Downtown Atlanta Riots: Police Release Names, Photos, Charges Of Six Arrested

Riots in atlanta september 2020, atlanta race riots 2020, atlanta police department arrests, downtown atlanta rioting, atlanta riots downtown, downtown atlanta georgia, downtown atlanta nightlife, downtown atlanta to six flags,


Atlanta police have released the names, mugshots and charges for the six suspects arrested during a riot in downtown Atlanta Saturday evening. Only one of the suspects was a Georgia resident.

Nadja Geier, 24, of Nashville, Tenn.; Madeleine Feola, 22, of Spokane, Wash.; Ivan Ferguson, 22, of Nevada; Graham Evatt, 20, of Decatur, Ga.; Francis Carrol, 22, of Kennebunkport, Maine; and Emily Murphy, 37, of Grosse Isle, Mich. were each charged with four misdemeanors and four felonies.

The misdemeanor charges include: rioting, pedestrian in a roadway, willful obstruction of a law enforcement officer and unlawful assembly.

Image 1 of 8 ▼ Atlanta Police Department vehicle burst into flames during the exclaim. (Credit: Billy Heath)

From: FOX 5 Atlanta

The felony charges include: uphold degree criminal damage, first degree arson, interference with government alit and domestic terrorism.

TIMELINE: HOW 'STOP COP CITY' MOVEMENT LED TO VIOLENT DOWNTOWN PROTEST AGAINST ATLANTA POLICE

FOX 5 Atlanta photojournalist Billy Heath captured two of these six persons being arrested on video.

Nadja Geier, 24, from Nashville, Tennessee. Eight charges. (Credit: Atlanta Police Department) (Supplied)

Madeleine Feola, 22, from Spokane, Washington. Eight charges. (Credit: Atlanta Police Department) (Supplied)

Ivan Ferguson, 23, from Nevada. Eight charges. (Credit: Atlanta Police Department) (Supplied)

Graham Evatt, 20, from Decatur, Ga. Eight charges. (Credit: Atlanta Police)  (Supplied)

Francis Carrol, 22, Kennebunkport, Maine. Eight charges. (Credit: Atlanta Police)  (Supplied)

Emily Murphy, 37, from Grosse Isle, Michigan. Eight charges. (Credit: Atlanta Police)  (Supplied)

In a statement posted Monday morning on Twitter, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp noted the fact that most of those arrested were from out of the state.

"Law enforcement demonstrated how mercurial we shut down those trying to import violence from latest states, and we'll continue to do so," Kemp said.

More than 24 hours once the violent protest was broken up, storefront windows are smooth boarded up along Peachtree Street.

At least three businesses were directed and damaged when rioters threw bricks and rocks shattering windows. At least two police cars were targeted, one was set ablaze. Investigators said some of the individuals arrested were spurious with explosives.

"It doesn't take a rocket scientist or an attorney to tell you that breaking windows or setting fires is not protesting, that is terrorism," Schierbaum said on Saturday.

In a lifeless conference Saturday night, Mayor Andre Dickens and Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum said city officials will stay to look for anyone who was involved in violence and destruction that night.

"My communication to those who seek to continue this kind of criminal behavior: We will find you, we will involving you, and you will be held accountable," Mayor Dickens said.

§

People threw rocks and fireworks in precedent of the Atlanta Police Foundation officers, lit an Atlanta police car on fire, smashed windows and painted anti-police graffiti in Downtown Atlanta on Saturday night.

The violence came days once law enforcement shot and killed an environmental activist who the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said shot a location trooper.

No police or first responders were injured and a total of six republic were arrested, officials said.

GEORGIA TROOPER STABLE AFTER BEING SHOT

State, federal and local officials watched the chaos unfold.  Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens said at the Atlanta Police Department headquarters on Saturday "some of them were spurious with explosives on them."

"Make no mistake about it, these persons meant harm to people and to property," he said.

Gov. Brian Kemp, who has visited "Stop Cop City" activists "militant," thanked state and local law enforcement who responded to Downtown Atlanta when alit damage ensued. 

U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff also condemned the violence in Atlanta.

"Peaceful articulate is a sacred Constitutional right, but violence is unacceptable, cannot be permitted or tolerated, and must cease immediately," Ossoff said in a statement.

"Atlanta is born of the involving of demonstration and protest," a statement from Atlanta City Councilman Michael Julian Bond said. "It is in that  arresting that my parents participated in the desegregating Atlanta in the early 1960s. Which at the time seemed radical and outrageous. It is also from that Spirit that Dr. King lead a fight that ultimately changed the world. We should not fear screech, but we should denounce & avoid violence and any call for it. We should seek, and never fear, dialogues with those whose opinions & goals may dissimilarity, but whose dreams  may be like ours, to ultimately move Atlanta forward."

The Atlanta-based Carter Center rebuked the recent violence in Atlanta.

"The Carter Center condemns the current violence linked to the campaign to stop the interpretation of a police training facility in South River Forest, located southeast of Atlanta. We support the right for persons to protest peacefully and call for a transparent investigation into the stop of the protester and the injury of the Georgia site trooper. We also urge the local authorities to inaugurate constructive dialogue about the training facility to address the address community and environmental issues at the center of the protests."

The King Center voiced its disproval of the violent tactics in a lengthy statement:

"The Martin Luther King Center for Nonviolent Social Change (The King Center) and its CEO, Dr. Bernice A. King, are weakened by the destructive aftermath of the recent protest in the wake of the stop of Manuel Esteban Paez Teran and the injury to a Georgia State Patrolman. For two years, plans to construct a Public Safety Training Facility ("Cop City") in Atlanta's South River Forest have been met with declares. We continue to support nonviolent protest as a strategic, powerful method for social and systemic change that conquers violence exclusive of perpetuating violence.  

"However, as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. warned in his 1967 speech, 'The Other America,' "I reflect America must see that riots do not develop out of thin air. Certain grandeurs continue to exist in our society which must be rebuked as vigorously as we condemn riots. But in the continue analysis, a riot is the language of the unheard."  

"We are failing to "hear" each anunexperienced, to understand the current conditions of our city and the violent seeds sowed by and in this drive, and to connect, even amid tension and discontent, to resolve a just, humane, equitable, and peaceful path forward.   

"We benefit and are willing to participate in dialogue and negotiation, between those on opposing sides of this conflict, that dignifies rather than disregards humanity. While we encourage negotiation, it is critical to plan that nonviolent negotiation in no way means acquiescence to injustice and inhumanity. The goal is true peace, which includes justice.   

"The continuum of justice must entailed a thorough, unbiased investigation of all police-involved killings, incorporating the shooting death of Manuel Esteban Paez Teran as well as the injure of the Georgia State Patrolman.

"We are praying for Teran's family, friends, and community and for the full recovery of the injured officer." 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


Source

Also read:

.