival, which began on the evening of Thanksgiving with a flaming cross atop Stone Mountain.
“We will light our cross and 20 minutes later we will be gone,” wrote Hobbs, who couldn’t be reached for comment Wednesday, in an application dated May 26. It wasn’t clear if Hobbs holds a formal position with the group.
“We don’t want any of these groups at the park, quite frankly,” John Bankhead, spokesman for the association said Wednesday, referring to white supremacist groups. “This is a family-oriented park.”
But since it’s a public park, the association created a permit process to consider each application individually.
In a statement, the memorial group, which oversees the park, said it “condemns the beliefs and actions of the Ku Klux Klan and believes the denial of this Public Assembly request is in the best interest of all parties.”
Writing to deny Hobbs, CEO Bill Stephens cited the trouble at the “Rock Stone Mountain” rally of April 23, 2016. The park had to close that day as white power revelers including KKK members clashed with counterprotesters.
Stephens said an event like Hobbs’ would require more public safety resources than the park police could provide.
The cross-burning also would have also been an act of intimidation, Bankhead said. “I think anybody who knows about cross burning knows why it’s used,” he said, recalling the KKK’s record of setting crosses on fire to intimidate African-Americans. “We’re just not going to allow that.”
Georgia’s terroristic threats and acts statute bars the practice when it’s done with the intent to “terrorize.” The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2003 that states can ban cross-burning, though it warned that the intent to intimidate must be proven.
Whatever Hobbs’ intent, the Stone Mountain Memorial Association CEO said the requested event would violate its rules against disruptions to the park and actions that present a “clear and present danger.”