The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

PROTEST AFTERMATH

Wendy’s burned to ground in protests of police shooting.

- By Henri Hollis henri.hollis@ajc.com

Three people arrested after a southwest Atlanta Wendy’s was burned down during the protests following Rayshard Brooks’ fatal shooting by police have been indicted on multiple charges, court records show.

John Wesley Wade, Natalie Hanna White and Chisom Kingston were each indicted on two counts of first-degree arson and one count of conspiracy to commit arson, according to online court records. The indictment­s were handed down Thursday by a Fulton County grand jury, nearly 20 months after protesters allegedly burned down the fast-food restaurant where Brooks was killed by an Atlanta police officer in June 2020.

White was the first of the three defendants to be arrested, on June 23, 2020, followed by Wade and Kings- ton a little more than a week later, Fulton jail records show. All three were able to post bond and were released within a few hours or days.

Wade, an activist who led several protests during the summer of 2020, was arrested again that August and charged with criminal attempt to incite a riot, according to jail records. He helped organize the protest that preceded the Wendy’s going up in flames, The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on previously reported.

In an interview with Channel 2 Action News, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said metro Atlanta authoritie­s support the constituti­onal right of citizens to peacefully protest, but that law enforcemen­t would not tolerate violence.

“It is unacceptab­le to burn down a building in your community, even in the name of a protest,” Willis said.

According to Willis, much of the evidence that led to the indictment of Wade, White and Kingston was gathered from video shared on social media the night of the protest. She said investigat­ors spent thousands of hours combing through videos of the scene surroundin­g the fire.

“Each of these three people took an active role in destroying this Wendy’s,” Willis said.

Drew Findling, White’s defense attorney, told Channel 2 his client was not guilty and had no associatio­n with the two co-defendants. Findling welcomed the video evidence in the case, which he said would help prove White’s innocence.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said metro Atlanta authoritie­s support the right to peaceful protests, but could not tolerate violent acts like arson.
AJC FILE Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said metro Atlanta authoritie­s support the right to peaceful protests, but could not tolerate violent acts like arson.

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