The Boston Globe

Atlanta votes to fund police training center despite outcry

Critics call the $90m project ‘Cop City’

- By María Luisa Paúl and Victoria Bisset

The Atlanta City Council voted overwhelmi­ngly early Tuesday to fund a controvers­ial police training center, a setback for racial justice and environmen­tal activists that is exposing broad fissures within the Georgia Democratic Party over policing and public safety.

The 11-to-4 vote in favor of committing $31 million to build the campus, which critics have labeled “Cop City,” followed more than 14 hours of emotional testimony in which most speakers adamantly opposed the project. But, at 5:30 a.m., the council voted to move ahead with the project, prompting jeers and chants from onlookers that “Cop City will never be built.”

One angry onlooker lunged at the council dais, causing police to line up to protect council members.

The $90 million center — which will be partially funded by private donations — was supported by Atlanta’s previous mayor, Keisha Lance Bottoms, a Democrat, as she sought to rebuild the morale of city police officers after a wave of protests against them that followed the murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s in 2020. The city’s current mayor, Andre Dickens, a Democrat, has continued the effort to push the project toward constructi­on.

But a diverse group of community and political activists mobilized against the center, decrying the planned destructio­n of one of Atlanta’s largest remaining green spaces. Activists also say the center — which will feature a mock city for urban training for police, a shooting range, a training course for emergency driving, and an auditorium — will lead to a more militarize­d police force in a city where Black residents account for nearly half the population.

“To be certain, what you are voting on today is a military facility,” R. Gary Spencer, the senior counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and an Atlanta resident, told council members during public testimony Monday. “The policing proposed by this facility will not make Atlanta safer. In fact, it will put our communitie­s, particular­ly our Black and Brown communitie­s, in significan­t danger.”

Although the vast majority of speakers opposed the center, other Atlanta residents argued that the opposition to the center was an overreacti­on. In addition to supporting the police, the 85acre center will be used to train firefighte­rs and paramedics. Supporters of the project included Atlanta City Council member Michael Julian Bond, the son of the late civil rights leader Julian Bond.

“The kids are more afraid of some of the folks here than they are of ‘Cop City,’” said Allen Lee, a community activist who criticized opponents of the project as using inflammato­ry language in their remarks. “We should not say this is about public safety if it’s about trees.”

The proposed law enforcemen­t facility began drawing internatio­nal attention last year, when environmen­tal activists from across the country took their opposition into the forest, erecting tents and tree stands to try to block its constructi­on in the South River Forest area of DeKalb County.

In raids on the forest in December and January, state and local law enforcemen­t agencies charged a dozen protesters with state “domestic terrorism” offenses. In one of the January raids, police fatally shot Manuel Esteban Paez Teran, 26, an activist camping in the forest.

Officials say that Paez Teran fired at police first and that they returned fire. Paez Teran’s family and activists have strongly contradict­ed that narrative. In March, the family released the report of an autopsy it had commission­ed that found that Paez Teran had been sitting crosslegge­d with his hands in the air when he was shot. The official autopsy, released in April, found Paez Teran had been struck 57 times.

Law enforcemen­t agencies’ tactics came under further scrutiny last week when the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion arrested three people on charges of money laundering and charity fraud for allegedly raising money to support those who had been detained on charges of domestic terrorism.

 ?? JASON GETZ/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The 11-to-4 vote followed more than 14 hours of emotional testimony; most speakers adamantly opposed the project.
JASON GETZ/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS The 11-to-4 vote followed more than 14 hours of emotional testimony; most speakers adamantly opposed the project.

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