The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

AG defends terrorism chargers for training center protesters

Civil rights groups question use of law against activists.

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

Georgia’s attorney general reiterated his support Monday for Atlanta’s controvers­ial new public safety training center — and defended the use of domestic terrorism charges against activists protesting its constructi­on.

Since December, at least 19 people have been arrested and charged with the weighty offense, which carries a potential sentence of 35 years in prison. Most of the activists so charged have also been accused of violating other laws — some for allegedly throw- ing objects at first responders, others by allegedly tres- passing on the site.

But few have been directly accused of the most violent acts linked to the nebulous “defend the forest” movement, and civil rights groups and attorneys for the defen- dants have questioned the usage of the law.

Attorney General Chris Carr said Monday he couldn’t get into specifics. But, he said, “the state of Georgia has passed a law that defines what domestic terrorism is.”

“I’m confident we’ll have the ability to go to court and prove those charges,” he said.

Carr’s office is working with prosecutor­s in Dekalb and Fulton counties to pursue the terrorism charges. Asked if such charges could ultimately be brought against more people, the attorney general said it wasn’t “appro- priate for [him] to discuss at this time.”

Carr spoke to The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on following a tour of the Westside At-promise Center, a juve- nile diversion center in Atlanta’s English Avenue neigh- borhood.

Carr’s office launched a gang prosecutio­n unit last summer and has promoted the new focus as a way to crack down on violent crime. The Republican official made a pitch Monday for Senate Bill 44, a pending piece of legislatio­n that, if approved and signed into law, would impose mandatory minimum sentences on adults who recruit children into gangs.

He held up the At-promise Center as a potential model for anti-gang-recruitmen­t efforts across the state. Providing a wide range of ser- vices and stopping children from joining gangs to begin with is a crucial part of preventing violence, Carr said.

Atlanta’s three At-prom- ise Centers are run by the Atlanta Police Foundation — the nonprofit that is helping steer creation of the public safety training center.

The Westside location Carr visited Monday was “firebombed” last May by two still-unidentifi­ed peo- ple throwing some version of Molotov cocktails through a rear window. The damage was largely contained to a single room and has since been repaired.

Officials believe the inci- dent was likely tied to protests over the training center, a $90 million facility planned for Atlanta’s police and fire department­s. It would be constructe­d on 85 wooded acres in southweste­rn Dekalb County, on the site of a former prison farm.

Initial land disturbanc­e permits for the facility were issued Jan. 31, and some clearing work has begun. But the permits’ approval has since been challenged.

Activists, local residents and others have demanded the project be called off, saying that, in addition to caus- ing environmen­tal damage, it would only further milita- rize the local police force.

Police foundation pres- ident Dave Wilkinson said Monday the facility would be “a boon” for law enforcemen­t but otherwise deferred com- ment to the city of Atlanta.

Carr said it was “critically important” for the training center to move forward.

“We’ve been talking for the last two years in particular, and then [the Memphis police killing of Tyre Nichols] brought it back up, about well-trained law enforcemen­t, well-trained first responders, well-trained firefighte­rs as well,” Carr said. “And that’s what this facility is about.”

 ?? TYLER ESTEP/TYLER.ESTEP@AJC.COM ?? Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr (center) visits the Westside At-promise Center, a juvenile diversion center in Atlanta, on Monday.
TYLER ESTEP/TYLER.ESTEP@AJC.COM Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr (center) visits the Westside At-promise Center, a juvenile diversion center in Atlanta, on Monday.

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