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Protesters Abandon ‘Cop City’ Camp After Deadly Police Raid, Atlanta Riot Arrests

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ATLANTA, Ga.—A camp of apparent anti-police environmentalists that defied Atlanta authorities for months now lies empty.

The group occupied public land where Atlanta plans to build a $90 million police department training complex.

City officials named it the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center. Among their ranks, activists dubbed it “Cop City.”

Agents with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) “along with other law enforcement partners, conducted an operation [on Jan. 18] to identify people who are trespassing and committing other crimes on the property,” according to a GBI press release.

Epoch Times Photo
A shrine to Manuel “Tortuguita” Teran stands at an abandoned camp of activists in the Atlanta Forest near Georgia’s capital city on Jan. 23, 2023. (Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

As officers were moving through the property, they located a man inside a tent in the woods, according to the statement. “Officers gave verbal commands” to Manuel Teran, also known as “Tortuguita,” but “he did not comply,” GBI officials said.

Teran, 26, then shot a Georgia State Patrol officer, according to the GBI.

Other officers returned fire, hitting Teran, who died at the scene. The trooper was transported to a local hospital, where he underwent surgery.

The GBI provided pictures of Teran’s gun, and showed its ballistics matched the bullet that hit the officer.

After Teran’s death, rioters blasted through downtown Atlanta on Jan. 21, damaging buildings.

On Peachtree Street, they smashed windows on Truist bank, Wells Fargo bank, and the building that houses the Atlanta Police Foundation. They set a police car ablaze and smashed another police vehicle’s windows.

‘Abolish War’

The attack wasn’t the only reprisal for Teran’s death.

Far-left extremist group Antifa also attacked a police officer in Boston, according to the local police department’s news site. The same protest also created “Stop Cop City” graffiti, the site noted.

Activists in Seattle, Washington, also created graffiti while holding a vigil for Teran, according to the website of Puget Sound Anarchists, a radical group.

At a few places within the makeshift camp, barricades made of tires, trees, furniture, and other objects still blocked the paths through the forest five days after the shooting.

The Epoch Times found three unoccupied tents in the park, along with sleeping bags, backpacks, and banners roped high in the trees.

One area of the forest had a small shelter of woven branches.

“Land Acknowledgement,” one banner proclaimed. “Atlanta Forest is of the Muscogee Creek and Cherokee people, Indigenous caretakers, black descendants.”

One tent appeared to have been cut open during the police raid. Another lay on the ground.

Epoch Times Photo
Graffiti reading “Abolish the Police” at an activist camp in the Atlanta Forest, Georgia., on Jan. 23, 2023. (Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

Most noticeable was an explosion of graffiti throughout the forest. Man-made surfaces from the forest’s entrance to a tunnel about a half-mile away had become a canvas for painted tags, slogans, and symbols of anarchists, environmentalists, socialists, anti-capitalists, and Black Lives matter.

“Abolish War,” one read.

“Forest defense is self defense,” another read.

“Stop Cop City,” demanded another.

“We will tell them,” a paper with song lyrics read, “that Weelaunee is not for franchise and wish the [expletives] drop down dead.”

Weelaunee is the American Indian name for the Atlanta Forest.

Life and Death in Weelaunee

A memorial near the park’s entrance celebrated Teran’s life.

“Erected in memory of all those whose lives were lived and unjustly lost in Weelaunee Forest,” reads a message written on a concrete slab propped up vertically and spray-painted gold.

“You live on in the trees and are remembered by the land. You will never be forgotten.

The camp’s remains show that occupants seemed to have lived well before the deadly encounter with law enforcement.

Garbage left behind includes remnants of apples, oranges, and pomegranates. Litter shows activists’ tastes for Cheerios, smoked whitefish pate, ramen, canned tomato soup, and Chick-fil-A. Trash heaps suggest they drank bottled water, soda, and rum.

Epoch Times Photo
A case of smoked whitefish pate left at the activist camp near Atlanta, Ga., on Jan. 23, 2023. (Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

The camp also had a fire pit and logs arranged to mark paths. A bucket in a pit, covered by a foam sheet, may have served as a latrine.

Full garbage bags dotted the woods after the campers’ abrupt departure. Cardboard Amazon boxes, plastic cartons, garlic-sauce containers from Papa Johns Pizza, and a broken ukulele lay strewn around the campsite.

Abandoned belongings included clothing, ropes, toilet paper, tarpaulins, metal camping bowls, and high-end gear, such as a $144 Ledge sleeping bag.

Mortar-style fireworks, multiple-edged weapons, pellet rifles, gas masks, and a blow torch were recovered by law enforcement officers, according to the GBI.

From Upper Crust to Forest Huts

Seven people, ages 20–35, were arrested and charged with domestic terrorism and criminal trespass, with additional charges pending, and all came from other states, according to the GBI.

Many of those arrested come from backgrounds of wealth and cultural acheivement.

One had graduated from a prestigious college, and wrote an article for American Scientist magazine.

Another comes from a millionaire family who sailed yachts and owned a mansion.

Epoch Times Photo
A sleeping bag, clothes, garbage, and other supplies left behind at an activist camp in the Atlanta Forest near Atlanta, Ga. on Jan. 23, 2023. (Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

A third was an award-winning clarinet player who studied at a famous music institute.

One more served in a leadership role at a Chicago climate change think tank.

They all are believed to have participated in a riot that burned police cars and smashed glass.

On Jan. 18, law enforcement officials removed 25 dwellings, including tree houses, from the forest camp, according to the GBI press release.

Epoch Times Photo
A damaged tent is left behind at the Atlanta Forest activist camp near Atlanta, Ga., on Jan. 23, 2023. (Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

Defend the Atlanta Forest, an activist group playing an important role in the decentralized movement occupying the forest, posted a statement on its website saying the raid was “the most recent of a series of violent police retaliations against the movement.”

“The official narrative is that Cop City is necessary to make Atlanta ‘safe,’ but this brutal killing reveals what they mean when they use that word,” the statement reads.

The Defend the Atlanta Forest website also states that “no one has been harmed by participants in this movement.”

It also states that rather than looking at “violent and nonviolent methods,” it divides its protests into a “much simpler and more intuitive framework: defense and offense.”

Epoch Times Photo
Windows of the Atlanta Police Foundation, broken on Jan. 21 by rioters, remain covered with plywood on Jan. 23, 2023. (Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

“The chief benefit of this framework is that it allows protesters to focus on the strategies and approaches that feel safe, dignified, and comfortable for them,” the website reads.

Before the Jan. 18 raid, law enforcement agencies conducted a joint operation to “combat ongoing criminal activity” in the forest about a month earlier, another GBI press release noted.

In that raid, they removed barricades and found explosive devices, gasoline, and road flares, the release said.

The forest’s inhabitants threw rocks at officers, according to the statement. Police arrested five of them. Four came from out of state.

Residents in a nearby neighborhood declined to speak with an Epoch Times reporter about the impact of the forest camp.

Normal Violence

Although The Epoch Times asked for comment from employees of several local businesses, many said they’d been instructed not to speak.

Alex Swanson, a bartender at Meehan’s Public House, said rioters passed through the area quickly. While at work, Swanson saw the group of about 150 people break windows and move on.

These days, riots are just another part of living in Downtown Atlanta, he said.

“It’s unusual, but in the climate we live in, it’s like, protests happen,” he said.

Epoch Times Photo
Alex Swanson, a bartender at Meehan’s Public House, in Atlanta, Ga. on Jan. 23, 2023. (Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

When compared with the massive Black Lives Matter riots in 2020, Jan. 21’s riot wasn’t a big deal, he said.

“What happened Saturday was a small scale compared to anything that happened” in 2020, he said. “It was more intense because it was way more people, and it was a larger protest covering more area.”

Defend the Atlanta Forest’s website has a long list of endorsements from organizations including: the National Lawyers Guild and several of its branches; the climate change activism group Rising Tide North America; the climate change group 350.org; several chapters of both the Democratic Socialists of America and Showing Up For Racial Justice (SURJ); organizing group Shut Down DC; the Savannah Federation of Democratic Women; several armed left-wing John Brown Gun Club chapters; Atlanta Antifascists; and several Antifa chapters.

A list of hundreds of individual supporters includes intellectual, linguist, philosopher, historian, social critic, and political activist, Noam Chomsky.

The Epoch Times reached out to Defend the Atlanta Forest but has received no response.



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