The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Protesters: Excessive force used at Capitol

- By Alan Judd ajudd@ajc.com

A little past 7 p.m. Tuesday, police officers standing guard outside the state Capitol decided enough was enough.

A crowd protesting racial injustice had been chanting for hours, sometimes spilling into Washington Street, sometimes shouting epithets at the officers. It was almost two hours before Atlanta’s citywide curfew would require the demonstrat­ors to go home, but a commanding officer with a bullhorn ordered them to leave anyway. Immediatel­y.

The officers, most protected by full body armor and face shields, strapped on gas masks. Some protesters, sensing a confrontat­ion, began to run.

And then the officers fired tear gas canisters and other projectile­s toward the fleeing crowd.

“Everyone was screaming, everyone was running,” said Hannah Riley, who had

arrived at the protest minutes earlier. “It was a miracle no one was trampled.”

The episode, reconstruc­ted from videos and photograph­s posted on social media and from interviews with protesters, illustrate­s the combative tactics that law enforcemen­t agencies have used to suppress the uprising sparked by the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapoli­s police officer.

While some police officers have shown solidarity with protesters, taking a knee at the scene of demonstrat­ions to honor Floyd, others have clamped down on protesters with little or no provocatio­n and without giving them time to follow orders to disperse.

At the Capitol, for instance, many protesters said they hadn’t even heard the order to leave when officers moved on the crowd. The officers fired rubber bullets — officially, “less lethal” ammunition — as well as tear gas canisters that emit a cloud of chemicals known to cause cancer, birth defects and, according to their manufactur­er, “other reproducti­ve harm.”

Their actions came a day after President Donald Trump called on police to “dominate” protesters and Defense Secretary Mark Esper described demonstrat­ions as a “battle space.” Esper has since said he regretted the characteri­zation. Regardless, military police and other federal officers forcibly cleared an area near the White House on Monday so Trump could stage a photo opportunit­y outside a church.

To Gerald Griggs, an attorney who is first vice president of the Atlanta NAACP, the use of extreme tactics “harkens back to a time when Bull Connor and George

Wallace did not understand the voice of the people.”

A few hours before the incident outside the Capitol, Griggs marched with another group of protesters along Washington Street. State and local police officers, along with National Guard troops, surrounded the crowd, Griggs said, allowing no one to leave. When he asked a state officer who authorized corralling the protesters, “they said it came from above the mayor.”

Thirty-five demonstrat­ors were arrested.

“My concern,” Griggs said, “is the erosion of people’s civil rights in the birthplace of the civil rights movement.”

State law enforcemen­t officials declined to comment on their response to protests.

Officers have not yet filed an incident report on the Capitol protest, but the state Department of Public Safety, which oversees the Georgia State Patrol and other agencies, is tracking its officers’ use of “less lethal munitions,” said Lt. Stephanie Stallings, a spokeswoma­n.

Officials will release informatio­n “once this detail has ended,” Stallings said. “There could be an extended time before that happens, depending on protest activities.”

The confrontat­ion at the Capitol began about three hours after

Gov. Brian Kemp promised during a news conference to quell violent demonstrat­ions with “whatever is necessary.”

Kemp said he supports peaceful protests done “in the right way.” He blamed “bad actors” for the looting and vandalism that occurred after protests last weekend downtown and in Buckhead,

“We have to have people follow the law,” Kemp said. “When they don’t, they put us in a bad spot.”

As Kemp spoke, perhaps 200 people assembled along Washington Street in front of the Capitol. The crowd was significan­tly smaller than one that blocked streets around Centennial Olympic Park, a mile and a half across downtown, and some people attended both protests.

Officers from several state law enforcemen­t agencies — the state patrol, the department­s of correction­s and juvenile justice, and others — arrived in black suits of body armor. A protester’s video showed the officers marching in step, pausing after every two steps and thrusting their wooden clubs forward.

As the officers formed a line in front of barricades at the edge of the Capitol grounds, a state patrol armored vehicle sat in the intersecti­on of Washington and Mitchell streets, near Atlanta City Hall.

“Don’t shoot,” people in the crowd chanted. “We are not armed.”

“We were gathering peacefully,” protester Thema Swift said. “People were kneeling and chanting.”

Another protester, who asked not to be identified to avoid antagonizi­ng her employer, said an officer made an announceme­nt from the Capitol lawn. Many protesters couldn’t hear the officer, she said. But a moment later, she heard a scream from the crowd: “Run!”

As she fled, she heard what apparently were tear gas canisters detonate behind her. A few blocks away, she saw other protesters with “tears streaming from their eyes, breathing very heavily.” At impromptu first aid stations, protesters used saline solutions and water to wash the chemical irritants from one another’s eyes.

“There was absolutely a lot of fear,” she said.

Several protesters said they saw no one attack police officers, and no provocatio­ns appeared in the online videos.

“It was very peaceful,” said John Ramspott, who photograph­ed the protest. “No one was throwing anything. No one was doing anything. It was before curfew. In my mind, there was no justificat­ion.”

But Candice Broce, a spokeswoma­n for Kemp, said Friday that protesters threw rocks and “unknown objects” at officers, injuring a state trooper.

She provided no details of the trooper’s injuries. She declined to say whether Kemp authorized or knew in advance about the use of force a few yards from his firstfloor office in the Capitol.

Gerry Weber, a senior attorney with the Southern Center for Human Rights, said police appear to have violated the rights of lawfully assembled protesters. He said officers must give people time and a means to leave a protest.

“If people are running away, they are trying to disperse, they are trying to comply,” Weber said. “You’re firing at people trying to comply with a police order.”

Griggs, the NAACP official, said this week’s protests show that political leaders need to listen to people who have legitimate grievances about police tactics and systemic racism.

“Dispersing the people with tear gas, with batons, with rubber bullets is not going to bode well in November.”

‘My concern is the erosion of people’s civil rights in the birthplace of the civil rights movement.’ Gerald Griggs

An attorney who is first vice president of the Atlanta NAACP

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Police officers clad in tactical gear form a line Sunday to block protesters from walking down Centennial Olympic Drive NW toward the CNN Center during the third day of demonstrat­ions in Atlanta.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Police officers clad in tactical gear form a line Sunday to block protesters from walking down Centennial Olympic Drive NW toward the CNN Center during the third day of demonstrat­ions in Atlanta.

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