Officials in Atlanta, includ­ing the police, have sought to demo­nize for­est defend­ers as “out­side agi­ta­tors”; the attack, his­tor­i­cal­ly used to dis­cred­it civ­il rights strug­gles, has failed to gain pop­u­lar pur­chase. The move­ment, which made a wide call for sup­port­ers to join, is explic­it in seek­ing to con­nect the local fight to stop Cop City and save the Atlanta for­est with nation­al and inter­na­tion­al move­ments against envi­ron­men­tal racism and police vio­lence.

Meanwhile, the Cop City project is hard­ly local: It is being fund­ed by numer­ous multi­na­tion­al cor­po­ra­tions, includ­ing Wells Fargo and Bank of America. The Atlanta Police Department told the Atlanta City Council that it intends to recruit 43 per­cent of trainees for the planned facil­i­ty from out of state.

Last month, the Atlanta Community Press Collective released the names of the six offi­cers iden­ti­fied by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation in con­nec­tion with Tortuguita’s killing and pub­lished a link to the GBI report. GBI spokesper­son Nelly Miles said the agency had not released the offi­cers’ names and cit­ed an exemp­tion under state pub­lic records law used to redact doc­u­ments. The names were not redact­ed in the ver­sion of the report obtained by the Atlanta Community Press Collective, which said it got the doc­u­ment from the Dekalb County Medical Examiner’s Office.

They care­ful­ly exer­cised their First Amendment rights and left the area,” Foster, the attor­ney, said of the activists’ dis­tri­b­u­tion of the fly­ers. “An unarmed activist died in a hail of gun­fire in the woods and now the state says it’s felony intim­i­da­tion to even talk about that.” (From the intercept)
Police state!!!