The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

■ Atlanta police are planning a different approach from last summer’s protests as they prepare for potential unrest,

Police indicate they’ve learned from unrest that erupted last year.

- By Christian Boone christian.boone@ajc.com

Atlanta police are plotting a different approach from last summer’s protests as they prepare for potential unrest following the trial of former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin, charged with murder in the 2020 death of George Floyd.

Last year, during protests that erupted after Floyd’s death, the Atlanta Police Department’s chief at the time, Erika Shields, took to the streets, talking with demonstrat­ors and often sympathizi­ng with their concerns over law enforcemen­t’s treatment of Black people. Shields’ successor, Rodney Bryant, who still holds the interim tag nearly one year after his appointmen­t, said he will be encamped in the joint operations center with his command staff until a verdict is reached.

Most observers expect a new round of protests if Chauvin is found not guilty. Jury deliberati­ons began late Monday afternoon.

At a press conference Monday, Bryant stressed improved collaborat­ion with state and federal partners in preparing for the worst. APD was roundly criticized last year by business owners and residents who said officers did not do enough to prevent looting and violence that broke out downtown and in Buckhead. Protesters, meanwhile, accused the department of operating with a heavy hand.

Six officers were criminally charged by former Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard for their actions in the arrest of two college students who had violated curfew in June. The students were stunned with Tasers and detained after officers say they ignored their commands.

Activists, aware the city is in the midst of a yearlong rise in violent crime, say they expect the city will respond forcefully. Informatio­n on how demonstrat­ors can protect themselves from rubber bullets and pepper spray has been widely disseminat­ed in recent days, said student protester Nick Daniels.

“I hear (Bryant) talk about how APD is under fire all the time, so I definitely think they will be more aggressive in dealing with protests,” said Daniels, an Atlanta resident who’s a sophomore at Howard University in Washington, D.C.

Bryant offered few specifics Monday except to say Atlanta’s officers will be working 12-hour shifts throughout jury deliberati­ons in Minnesota.

“If you’re going to protest, do so peacefully,” Bryant said. “What we realized last time is people came from outside the city and they were more problemati­c. We support peaceful protests, but we should not tolerate people who come to vandalize our city and impose on our citizens.”

Better collaborat­ion will help APD “utilize intelligen­ce to better monitor the situation” if protests get out of hand, he said.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2020 ?? An Atlanta Police Department patrol car is engulfed in flames after demonstrat­ors set it on fire and destroyed other patrol cars outside the CNN Center in Atlanta on May 29. Violence erupted after peaceful protests against racial injustice and police brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death.
ALYSSA POINTER/AJC 2020 An Atlanta Police Department patrol car is engulfed in flames after demonstrat­ors set it on fire and destroyed other patrol cars outside the CNN Center in Atlanta on May 29. Violence erupted after peaceful protests against racial injustice and police brutality in the wake of George Floyd’s death.

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