Atlanta Activists Want to Let the People Decide on Cop City
Organizers are pushing a referendum to let the public vote on whether their tax dollars should be used for a massive police facility.
Protesters against Cop City are not backing down.
The Atlanta City Council on Tuesday voted to approve $67 million in taxpayer money for a massive police training facilityâall after police officers indiscriminately arrested protesters and even killed one in cold blood.
And the very next day, organizers announced a public referendum campaign to demand the city repeal the lease agreement for the forest land set to be razed to construct the massive $90 million police training facility.
Organizers need at least 75,000 signatures from registered voters in the next 60 days to make it on the ballot this November.
âThe Atlanta City Council has again turned its back on working class, particularly Black, Atlantans,â said organizer Kamau Franklin. âThe overwhelming majority of people opposed Cop City but the city council chose again to side with the police & corporations to continue to criminalize our communityâwhich is why it is time for the people of Atlanta to decide.â
Organizersâ decision to move this to a public vote comes after hundreds of Atlantans flooded City Hall to protest the approval of the Cop City funding.
âViva viva, Tortuguita!â the crowd chanted, early Tuesday morning, in reference to Manuel Esteban Paez TerĂĄn, known as Tortuguita, who was shot and killed by Atlanta police in January. Contrary to police claims that the officers only shot after being shot at first, an independent autopsy found Tortuguitaâs hands were raised during the shooting. Even worse, police shot Tortuguita at least 57 times.
âThe Atlanta community has repeatedly drawn attention to the serious harms posed by Cop City, including environmental damage and the dangers of a militarized police force that have the potential of impacting the everyday lives of Black Atlantans,â said R. Gary Spencer, senior counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. âBut instead of addressing these concerns, Georgia officials have responded with police violence, targeted arrests, and unduly harsh charging decisions. As a result, Atlantans have witnessed the police killing of Manuel âTortuguitaâ Esteban Paez TerĂĄn, domestic terrorism charges against activists based on tenuous evidence, and felony charges against protestors for simply distributing flyers.â
In March, dozens of people were indiscriminately arrested at a music festival organized by protesters. They were detained on accusations of participating in vandalism and arson at a construction site that was over a mile away from where the music festival was being held, some even charged with domestic terrorism. Worse, many were arrested and denied bond on the grounds of having muddy shoes (they were all in a forest, where it had rained), or being âpart of the teamâ because they were wearing black.
Last week, Atlanta police used a heavy-duty police truck and hordes of riot police to arrest just three individuals who had been helping organize bail funds and legal support for protesters. The trio were arrested on flimsy charges of âmoney launderingâ and âcharity fraud.â Even the presiding judge seemed uncompelled by the prosecution. âI donât find it very impressive,â he said. âThereâs not a lot of meat on the bones.â
âThe Atlanta community has repeatedly drawn attention to the serious harms posed. Cop City symbolizes the failures of a public safety system that continues to weaponize law enforcement against communities rather than invest in resources that would actually produce the safety and stability they need,â Spencer said. âThe voice of the people has been repeatedly ignored, so it is time for the residents of Atlanta to exercise their political will and decide the fate of Cop City. This referendum does just that.â