The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Peoplestow­n grapples with aftermath of police shooting

The shooting of Rayshard Brooks last month ‘changed the dynamics.’

- By Marlon A. Walker marlon.walker@ajc.com

Outside R&R Tire Service on University Avenue in south Atlanta, Eugene Bell surveyed the businesses around the busy Peoplestow­n thoroughfa­re.

Up and down the street, boards cover doors and windows at convenienc­e stores, gas stations, a beauty supply shop. The charred remains of the Wendy’s where Rayshard Brooks lived his last moments is now a symbol of the national push against police brutality.

“It changed the dynamics of the whole situation,” Bell, 38, said of the fatal shooting that took place last month.

Bell, who works at the tire shop owned by his uncle, was talking about the community’s growing impatience with leadership that seemingly has allowed the neighborho­od to become forgotten while the city’s downtown and Midtown neighborho­ods flourish.

Brooks, a Black man, died from two gunshot wounds to the back after struggling with two police officers outside the University Avenue fast-food restaurant, where he’d fallen asleep in the drive-thru. During the struggle, he took an officer’s Taser and began running away

from police. Brooks was shot after surveillan­ce footage shows him turning and pointing the Taser in the officers’ direction.

The white officers — Garrett Rolfe and Devin Brosnan — face charges in connection with his death. Rolfe was fired.

The shooting — coupled with decades of conflict between police and the Black community and a demographi­c shift brought on by gentrifica­tion — has upended the historic community, largely made up of lowand middle-income Black residences and homegrown businesses.

The shooting took away the peace many saw here, in their version of the quiet suburban cul-de-sac, despite an abnormal crime rate. The burned-out fast food restaurant punctuates the loss, a glaring reminder of missed opportunit­ies.

“Martin Luther King preached nonviolenc­e, peaceful protest,” Bell said, “What’s peaceful got you?”

Peoplestow­n, home to about 2,700, is located just south of Turner Field, bordering Mechanicsv­ille at I-75 to the west, Grant Park at Hill Street to the east, a northern border at Ormond Street and the beginning of the Summerhill community, and University Avenue and Pryor Street as part of its southern boundary.

The once segregated neighborho­od became less desirable to white people in the 1920s and 1930s as they flocked to the city’s northern neighborho­ods, according to a city of Atlanta community profile. By the 1960s, a census count showed the neighborho­od was almost equally Black and white.

Christophe­r Lemons, president of the Peoplestow­n Neighborho­od Associatio­n, has deep roots in the community. His home was built on land his family once used as a garden, from which they sold fresh produce. In 1959, his great-great-grandparen­ts built and moved into a home there. It has since been occupied by a great-great-aunt, as well as his grandmothe­r before him. As recent as 10 years ago, the community was largely made up of older residents who raised families and stayed because they paid off their homes and were ready to enjoy retirement, Lemons said. Gentrifica­tion has significan­tly changed that, bringing in younger people of different races, and new businesses like a juice bar.

Still, Lemons said, 30% of the community live below poverty. “Every spring, you can see how much the neighborho­od is changing,” said Lemons, 34, adding that he saw more new neighbors as the coronaviru­s pandemic took hold, as people took to outdoor activities as working from home became more commonplac­e.

The median income here is about $28,000 a year, according to Statistica­l Atlas, which compiles demographi­c data for communitie­s around the globe. About 60% of homes here are occupied by families. About 70% of the neighborho­od’s residents are Black, down from 80% about 10 years ago. Just under 5% are immigrants.

Lemons said as with much of the city, crime has plagued the neighborho­od. Most of that is due to the proximity to the interstate­s, he said, which gives people easy access in and out of the community.

The community is in Zone 3 of the Atlanta Police Department’s district system, which had the second-most homicides this year among zones, with 9 as of June 20. Only Zone 4, which includes much of Southwest Atlanta, had more at that point, with 17.

In the aftermath of Brooks’ shooting, as people converged on the University Avenue Wendy’s, Lemons said some Peoplestow­n residents saw hope in conversati­ons calling for justice. They also pushed for economic developmen­t in the community, better relations with city officials, and a community center to be built at the site of the burned-out restaurant.

They had been asking for much of that, and more, for decades, Lemons said.

“We’re kind of the redheaded stepchild of the city,” he said. Then came the guns. Lemons said outsiders who effectivel­y took over the fastfood restaurant were being “overly aggressive” with residents who went there offering support. Several people were injured in shootings there.

On July 4, an 8-year-old girl was killed across from the restaurant. Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms ordered the site cleared out. Leaders of the group that had been camped out at the restaurant denied involvemen­t in the fatal shooting.

“People were saying, ‘Put the guns up because it is only going to exacerbate the situation and not get what you want out of it,’” Lemons said. “Just losing her life like that. It was that armed factor.

Dirk Bateman has lived in Peoplestow­n for 30 years, after being raised just across the interstate in the city’s Pittsburgh neighborho­od, also in south Atlanta. He said the neighborho­od’s lure is that it is in the city, with easy access to MARTA and a stone’s throw from the city’s entertainm­ent hot spots.

“I just love the city, and the city life,” said Bateman, 63, who was an equipment monitor for DeKalb County’s Sanitation Department before he retired.

He said the neighborho­od is changing through gentrifica­tion and businesses popping up to benefit from the new demographi­cs. Brooks’ shooting only added to division among the neighborho­od’s residents and the police.

“Both of them were wrong,” he said. “But I don’t want to hear about a deadly Taser. Not when you’re running around and shooting him in the back. How do you fear for your life when he’s running from you?”

The shooting felt more deliberate and racially driven, said William Williams, whose father owns the R&R Tire Shop on University. Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard, in announcing charges against the officers, said Rolfe, the officer who fired the fatal shots, could be heard saying “I got him” afterward.

“You always wanted to get you one,” Williams said, referring to police officers killing Black men, “so you got you one.”

In the days after the shooting, Williams said he was frustrated by how people responded to the area. Police officers barely drive through. Many called in sick following the arrests of the officers after the fatal shooting.

“A lot of that could have been saved,” he said, glancing down the street at businesses boarded up in the wake of Brooks’ death.

On a day recently, the neighborho­od was bustling with activity. Some rode bicycles near Four Corners Park. Older residents were out watering their lawns. Neighbors chatted with each other through masks, or across driveways.

Before the shooting of 8-year-old Secoriea Turner on July 4, Bateman felt the impact from activity at the Wendy’s was pushing for long overdue conversati­ons to forge better relations and treatment of Black people.

“Even if it wasn’t them, if they weren’t (at the Wendy’s), this wouldn’t have happened at all.”

Atlanta City Councilwom­an Carla Smith, whose district includes the Peoplestow­n neighborho­od, called it a great community and said she had received a list of demands from community leaders seeking better conditions and relations with other city leaders.

Other wants, Lemons said, include being part of the process that selects a new police chief, providing racial and implicit bias testing for police candidates and reallocati­ng money away from the police for neighborho­od resources.

“Had some of those demands been met, maybe nobody would have been down there,” Lemons said about the Wendy’s.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? People walk past the remains of the Wendy’s where Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed by an officer of the Atlanta Police Department in Atlanta’s Peoplestow­n community.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM People walk past the remains of the Wendy’s where Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed by an officer of the Atlanta Police Department in Atlanta’s Peoplestow­n community.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Christophe­r Lemons, president of the Peoplestow­n Neighborho­od Associatio­n, says: “We’re kind of the red-headed stepchild of the city.”
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Christophe­r Lemons, president of the Peoplestow­n Neighborho­od Associatio­n, says: “We’re kind of the red-headed stepchild of the city.”
 ??  ?? Rayshard Brooks
Rayshard Brooks
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? A Peoplestow­n mural is displayed along a building in the south Atlanta community.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM A Peoplestow­n mural is displayed along a building in the south Atlanta community.
 ?? REBECCA WRIGHT / FOR THE AJC ?? Dirk Bateman has lived in Peoplestow­n for 30 years. Of Rayshard Brooks’ shooting, he said: “Both of them were wrong. But I don’t want to hear about a deadly Taser. Not when you’re running around and shooting him in the back. How do you fear for your life when he’s running from you?”
REBECCA WRIGHT / FOR THE AJC Dirk Bateman has lived in Peoplestow­n for 30 years. Of Rayshard Brooks’ shooting, he said: “Both of them were wrong. But I don’t want to hear about a deadly Taser. Not when you’re running around and shooting him in the back. How do you fear for your life when he’s running from you?”
 ?? Source: maps4news.com/©HERE STAFF ??
Source: maps4news.com/©HERE STAFF
 ??  ?? Garrett Rolfe
Devin Brosnan
Garrett Rolfe Devin Brosnan

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