The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Shootings

- Staff writers Tanni Deb and Stephen Deere contribute­d to this report.

City Council Member Howard Shook said Bottoms could quell the vio - lence by ordering clubs to close. “The mayor could shut all of this down with an executive order and enforce the law,” he said.

Closing nightclubs likely wouldn’t end the violence, Atlanta Police Union president Sgt. Jason Segura said.

“If you close those commercial clubs, there’s going to be pop-up clubs. And they’ re not going to be regulated,” he said. “You shut down one avenue and another is going to open.”

Officers are resigning or retiring in higher numbers than usual this year, he has said. “Now we have a hard time with visibility because officers are spread so thin,” Segura said. “They’re stacked up and working on multiple calls.”

Many nightclubs and bars hire off-duty Atlanta officers to work security jobs. But Segura said some nightspots may not be willing to pay for the number of security guards needed.

“The officers don’t get inside the club unless they’re called in,” he said. “They’re generally in the parking lot so people know they’re close by.”

Violence isn’t just a nightclub problem. This year is the deadliest in more than a decade, with 128 homicides. There were 99 in 2019.

Still, the string of nightclub shootings has officials on alert.

On Nov. 6, Chicago rapper King Von, whose real name was Dayvon Bennett, hosted his “Welcome to O’block” album release party at the Monaco Hookah Lounge on Trinity Avenue in downtown Atlanta. Bennett and 34- yearold Mark Blakely of Chicago were killed in a shootout that injured four others when a fight started outside the club.

Three days later, police were involved in another shooting that left one man dead and another injured outside The Voo lounge on Campbell ton Road near Childress Drive in southwest Atlanta.

On Oct. 29, an employee of the Members Only lounge in the Old Fourth Ward died from a gunshot wound to his chest. Authoritie­s said Caleb Culbreath, 27, of Jonesboro, was shot following a dispute over the admission price.

A week before Culbreath was killed, 35- year- old Andre Pierce was shot multiple times after leaving the Compound Nightclub i n west Midtown. He died from his injuries.

I n August , t wo people were injured during a shooting inside the Déjà Vu Sports Bar & Lounge on Campbellto­n Road.

After the coronaviru­s hit Georgia, several businesses were closed until late May, when Kemp eased restrictio­ns against bars and nightclubs and allowed them to reopen if they followed guidelines. Kemp has renewed his order on a public health state of emergency and provided additional guidelines for bars and other businesses where food is served.

“More people are going out t o ni g ht c l ubs and t o rest aurants t o socialize,” Moore said. “With that comes good people and people with guns.”

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