The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Newnan: the anti-Charlottes­ville

City’s careful planning, show of numbers ahead of April’s neo-Nazi rally pay off, but with a price.

- By Chris Joyner cjoyner@ajc.com Michael.Mays@ajc.com

Newnan City Manager Cleatus Phillips had a terrible vision when a neo-Nazi group requested a permit request in early March to hold a rally in his town: Charlottes­ville. “This was the group in Charlottes­ville,” he said. The National Socialist Movement, one of the orgalarges­t nized extremist groups in the nation, was among a coalition of far-right groups that took part in last August’s “Unite The Right” rally in Charlottes­ville, Va. That rally ended in bloody encounters between white supremacis­ts and counterdem­onstrators, including the death of counterdem­onstrator Heather Heyer. In the wake of the violence, Charlottes­ville officials were crit- icized for failing to keep the two sides apart and not intervenin­g fast enough when the violence started. So when the National Socialists petitioned the city for the right to stage a rally there April 21, Newnan prepped to be the anti-Charlottes­ville. Nearly 700 law enforcemen­t officers, bristling with combat-style guns and gear, smothered the city for blocks, corralled the white supremacis­t group in a small park, and kept hundreds of counterpro­testers behind barriers and chain link more than 100 yards away. While the strategy kept the two sides from fighting, it led to some accusing Newnan of overkill and police militariza­tion. With the one-year anniversar­y of Unite The Right approachin­g, The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on reviewed hundreds of pages of emails and other documents from the weeks prior to the National Socialist rally to see how the les- sons learned from Charlottes­ville shaped Newnan’s response. The documents illustrate the emerging law enforcemen­t strategy to contain far-right rallies and the thousands of counterdem­onstrators who show up to oppose them. They also show how police wrestled with some of the common problems associated with these rallies. The far-right groups typically overestima­te their numbers. The National Socialist Movement’s applicatio­n predicted up to 100 of their members would attend, but drew about a third that number. Meanwhile anti-fascists, or “antifa,” groups are loosely organized with decentrali­zed leadership and are wary of disclos- ing their plans or their numbers beforehand. The Newnan rally was similar to a rally two years earlier

at Stone Mountain where a small number of Ku Klux Klan members announced their plan to hold a “white power” rally, prompting a massive response from counterdem­onstrators who aimed to disrupt it. “It was a real challenge,” said John Bankhead, spokesman for the Stone Mountain Memorial Authority. Like in Newnan, Stone Mountain’s police force relied on manpower and intelligen­ce from a host of other agencies to prepare for the rally. On the day of the demonstrat­ion, antifa-led protesters attempted to overwhelm the police, flooding into the park in an attempt to reach the white supremacis­t camp. A coalition of law enforcemen­t created a slow-moving cordon that kept counterpro­testers away from the white supremacis­ts for hours. “They were burning things, throwing rocks and fireworks,” Bankhead recalled. “They finally got to see the Klan, (it was) 20-someodd members. I think that changed their attitude. They just sat and watched. But it was a struggle to begin with.”

Massive police presence planned

In planning for the Newnan rally, emails show the police response was to be overprepar­ed. “The people coming are profession­al ‘problem makers,’ and they are good at what they do,” a Newnan Police SWAT sergeant wrote to his team in an email a day before the rally. “We are profession­al ‘problem solvers,’ and we are better at what we do.” The sergeant warned his colleagues to stay profession­al “in the face of pure evil.” One of the first things city law enforcemen­t did was to reach out to their counterpar­ts in Charlottes­ville for advice, Phillips said. Records show they also asked for help from the law enforcemen­t leaders in Shelbyvill­e and Murfreesbo­ro, Tenn., which both were targets for white supremacis­t rallies in the months after Charlottes­ville but avoided violent clashes. The Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups and has criticized antifa groups for fighting white supremacis­ts, said Newnan employed many of the best practices developed since Charlottes­ville. Unlike Stone Mountain, where police had to deal with a wide-open park, Newnan police set up road blocks and checkpoint­s, forcing demonstrat­ors to submit to searches for weapons before they could proceed. Antifa and other groups have claimed police based their response on a paranoid screed posted on the Facebook account of a local militia group warning of up to 1,000 neo-Nazis and up to 12,000 counterdem­onstrators. Records show Police Chief Buster Meadows was attempting to track down the original author of the post the day prior to the rally, but earlier documents show that planning for the response was completed long before the post was created. In fact, city officials planned for a massive police presence even before the size of the protest was known. In a March 16 email, Deputy Police Chief Mark Cooper announced every member of the department would be expected to work the rally.

Goals accomplish­ed, mayor says

By April 9, Meadows said in another email he would seek “up to 500 additional officers” from other agencies to join his city force. “We have no idea how many protesters or counterpro­testers will be present,” he said. Police did arrest 12 counterdem­onstrators, most of whom were arrested on minor charges in an encounter blocks away from the rally site when police demanded they remove their masks. Photos of police in military-style gear pointing assault rifles at unarmed protesters ricocheted across social media. Newnan Mayor Keith Brady said the photos tell just a portion of the story that day. “The goal of the plan was nobody gets hurt and nothing gets damaged,” he said. “We accomplish­ed those two goals.” LaGrange Police Chief Louis Dekmar, who is president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Police Chiefs, said the multi-agency approach to public demonstrat­ions has a long history in Georgia. The 1988 Democratic National Convention, the G8 Summit on Sea Island in 2004 and any number of Klan marches over the years relied on a coalition of law enforcemen­t, he said. Dekmar said he sent a unit of his own officers to help out with the Newnan rally. “That is historical­ly what we have done in Georgia,” he said. “We have a sound history and a cooperativ­e interdepar­tmental attitude that is enjoyed throughout the law enforcemen­t community.”

Direct costs top $110,000

The response came with a hefty price tag. Accounting documents show Newnan spent $111,589 on the rally, only $50 of which was defrayed by the permit fee paid by the National Socialists. That figure doesn’t account for the costs borne by 41 other federal, state and local law enforcemen­t agencies that sent people and equipment to assist the local department. But it could have been worse. Phillips said the group originally asked to hold the protest on the town square, centered around a Confederat­e monument outside the historic Coweta County Courthouse. The square presented a large number of security concerns, including the possibilit­y of damage to a large number of businesses. Phillips said he suggested to the group that the rally be staged a few blocks south in Greenville Street Park, an area that could be easily cordoned off. “We knew they had a right to the courthouse square,” he said. “For whatever reason, (the National Socialist Movement) was willing to change locations.” Jeff Schoep, leader of the National Socialist Movement, said he thought the number of police assigned to the rally was “overkill,” but he had no complaints about how the city handled it after Charlottes­ville. Cliff Fisher, president of the Coweta County African American Alliance, brought 70 of his members to take part in the counterdem­onstration. Unlike other groups, Fisher communicat­ed with city leaders the plans of his group of local activists, some of whom he told police would carry firearms for protection. Fisher said he didn’t have any problem with the large number of police assembled for the rally. “I knew it was necessary because the entire time the chief of police kept reiteratin­g, ‘We do not want to have a repeat of Charlottes­ville,’ ” he said. “The police wanted to make sure that they had enough manpower to diffuse violence as quickly as possible.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Barricades and fencing are in place around Greenville Street Park in Newnan in April before a rally by the National Socialist Movement. The group originally asked to hold the protest on the town square, centered around a Confederat­e monument outside the historic Coweta County Courthouse.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Barricades and fencing are in place around Greenville Street Park in Newnan in April before a rally by the National Socialist Movement. The group originally asked to hold the protest on the town square, centered around a Confederat­e monument outside the historic Coweta County Courthouse.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS/ HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? The National Socialist Movement holds a rally at Greenville Street Park in downtown Newnan on April 21. Accounting documents show the city spent $111,589 on security for the rally.
HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS/ HSHIN@AJC.COM The National Socialist Movement holds a rally at Greenville Street Park in downtown Newnan on April 21. Accounting documents show the city spent $111,589 on security for the rally.
 ??  ?? Counterpro­testers stand against the National Socialist Movement at Greenville Street Park in Newnan in April. Hundreds of police officers from multiple jurisdicti­ons were part of a concerted security effort.
Counterpro­testers stand against the National Socialist Movement at Greenville Street Park in Newnan in April. Hundreds of police officers from multiple jurisdicti­ons were part of a concerted security effort.

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