The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Police raid ‘hippie district,’ face near riot in 1969

75 to 100 arrested on ‘The Strip’ at Peachtree and 14th.

- By Mandi Albright malbright@ajc.com

Today’s AJC Deja News comes to you from the Tuesday, Aug. 5, 1969, edition of The Atlanta Constituti­on.

June’s violent protests in Atlanta following the death of George Floyd rekindled the debate over what constitute­s excessive use of force by police. And since the June 12 police-involved shooting death of Rayshard Brooks, the city is dealing with the consequenc­es of officers pulling back from more proac- tive policing “because of what they see as anti-police sentiment on the streets and a lack of support from local politician­s.”

“Officers are afraid to do their job,” Atlanta police officer Jason Segura, pres- ident of the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Police Offi- cers’ local chapter, told the AJC’s Joshua Sharpe in a July 5 article.

Following a 1969 narcotics raid in the Midtown “hippie district,” Atlanta police were also met with excessive force complaints, though none involving a death, after a mass arrest of an estimated 75 to 100 persons. While San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury neighborho­od and New York’s Greenwich Village are the most noted countercul- ture scenes during the Viet- nam Era, “The Strip” along Peachtree Street between 8th and 14th Streets in Midtown was Atlanta’s realm of the outre.

“The (late night) arrests followed what police described as a ‘near-riot’ that erupted after Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion agents and Atlanta detectives raided the area ( of 14th a nd Peachtree streets) looking for danger- ous drugs,” Constituti­on reporter Keeler McCartney wrote. “A short time earlier, the area was filled with shouting hippies and flying bricks and bottles. Several officers were struck by the missiles before the crowd — shouting ‘No more pigs (police)’ and assorted obscenitie­s — could be cleared from the streets.”

“Barricades of furniture and boxes dragged from nearby buildings were thrown up by the hippies,” McCartney continued, “but they were cleared away quickly.”

“Yes, there was plenty of violence — police vio- lence,” an unidentifi­ed woman speaking from the office of the undergroun­d newspaper The Great Speck- led Bird told the Constitu- tion. “They’ve arrested a great number of people out here, many on undetermin­ed charges and some on pub- lic profanity, and they’ve manhandled several people. They’ve thrown people against cars and roughed them up.”

In a paragraph presaging the current opinions of some questionin­g the effectiven­ess of policing in their neighborho­ods, McCartney noted the hippies’ “increasing hostility toward the police in recent months, charging that officers supposedly investigat­ing crimes in the area constitute a greater danger to the public than those accused of the alleged crimes.”

Atlanta police at the scene of the 1969 fracas told a different story.

“Officers said as those arrested were loaded into police wagons, others began to gather on the streets and shout: ‘No more pigs’ and obscenitie­s,” McCartney wrote. “Then they began to yell, ‘You’d better watch out — the revolution is about to start.’ ”

 ??  ?? The Aug. 5, 1969, Constituti­on front page detailed a “near riot” after Atlanta police raided a known hippie hangout.
The Aug. 5, 1969, Constituti­on front page detailed a “near riot” after Atlanta police raided a known hippie hangout.

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