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6 arrested in Atlanta protests over proposed police training facility

Six people were arrested after a peaceful protest over a proposed police training ground turned violent in Atlanta, Georgia, Saturday night, police said.

According to Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum, people protesting a new police training ground gathered around 5 p.m. and marched peacefully until, once downtown, several of the protestors “started committing illegal acts, which included the breaking of windows and also attacking police cruisers that were in the area.”

Police suppressed the violence quickly and no law enforcement officers or citizens were injured, Schierbaum said.

Three businesses, however, sustained damages, he said.

Police block downtown streets following a protest, Saturday, Jan. 21, 2023, in Atlanta, in the wake of the death of an environmental activist killed after authorities said the 26-year-old shot a state trooper.

Alex Slitz/AP

Mayor Andre Dickens said that some of tonight’s protestors traveled in from elsewhere.

“Many of them don’t even live in Atlanta or in the state of Georgia, and they don’t represent the voices of Atlanta,” he said, adding that some of the protestors were armed with explosives.

Dickens confirmed that a police car was lit on fire.

Gov. Brian Kemp condemned the acts of violence on Twitter.

“Violence and unlawful destruction of property are not acts of protest. They are crimes that will not be tolerated in Georgia and will be prosecuted fully,” he tweeted.

Saturday’s protests appear to be the latest development in the opposition to a new training center for the Atlanta Police Department, announced in 2021 by former Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, which would be carved out of a wooded area in DeKalb County.

Earlier this week, police raided the forest where protestors have camped out for months, shot and killed a protestor identified as Manuel Esteban Paez Teran and claimed Teran fired first. An officer was struck in the hip by a bullet and treated at a hospital, police said.

Seven people were also arrested and charged with domestic terrorism following the fatal shooting.

Protesters have claimed the police training center will only serve to further militarize law enforcement and that the conflict between the protesters and authorities have been escalating in recent months.

“What is taking place is a classic example of tyrannical government overreach,” activists said in a statement published by the Atlanta Community Press Collective. “The public has a right to defend its interests. We are advocates of a free and peaceful society built on cooperation and mutual understanding. The government is escalating this situation pointlessly.”

ABC News’ Jon Haworth and Nadine El-Bawab contributed to this report.

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