Thursday, February 29, 2024

‘Cop City’ Prosecutions Hinge on a New Definition of Domestic Terroris

Are the protesters against a new police training center part of a violent “extremist organization,” or are the serious charges they face a means of stifling free speech?



Timothy Bilodeau, 26, was charged with domestic terrorism after taking part in protests against building a new police center in a forested area just outside Atlanta.Credit...Sophie Park for The New York Times

By Sean Keenan and Rick Rojas

Sean Keenan has reported extensively on the Stop Cop City movement, including at various protests, and Rick Rojas has covered the response to it as The Times’s Atlanta bureau chief.

Feb. 26, 2024

In a forest on the outskirts of Atlanta last March, hundreds of protesters had gathered once again to try to stop the construction of a new police and fire training center.

For Timothy Bilodeau, a 26-year-old who had flown in from Boston, the fight that began in 2021 had gained new urgency after state troopers killed a protester in a shootout in the forest weeks earlier that also wounded an officer.

On the day that Mr. Bilodeau headed in, there was another fiery confrontation. A crowd marched to the development site, where some protesters threw fireworks and Molotov cocktails, setting equipment ablaze. The police arrested nearly two dozen protesters, including Mr. Bilodeau.

As Mr. Bilodeau saw it, he was taking a principled stand against the destruction of the forest. But prosecutors had a darker take: They charged Mr. Bilodeau and 22 others with domestic terrorism.

In all, 42 people involved in the demonstrations against the training facility have been charged under Georgia’s domestic terrorism law, making for one of the largest cases of its kind in the country on a charge that is rarely prosecuted.

As several states have added or expanded laws related to terrorism, or are considering doing so, the case in Georgia is at the center of debate about the need for these measures, the dangers they pose and, more fundamentally, what constitutes terrorism. (One proposal in New York has suggested that blocking traffic, a tactic occasionally used in demonstrations, could be considered domestic terrorism.)

Georgia broadened its definition in 2017 to include attempts to seriously harm or kill people, or to disable or destroy “critical infrastructure,” with the goal of forcing a policy change. The charge carries a penalty of up to 35 years in prison.

Officials in Georgia have argued that those charged were involved in sowing disorder and destruction — actions that demanded a swift and forceful response.

“We will not waver when it comes to keeping people safe, enforcing the rule of law, and ensuring those who engage in criminal activity are vigorously pursued and aggressively prosecuted,” Christopher M. Carr, Georgia’s attorney general, said in a statement.

Critics say that the charges in Georgia justify their worst fear about domestic terrorism laws: that they can frame activism as terrorism, and allow prosecutors to pursue even harsher punishments for “property crimes that were already illegal, simply because of accompanying political expression critical of government policy,” as the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia said in a recent statement.

The result, critics argue, is stifling free speech.

“It’s chilling,” Mr. Bilodeau, a tech consultant, said. “It is a devastating threat to all people who are advocates or activists for the well-being of our planet or climate or communities.”


A confrontation between police and demonstrators at the construction site in November.Credit...Erik S Lesser/EPA

Legal experts have also raised concerns about many people being prosecuted for serious crimes over the actions of a few.

Mr. Bilodeau’s lawyer, Amanda Clark Palmer, argued in a motion for a bond that his arrest warrant contained “no specific allegation that Mr. Bilodeau himself possessed or threw a rock, firework or Molotov cocktail.”

“The only specific allegation,” she added, “is the following: The accused was observed with muddy clothing from breaching and crossing the embankment. Accused was also in possession of a shield.”

Officials in Georgia have maintained that the charges were warranted, with the Atlanta Police Department calling the accused “violent agitators,” mostly from out of state, who committed violence “under the cover of a peaceful protest.”

The charges have not yet proceeded to indictments, in part because the local district attorney withdrew from the case, citing a “fundamental difference in prosecutorial philosophy” with Mr. Carr, the Republican attorney general.


A burned construction vehicle at the site of the proposed Atlanta Public Safety Training Center last March. Credit...Erik S Lesser/EPA

But the allegations also provided the foundation for a broader case that Mr. Carr's office is pursuing under the state’s racketeering law — a powerful tool that prosecutors have used to target street gangs, public officials accused of corruption and even former President Donald J. Trump, who is accused of conspiring to overturn his election loss in 2020.

Mr. Bilodeau and 60 others are now facing racketeering charges, with prosecutors describing them as part of “an anarchist, anti-police and anti-business extremist organization” that conspired to block the training center. The first trial in the racketeering case could start in the coming weeks.

The Atlanta City Council voted in 2021 to authorize the training facility, officially named the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center and derided by protesters as “Cop City.”

The project stirred a diverse coalition of opponents: environmental activists who objected to developing a rare expanse of forest in a rapidly developing metropolitan area; social justice activists who believed the facility would train officers to police communities with militarized tactics; and nearby residents opposed to a potentially disruptive new neighbor.

The opposition intensified in 2022 as officers began sweeping the site. Protesters had set up camp in the trees and erected barricades to block officers and construction crews. Some of the demonstrators threw Molotov cocktails and set off fireworks, the police said. Officers responded with tear gas and rubber bullets, and in January 2023, a 26-year-old activist, Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, known as Tortuguita, was fatally shot by state troopers.

Officials have said that the activist shot first, wounding a trooper, but protesters have remained skeptical, partly because the troopers were not wearing body cameras.


A memorial to Manuel Esteban Paez Terán, an activist who was fatally shot by state troopers.Credit...Nicole Craine for The New York Times

More construction and police vehicles at the site have been set on fire since then, including as recently as late January. Construction companies in Georgia and beyond — including at least one mistakenly associated with the training center — have had equipment vandalized or burned, the authorities said.

Last month, city officials said that the destruction had caused the cost of the facility, which had been estimated at $90 million, to jump by nearly $20 million.

“These individuals are trafficking in fear,” John F. King, Georgia’s insurance and safety fire commissioner, said in a recent news conference announcing rewards of up to $200,000 for help finding and convicting arson suspects.

When Georgia lawmakers strengthened the state’s domestic terrorism laws, it was in part a response to the racist massacre in 2015 at a Black church in Charleston, S.C. The point, they said at the time, was to empower prosecutors to charge perpetrators of racist attacks as domestic terrorists. Georgia lawmakers are currently considering another measure to bolster its law further.

Like Georgia, other states have also moved to expand terrorism-related laws, reflecting an increasingly fractured political climate and fears of rising extremism. A bill in West Virginia would clarify definitions of terrorism and create mandatory sentencing rules.

Last year, Oregon — where the authorities have had showdowns with armed militias on public land, and where far-right demonstrators breached the State Capitol in 2021 — became the latest state to enact a domestic terrorism law.

Officials in Georgia have used the expanded law to target left-wing activism that, they argue, took a violent turn in Atlanta around the time of the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020.

One of the demands in the nationwide protests that followed the murder of George Floyd was to strip funding away from police departments and redirect those resources. The Cop City protesters see Atlanta as doing the opposite with the training center, which officials have hailed as an investment in a police force struggling with depleted ranks and morale.

“We don’t need more police and more of a surveillance state,” said Ayla King, 19, a recent high school graduate from Worcester, Mass., who traveled to Atlanta last March after following the developments on social media. Mx. King, who uses the they pronoun, faces both domestic terrorism and racketeering charges.


Ayla King, 19, a recent high school graduate from Worcester, Mass., who traveled to Atlanta last March after following the developments on social media. Credit...Nicole Craine for The New York Times

Mr. Bilodeau, who spent 17 days in jail after the confrontation last March, declined to discuss what he did in the forest in March, pointing to his impending trial. In charging documents, prosecutors accused him of criminal trespass and of joining “an organized mob designed to overwhelm the police force,” occupy the forest and cause property damage.

He returned to a life in Boston that was upended. His bank closed his accounts, he said. The youth art and music program where he had been a regular volunteer told him he was no longer welcome. His anxiety about the police seeped into his dreams, and he is wary of participating in any more protests.

“This has been just a crushing emotional and legal process, and we’re not really in the thick of things yet,” Mr. Bilodeau said.

Mx. King has had to set aside plans for college.

“This is terrifying,” Mx. King said in an interview in December, before a gag order was issued in their case. “But it’s really important to stay strong and just know that, just because the state says that I’m a domestic terrorist, it doesn’t mean anything, really. It’s such an inflated charge.”

Still, Mx. King has no illusions about the gravity of the situation. In fact, they recently had a stark reminder of the stakes: They declined a plea offer of a 10-year sentence that included three years in prison.

Rick Rojas is a national correspondent covering the American South. He has been a staff reporter for The Times since 2014. More about Rick Rojas

A version of this article appears in print on Feb. 27, 2024, Section A, Page 11 of the New York edition with the New York Times.

Cedar's Take:

Sometimes if order to understand just how screwed-up some people are, you need to explore the really troubling editorial content they are reading. 

This February 26 "article" ran in the New York Times. It makes the argument that the "Cop City" violent protesters were really just exercising their right to free speech. 

Keep in mind this is the New York Times. But this garbage is so bad that even The Charlotte Observer won't run this story. 

This juxtaposed to the January 6th march on the Capitol aka insurrection in which hundreds were arrested and charged with misdemeanors that resulted in prison sentences for most is really comical. 

These people are career anarchists, some who participated in the 2020 George Floyd protests in Charlotte. I guess they just go to violent anti police protests like I go to motorcycle rallies? 

Sturgis Anyone?


Monday, February 26, 2024

Huntersville Arrests Felicia Alia Rush



Huntersville Police arrested Felicia Alia Rush and didn't mess around. Charging her with 8 counts of trafficking, Opium or Heroin. 

Bond was set at $100,000.00 then reduced to $75,000.00

An order for release was generated but as 1600 she was still in the custody of the Meck County Sheriff. 


Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Tony Moore Captain Retired Charlotte Fire Department

This "go fund me" was created by Jennifer Perkins:

As many of you have seen over the news this week, former Charlotte Fire Captain, Tony Moore tragically died on I-485. 

His son Audie had a minor bump up on a rainy dark winter night and called his parents for help. 

Thankfully Audie was not injured in the accident! 



His mother was on route from one direction and his father was on route the other direction. 

Tony was dropped off on the opposite side of the highway and was attempting to cross when he didn't see an oncoming pickup truck. Audie's mother arrived immediately after Tony was struck and while did not see that happen, sadly, both of them witnessed more than anyone ever should! 

They have a new found respect for all the years of service Tony gave to the community and their lives are forever changed.

Tony's Story

We haven't had a lot of time with Audie over the years, but everyone who comes in contact with him are in awe of this young man. That is not an exaggeration. My description from the first day I met him was that he is an old soul. He is mature beyond his years, thoughtful, compassionate, caring, always listening and seems to have a special fondness for people older than him. 

He loves his family; immediate and extended alike. He is a bright young man, enjoying trains, creating models for 3D printing, photography and esports gaming. He is liked by his peers at school and has made friends across the nation through his various hobbies.

Audie is a good student, making straight A's and taking AP classes this year. He has done exceptionally well in school, eager to learn and retaining that knowledge for application. His desire is to further his education with college and his ultimate goal being Aerospace Engineering; which brings me to the purpose of this fund raiser. We would like to see Audie get a good start on his education because he is well deserving and his mother will need help to see him through his college years.

Melissa, Tony's wife and Audie's mother, did the book keeping/scheduling end of their family carpet cleaning business. She has not worked outside of the home for many years and this was their main income. Her ultimate concern is for Audie's future and well being.

Melissa and I (Jennifer) have been friends 20yrs and my desire is to support Melissa and Audie as much as I can through this terrible tragedy. If your family has the means and can help these sweet people with your donation, it will go to what it is intended for and they will be very appreciative. If you cannot donate, that is OK too - send them love and light. This is going to be a long hard journey for them.

"Grief never ends...But it changes. It's a passage, not a place to stay. Grief is not a sign of weakness, nor a lack of faith. It is the price of love."- Author Unknown

Support my GoFundMe here: https://gofund.me/1ccfdcd8 

Jennifer Perkins

Note many of you know CP a one time hobby hose dragger is a big supporter of the guys and girls who climb aboard red trucks. Even Mrs. Cedar is a fan underwriting the construction of Volunteer Fire Stations across the Carolinas. So we really hate to see social media posts like this. It breaks our hearts. Prayers to Captain Moore's family. 

Monday, January 29, 2024

Winner Winner Chicken Dinner

An argument over stolen fried chicken led to a Walmart employee getting shot on Sunday, Pineville police said. 

Pineville police responded to a reported shooting at the Walmart on Pineville-Matthews Road around 6:30 p.m. this past Saturday January 28, 2024. 

When officers arrived, they found an employee who had been shot in the leg and learned that the whole incident apparently started over a self-checkout dispute. 

Jonathan Alan Smith Photo Courtesy MCSO

According to Pineville detectives, a Walmart employee noticed that Jonathan Alan Smith didn't scan some fried chicken and dog food while checking out. The employee confronted Smith, who then scanned the dog food but did not pay for the chicken, investigators claimed. 

Smith and the employee then got into an argument that led to a brief fight that was broken up by a group of employees. 

Smith was apparently Jonesing for that Fried Chicken and allegedly returned to the store a short time later with a gun, according to Pineville police. 

Smith is accused of entering the store and confronting multiple employees before another fight broke out. The gun fell out of Smith's pocket, leading to the employees and Smith struggling to control the weapon. The gun then went off, shooting one of the employees in the knee. 

Smith was arrested at the store and charged with assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury and larceny of the Fried Chicken in question. 

The employee was treated for their injuries and is expected to be OK, according to police. 

Not wanting any further trouble out of Smith, Pineville Officers confiscated the weapon but let Smith keep the stolen bucket of Fried Chicken.

Smith is being held in the Mecklenburg County Jail under a $10,000.00 secured bond. But I'd expect he'll be out in time to hit Popeyes on the way home. Y'all been warned because next time Smith may just try for the whole damn tray.


Good Fried Chicken will make a man do crazy stuff. 

Sunday, January 28, 2024

26 Year Old Diana Perez-Barrera Murdered

More than a week ago Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police responded to a call for service at Turquoise Drive in CMPD's Hickory Grove Division around 6 a.m. on Friday January 19th.

Since then police have released the name of the woman who was shot and killed as Diana Perez-Barrera ago 26.

Diana Perez-Barrera

According to CMPD she was pronounced dead at the scene when police arrived.

A CMPD incident report said the unknown male suspect who shot Perez-Barrera demanded money and moved her and another victim, a 21-year-old man, around the home at gunpoint. 

The suspect shot Perez-Barrera, kidnapped and transported the male victim in the male victim’s vehicle, took him to a second location on Rozzelles Ferry Road, where he “committed other incidents” and stole the male victim’s vehicle, the report said. 

CMPD Crime Scene Investigations was videotaped at 7921 Turquoise Drive which is off Plott Road near Plaza Road Extension. 


9721 Turquoise Drive Charlotte, NC 

The home is owned by Hanh T. Vo. Neighbors say it is rental property owned by Vo since for at least 8 years. 

According to a police report, the victims did not know the suspect. The area while not immune to crime is not really a hotspot for criminal activity. Most the homes in the area are modest single family older homes with kids playing in the street and well cared for yards.

CMPD spokesperson Michael Allinger said Monday that while the male victim was originally reported as being kidnapped, he is not currently missing. The investigation is active and ongoing.

The investigation into this case is active and ongoing. As additional information develops, it will be released by the CMPD’s Public Affairs Office. Anyone with information about this incident is asked to call 704-432-TIPS and speak directly to a Homicide Unit detective. Detective D. Haulsee is the lead detective assigned to this case. The public can also leave information anonymously by contacting Crime Stoppers at 704-334-1600 or http://charlottecrimestoppers.com/. For additional information about this case, please refer to the report: 20240119-0554-00.

Cedar's Take: Something is just off. 

First no description of the suspect. 

Second this murder has zero media interest. With no more than 3 column inches given in the local paper and nothing more than a 30 second sound bite on WCNC and other television news outlets. 

Third this is a "home invasion" a random act of extreme violence and the perp has not be arrested or identified.

Fourth nothing further on the victim. 165 candles on Gun Violence yet no obituary no gofundme or memorial page.



Thursday, January 25, 2024

What's in a Name? South Charlotte Rapist Santerius Qwayshaw

Santerius Qwayshawn Allen is a violent repeat offender that should not have been lose on Charlotte Streets. But nevertheless he broke into a South Charlotte woman’s home through a window and raped her yesterday. The woman’s teenage daughter was inside during the attack and was able to call 911.



The attack happened shortly after 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 24, at a home located in the 10200 block of Chivalry Drive in south Charlotte. This in the Cady Lake subdivision just of Tom Short and south of I-485 beltway and not Ballantyne as many local media are reporting.

As CMPD officers arrived at the house, they heard a woman screaming inside and immediately made entry and took the suspect, identified as Allen, into custody.

The woman’s daughter who called 911 was not harmed during this attack, police said.

Allen has been charged with felony breaking and entering, first-degree kidnapping, second-degree kidnapping, second-degree rape, second-degree sex offense, sexual battery, and assault on a woman.

Allen is a convicted felon with a violent history outside of the Charlotte area, CMPD said. 



Allen has spent nearly 8 years in prison for offenses. His past arrests include nearly a dozen charges ranging from assault, stolen auto, stolen property, malicious conduct, assault on a corrections official, assault on a probation officer.  He was paroled in 2022 but arrested five times for violating the conditions of his parole. His past criminal history covers both Cleveland and Gaston counties.

Allen has his first court appearance Thursday morning at 10 a.m. He is currently being held without bond.

Beyond his skin color Santerius Qwayshawn is obviously burdened by his given name. Therefore he is clearly beyond rehabilitation regardless of what the liberals appointed to the parole board by our Democrat Governor and Attorney General Josh Stein think. Hopefully today the judge will keep this POS behind bars and hold him for trial as a habitual felon.

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Hotel McFadden Where You Can Check Out Anytime You Like

 But you can never leave....



According to a local new report a convicted felon was taken into custody by Mecklenburg County deputies on Friday night. On Saturday morning, he was found dead in his housing unit.

George Wesley Benfield, 43, was arrested and processed Friday night at 8:17 p.m. for charges of violating parole and stealing a vehicle.

He was moved to the detention center in Uptown around 1:45 a.m.The Mecklenburg County Sheriff’s Office announced he was found unresponsive in his housing unit around 3:09 a.m. on Saturday.

Both MEDIC and Charlotte Fire Department attempted life-saving measures. Benfield was pronounced dead at Atrium Main just after 4 a.m.

“Announcing the news of a resident’s passing is always a challenge and remains a consistently difficult task,” said Sheriff McFadden. “Our hearts go out to Mr. Benfield’s family. May they find strength and comfort during this difficult time.”

The State Bureau of Investigation and the MCSO are conducting in-custody death investigations. The county medical examiner is working to determine the cause of death.

Benfield had a long record criminal record dating back 25 years in Mecklenburg and surrounding counties. Most charges were low level felonies and misdemeanors. 

Cedar's Take: Benfield had the sort of record that just makes you smile and shake your head. Just a nonconformist who clearly looked the part. Pulled the police report from the Iredell County arrest, and I nearly spit my coffee. God just created some of us different or as my grandmother would say "that boy ain't right". RIP George Benfield.