Current:Home > ContactJudge blames Atlanta officials for confusion over ‘Stop Cop City’ referendum campaign -CoinMarket
Judge blames Atlanta officials for confusion over ‘Stop Cop City’ referendum campaign
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:34:27
ATLANTA (AP) — A federal judge overseeing the case involving Atlanta activists’ referendum effort against a police and firefighter training facility accused city officials on Wednesday of moving the goalposts on the signature-gathering campaign, saying they have “directly contributed” to a widespread sense of confusion over the matter.
U.S. District Judge Mark Cohen ruled that he does not have the authority to force the city of Atlanta to begin processing the tens of thousands of signatures that were handed in Monday by “Stop Cop City” activists, explaining that he cannot intervene while a larger dispute over the effort is awaiting input from the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
But Cohen also said he was “compelled to comment upon the vacillating positions of the City of Atlanta throughout this litigation.”
“On June 21, 2023, instead of approving a referendum petition it had no intention to honor regardless of the number of signatures obtained from City residents, the City could have taken the position it later espoused in this lawsuit and disapproved the petition as unauthorized under Georgia law,” Cohen wrote.
The judge continued: “The City instead opted to approve a petition for a referendum it believed and later contended was illegal. A proverb dating back over four centuries ago once again applies here: Honesty is the Best Policy.”
Over the past three months, hundreds of activists spread out across the city to gather what they said were more than 116,000 signatures of registered Atlanta voters, far more than necessary to force a vote on the proposed training facility that has outraged environmentalists and anti-police protesters across the country.
But activists who arrived at City Hall on Monday carrying boxes full of signed petitions were shocked when Atlanta officials told them the clerk was legally barred from beginning the process of verifying the forms, saying organizers had missed an Aug. 21 deadline. The deadline had been previously extended until September by Cohen, but the 11th Circuit on Sept. 1 paused the enforcement of that order, throwing the effort into legal limbo.
Organizers responded by asking Cohen to intervene, but the judge denied the emergency motion, ruling that he cannot step in while the matter is in front of the appellate court, though he conceded that the appellate court’s recent recent pause “leaves both Plaintiffs, the (Cop City Vote) Coalition, and the City in a quandary.”
Atlanta Mayor Dickens and others say the $90 million facility would replace inadequate training facilities, and would help address difficulties in hiring and retaining police officers that worsened after the nationwide 2020 protests against police brutality and racial injustice.
Opponents, however, say they fear it will lead to greater militarization of the police and that its construction will exacerbate environmental damage in a poor, majority-Black area.
Organizers have modeled the referendum campaign after a successful effort in coastal Georgia, where Camden County residents voted overwhelmingly last year to block county officials from building a launchpad for blasting commercial rockets into space.
The Georgia Supreme Court in February unanimously upheld the legality of the Camden County referendum, though it remains an open question whether citizens can veto decisions of city governments. Atlanta officials have called the petition drive “futile” and “invalid,” arguing that the City Council’s 2021 decision to lease the land to the Atlanta Police Foundation cannot be overturned via a referendum.
veryGood! (551)
Related
- Average rate on 30
- Alabama lottery, casino legislation heads to conference committee
- Getting 'ISO certified' solar eclipse glasses means they're safe: What to know
- Lawyer for sex abuse victims says warning others about chaplain didn’t violate secrecy order
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- When do new 'Shōgun' episodes come out? Full season schedule, cast, where to watch
- Man who used megaphone to lead attack on Capitol police sentenced to more than 7 years in prison
- Lizelle Gonzalez is suing the Texas prosecutors who charged her criminally after abortion
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Trump Media sues Truth Social founders Andrew Litinsky, Wes Moss for 'reckless' decisions
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Bills to trade star WR Stefon Diggs to Texans in seismic offseason shakeup
- AT&T says personal information, data from 73 million accounts leaked onto dark web
- In swing-state Wisconsin, Democrat hustles to keep key Senate seat against Trump-backed millionaire
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- New sonar images show wreckage from Baltimore bridge collapse at bottom of river
- Suits’ Wendell Pierce Shares This Advice for the Cast of Upcoming Spinoff
- One school district stopped suspending kids for minor misbehavior. Here’s what happened
Recommendation
Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
9 children dead after old land mine explodes in Afghanistan
Did Texas 'go too far' with SB4 border bill? Appeals court weighs case; injunction holds.
Powerball lottery jackpot rockets to $1.09 billion: When is the next drawing?
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
This fungus turns cicadas into 'zombies' after being sexually transmitted
Chinese signatures on graduation certificates upset northern Virginia police chief
NYC’s AI chatbot was caught telling businesses to break the law. The city isn’t taking it down