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A federal judge ruled Department of Justice records related to the recent seizure of 2020 ballots and documents in Fulton County, Georgia, must be unsealed by Tuesday. Willie James Inman has more.
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A federal judge ruled Department of Justice records related to the recent seizure of 2020 ballots and documents in Fulton County, Georgia, must be unsealed by Tuesday. Willie James Inman has more.
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In recent weeks, Marin County Registrar Natalie Adona has been largely focused on the many mundane tasks of local elections administrators in the months before a midterm: finalizing voting locations, ordering supplies, facilitating candidate filings.
But in the wake of unprecedented efforts by the Trump administration to intervene in state-run elections, Adona said she has also been preparing her staff for far less ordinary scenarios — such as federal officials showing up and demanding ballots, as they recently did in Georgia, or immigration agents staging around polling stations on election day, as some in President Trump’s orbit have suggested.
“Part of my job is making sure that the plans are developed and then tested and then socialized with the staff so if those situations were to ever come up, we would not be figuring it out right then and there. We would know what to do,” Adona said. “Doing those sort of exercises and that level of planning in a way is kind of grounding, and makes things feel less chaotic.”
Natalie Adona faced harassment from election deniers and COVID anti-maskers when she served as the registrar of voters in Nevada County. She now serves Marin County and is preparing her staff for potential scenarios this upcoming election, including what to do if immigration agents are present.
(Jess Lynn Goss / For The Times)
Across California, local elections administrators say they have been running similar exercises to prepare for once unthinkable threats — not from local rabble-rousers, remote cyberattackers or foreign adversaries, but their own federal government.
State officials, too, are writing new contingency plans for unprecedented intrusions by Trump and other administration officials, who in recent days have repeated baseless 2020 election conspiracies, raided and taken ballots from a local election center in Fulton County, Ga., pushed both litigation and legislation that would radically alter local voting rules, and called for Republicans to seize control of elections nationwide.
California’s local and state officials — many of whom are Democrats — are walking a fine line, telling their constituents that elections remain fair and safe, but also that Trump’s talk of federal intervention must be taken seriously.
Their concerns are vastly different than the concerns voiced by Trump and other Republicans, who for years have alleged without evidence that U.S. elections are compromised by widespread fraud involving noncitizen voters, including in California.
But they have nonetheless added to a long-simmering sense of fear and doubt among voters — who this year have the potential to radically alter the nation’s political trajectory by flipping control of Congress to Democrats.
An election worker moves ballots to be sorted at the Orange County Registrar of Voters in Santa Ana on Nov. 5, 2024.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Trump has said he will accept Republican losses only if the elections are “honest.” A White House spokesperson said Trump is pushing for stricter rules for voting and voter registration because he “cares deeply about the safety and security of our elections.”
Rick Hasen, an election law expert and director of the Safeguarding Democracy Project at UCLA Law, said some of what Trump says about elections “is nonsensical and some is bluster,” but recent actions — especially the election center raid in Georgia — have brought home the reality of his threats.
“Some worry that this is a test run for trying to seize ballot boxes in 2026 and prevent a fair count of the votes, and given Trump’s track record, I don’t think that is something we can dismiss out of hand,” Hasen said. “States need to be making contingency plans to make sure that those kinds of things don’t happen.”
The White House dismissed such concerns, pointing to isolated incidents of noncitizens being charged with illegally voting, and to examples of duplicate registrations, voters remaining on rolls after death and people stealing ballots to vote multiple times.
“These so-called experts are ignoring the plentiful examples of noncitizens charged with voter fraud and of ineligible voters on voter rolls,” said Abigail Jackson, the White House spokesperson.
Experts said fraudulent votes are rare, most registration and roll issues do not translate into fraudulent votes being cast, and there is no evidence such issues swing elections.
Early in his term, Trump issued an executive order calling for voters nationwide to be required to show proof of U.S. citizenship, and for states to be required to disregard mail ballots received after election day. California and other states sued, and courts have so far blocked the order.
This past week, Trump said outright that Republicans should “take over” elections nationwide.
The Justice Department has sued California Secretary of State Shirley Weber and her counterparts in other states for refusing to hand over state voter rolls — the lawsuit against Weber was tossed — and raided and seized ballots from the election office of Fulton County, long a target of right-wing conspiracy theories over Trump’s 2020 election loss.
President Trump walks behind former chairperson of the Republican National Committee Michael Whatley as he prepares to speak during a political rally in Rocky Mount, N.C., on Dec. 19.
(Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP via Getty Images)
Longtime Trump advisor and ally Stephen K. Bannon suggested U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents will be dispatched to polling locations in November, reprising old fears about voter intimidation. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said she couldn’t rule that out, despite it being illegal.
Democrats have raised concerns about the U.S. Postal Service mishandling mail ballots in the upcoming elections, following rule changes for how such mail is processed. Republicans have continued pushing the SAVE America Act, which would create new proof of citizenship requirements for voters. The U.S. Supreme Court is considering multiple voting rights cases, including one out of Louisiana that challenges Voting Rights Act protections for Black representation.
Charles H. Stewart, director of the MIT Election Data + Science Lab, said the series of events has created an “environment where chaos is being threatened,” and where “people who are concerned about the state of democracy are alarmed and very concerned,” and rightfully so.
But he said there are also “a number of guardrails” in place — what he called “the kind of mundane mechanics that are involved in running elections” — that will help prevent harm.
California leaders have been vociferous in their defense of state elections, and said they’re prepared to fight any attempted takeover.
“The President regularly spews outright lies when it comes to elections in this country, particularly ones he and his party lose,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement. “We will continue to correct those lies, rebuild much-needed trust in our democratic institutions and civic duties, and defend the U.S. Constitution’s grant to the states authority over elections.”
California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta and Secretary of State Shirley Weber take questions after announcing a lawsuit to protect voter rights in 2024.
(Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)
California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta said in an interview that his office “would go into court and we would get a restraining order within hours” if the Trump administration tries to intervene in California elections, “because the U.S. Constitution says that states predominantly determine the time, place and manner of elections, not the president.”
Weber told The Times that the state has “a cadre of attorneys” standing by to defend its election system, but also “absolutely amazing” county elections officials who “take their job very seriously” and serve as the first line of defense against any disruptions, from the Trump administration or otherwise.
Dean Logan, Los Angeles County’s chief elections official, said his office has been doing “contingency planning and tabletop exercises” for traditional disruptions, such as wildfires and earthquakes, and novel ones, such as federal immigration agents massing near voting locations and last-minute policy changes by the U.S. Postal Service or the courts.
“Those are the things that keep us up at night,” he said.
Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder Dean Logan said the county no longer has ballots from the 2020 election.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Logan said he is not currently concerned about the FBI raiding L.A. County elections offices because, while Fulton County still had its 2020 ballots on hand due to ongoing litigation, that is not the case for L.A. County, which is “beyond the retention period” for holding, and no longer has, its 2020 ballots.
However, Logan said he does consider what happened in Georgia a warning that the Trump administration “will utilize the federal government to go in and be disruptive in an elections operation.”
“What we don’t know is, would they do that during the conduct of an election, before an election is certified?” Logan said.
Kristin Connelly, chief elections officer for Contra Costa County, said she’s been working hard to make sure voters have confidence in the election process, including by giving speeches to concerned voters, expanding the county’s certified election observer program, and, in the lead-up to the 2024 election, running a grant-funded awareness campaign around election security.
Connelly — who joined local elections officials nationwide in challenging Trump’s executive order on elections in court — said she also has been running tabletop exercises and coordinating with local law enforcement, all with the goal of ensuring her constituents can vote.
“How the federal government is behaving is different from how it used to behave, but at the end of the day, what we have to do is run a mistake-free, perfect election, and to open our offices and operation to everybody — especially the people who ask hard questions,” she said.
Several officials in California said that as they prepare, they have been buoyed by lessons from the past.
Before being hired by the deep-blue county of Marin in May, Adona was the elected voting chief in rural Nevada County in the Sierra foothills.
In 2022, Adona affirmed that Trump’s 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden was legitimate and enforced a pandemic mask mandate in her office. That enraged a coalition of anti-mask, anti-vaccine, pro-Trump protesters, who pushed their way into the locked election office.
Protesters confronted Adona and her staffers, with one worker getting pushed down. They stationed themselves in the hallway, leaving Adona’s staff too terrified to leave their office to use the hallway bathroom, as local, state and federal authorities declined to step in.
“At this point, and for months afterwards, I felt isolated and depressed. I had panic attacks every few days. I felt that no one had our back. I focused all my attention on my staff’s safety, because they were clearly nervous about the unknown,” Adona said during subsequent testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
In part because she knows what can go wrong, Adona said her focus now is on preparing her new staff for whatever may come, while following the news out of Georgia and trying to maintain a cool head.
“I would rather have a plan and not use it than need a plan and not have one,” she said.
Clint Curtis, the clerk and registrar of voters in Shasta County — which ditched its voting machines in 2023 amid unfounded fraud allegations by Trump — said his biggest task ahead of the midterms is to increase both ballot security and transparency.
Since being appointed to lead the county office last spring, the conservative Republican from Florida has added more cameras and more space for election observers — which, during the recent special election on Proposition 50, California’s redistricting measure, included observers from Bonta’s and Weber’s offices.
He has also reduced the number of ballot drop boxes in the vast county from more than a dozen to four. Curtis told The Times he did not trust the security of ballots in the hands of “these little old ladies running all over the county” to pick them up, and noted there are dozens of other county locations where they can be dropped off. He said he invited Justice Department officials to observe voting on Proposition 50, though they didn’t show, and welcomes them again for the midterms.
“If they can make voting safer for everybody, I’m perfectly fine with that,” he said. “It always makes me nervous when people don’t want to cooperate. Whatcha hiding? It should be: ‘Come on in.’”
Election workers inspect ballots after extracting them from envelopes on election night at the Los Angeles County Ballot Processing Center on Nov. 5, 2024, in the City of Industry.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
Weber, 77 and the daughter of an Arkansas sharecropper whose family fled Southern racism and threats of violence to reach California, said that while many people in the U.S. are confronting intense fear and doubt about the election for the first time, and understandably so, that is simply not the case for her or many other Black people.
“African Americans have always been under attack for voting, and not allowed to vote, and had new rules created for them about literacy and poll taxes and all those other kinds of things, and many folks lost their lives just trying to register to vote,” Weber said.
Weber said she still recalls her mother, who had never voted in Arkansas, setting up a polling location in their home in South L.A. each election when Weber was young, and today draws courage from those memories.
“I tell folks there’s no alternative to it. You have to fight for this right to vote. And you have to be aware of the fact that all these strategies that people are trying to use [to suppress voting] are not new strategies. They’re old strategies,” Weber said. “And we just have to be smarter and fight harder.”
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Kevin Rector, Hailey Branson-Potts, Ana Ceballos
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Agents with the Federal Bureau of Information are executing a search at a warehouse that serves as Fulton County’s election hub.
The agency confirmed that its agents were “executing a court authorized law enforcement action” at 5600 Campbellton Fairburn Road, the site of the Fulton County Elections Hub & Operations Center. Agents wearing camouflage vests were seen going in and out of the warehouse.
An FBI spokesperson did not provide any details about what the search was concerning, other than saying their investigation was ongoing. A spokesperson for the Georgia Bureau of Investigation says that their agency is not involved in the operation.
Fulton County spokesperson Jessica Corbitt-Dominguez said that the search at the county’s main election facility in Union City focused on records related to the 2020 election, but declined to share specifics.
Mike Stewart / AP
The center, which opened in 2023, serves as a storage space for election equipment and office space for multiple Fulton County agencies.
Democratic state Sen. Josh McLarin told reporters at the scene that an FBI evidence retrieval team was loading what he called “700 boxes of ballots” into parked trucks nearby. He expressed his concern about what would happen to the ballots after they are removed from the center.
“If they are able to modify the contents of these ballots. Then there is really no way to find out what happened in 2020,” McLarin said.
President Trump has long made Georgia, one of the battleground states he lost in 2020, a central target for his complaints about the election and memorably pleaded with its then-secretary of state to “find” him enough votes to overturn the contest.
Last year, the U.S. Justice Department sued the Fulton County Board of Registration and Elections and Clerk of Courts Che Alexander, arguing that they had failed to comply with a subpoena requesting all “used and void ballots, stubs of all ballots, signature envelopes, and corresponding envelope digital files from the 2020 General Election in Fulton County.” The county responded on Jan. 20, asking for the lawsuit be dismissed.
It is not clear if that lawsuit and request for information were connected with the search.
In May 2024, Georgia’s State Election Board heard a case that alleged documentation was missing for thousands of votes in the recount of the presidential contest in the 2020 election in 2020. After a presentation by a lawyer and an investigator for the secretary of state’s office, a response from the county and a lengthy discussion among the board members, the board voted to issue a letter of reprimand to Fulton County.
Shortly after that vote, there was a shift in power on the board, and the newly cemented conservative majority sought to reopen the case. The lone Democrat on the board and the chair have repeatedly objected, arguing the case is closed and citing multiple reviews that have found that while the county’s 2020 elections were sloppy and poorly managed there was no evidence of intentional wrongdoing.
This is a breaking news story and will be updated as soon as additional information is available. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens, Councilmember Jason Dozier, Fulton County Commissioner Mo Ivory, and Partners for Home gathered on a cold, windy Thursday, January 15, for a press conference and hard-hat tour of a new rapid-housing site at 405 Cooper St.
This rapid-housing site for unhoused residents of Fulton County will provide 100 units of supportive housing and 70 townhomes in the heart of the Mechanicsville community. The city and partners broke ground on the site just months ago and invited media partners for a sneak peek of the development progress.
Atlanta is home to over a quarter of the state’s homeless population of nearly 10,000, according to Atlanta Mission. According to Partners for Home, the 2025 Point-In-Time (PIT) Count, conducted the night of January 27 and followed by additional surveying the week following, recorded a 1% overall increase from 2024, suggesting a potential plateau.

Chronic homelessness fell 9% due to an ongoing focus on rehousing the most vulnerable individuals in permanent supportive housing (PSH), a housing intervention that pairs long-term leasing/rental aid with supportive services like mental health services, employment help, and ongoing case management.
During the press conference, Dickens discussed the rising issue of homelessness in the U.S., emphasizing that it has surpassed crime as a primary concern for mayors, including in Atlanta. He also highlighted visible encampments and the city’s multifaceted approach to addressing the problem, involving government, philanthropy, nonprofits, and innovative construction techniques.
“Seeing a growth and a climb in people experiencing homelessness, the unsheltered population across this country is rising,” he said. “I can’t tell you how many mayors that I talked to across the country that no longer is crime our number one concern and thing that we are most pressed about, but at this point in time, it is the growth of people that are having more money than money people that are unhoused in our communities across the country and Atlanta is no different.”

Additionally, Dickens mentioned the city’s commitment of $60 million to a homelessness opportunity bond, the highest in Atlanta’s history, which has helped house thousands over four years. He underscored the city’s determination to tackle homelessness collaboratively, with the city going first or last but never alone, and acknowledged the presence of key stakeholders in the effort.
“We’re trying to attack this problem with the help of community members and great-minded folks in the nonprofit business sector, etc. And this work is meaningful. We’ve been doing it for a long time,” he said. “My administration has been doing a whole lot of work, but there’s still more work to be done.”
Ivory emphasized the need for permanent supportive housing to address Fulton County’s homelessness crisis. She highlighted that Fulton County currently supports 302 supportive housing units but requires 550, with funding only secured through 2026. Ivory said fully funding supportive housing is cost-effective, reduces repeat jail bookings, and helps public safety.
When housing is missing, she said, those systems become the default response. Ivory also urges her colleagues to honor the commitment to helping their residents.
“I have told my colleagues to honor that commitment, and I hope that when we get to our meeting next Wednesday, when we vote on this budget, that they will do that,” she said. “They have not done that thus far. Fulton County should be a partner to its cities, not a hindrance to the vital services that its cities need. I fully support funding permanent housing services now and into the future beyond the 10 years that we committed to, but especially right now.”
Also, Dozier reflected on the importance of the work that’s been doing and how he experienced homelessness at an early age. Sharing in one of his earlier groundbreakings, he grew up in Atlanta, where his home of 16 years and the only home his mom ever owned was lost to foreclosure.
“We had all our things thrown out into the street and as a someone who was in my early 20s, I know what it was like to experience fear, to experience instability, to not know what roof was going to be over my head, where I was going to sleep, and I had to rely on the generosity of friends and family members and neighbors sleeping on couches on cold days like to this turn on the oven to keep the house warm,” he said.
Dickens stressed the commitment of Fulton County Commission members and city council to distribute $4.8 million annually for 30 years to address homelessness, a small portion of their budget.
He also criticized some commissioners for attempting to pull back on this promise.
“We must be honest about some of the people who are supposed to be in this with us, and that is members of the Fulton County Commission, and we have one [Mo Ivory], who is here to support our efforts and the people that are in need,” he said.
Dickens also praised Governor Kemp for stepping up, saying he would pull $50 million towards housing the homeless and helping with wraparound services for urban areas like the city of Atlanta.
“That’s meaningful steps up towards helping us, so we need the county to do just what they said they were going to do and what their charter is for them to do, which is to help with the Health and Human Services,” he said. “Do what you say you’re gonna do, and for the next 30 years, you’re supposed to put up at a minimum $4.8 million. You can’t walk back from that.”
Furthermore, Dickens said they must have a partnership from the county to pay for the operations.
“That’s the agreement, and we must keep them to their promises, promises made must be promises kept, or see you at the ballot,” he said.
The rapid housing units at 405 Cooper St., will be finished in the next two months, according to developers.
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President Trump has filed a motion in Fulton County seeking more than $6.2 million from the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office to cover his attorney fees and litigation costs in the recently dismissed criminal election interference case.
A new Georgia law allows defendants to request reimbursement for their legal bills if a prosecutor is disqualified and the case is dismissed, a change that many people who spoke with CBS Atlanta report was written specifically for this purpose.
Under the law, each defendant has 45 days from the date of dismissal to file a claim seeking reimbursement for “reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.” Judge Scott McAfee decides.
Mr. Trump’s camp and Georgia Republicans have repeatedly described the case as “politically motivated.”
In August 2023, Willis announced the indictment against Mr. Trump and 18 others using Georgia’s anti-racketeering law to accuse them of participating in a scheme to overturn Mr. Trump’s narrow 2020 election loss to Joe Biden in the state.
Willis was removed from the case after one of the defense attorneys in the case revealed a relationship between her and Nathan Wade, the special prosecutor hired to lead the case.Willis and Wade admitted they were romantically involved but denied any wrongdoing. They testified that the relationship began after Wade was hired, and that it had ended in the summer of 2024.
While a judge in the case found that there was no conflict of interest, the Georgia Court of Appeals ruled she could not prosecute Mr. Trump and others, citing an “appearance of impropriety.”
In November, Prosecuting Attorneys Council of Georgia Executive Director Peter J. Skandalakis stepped in to replace Willis as the lead prosecutor.
In the days afterward, he filed a motion informing the court of his decision to abandon the prosecution, arguing that the acts listed in the indictment “are not acts I would consider sufficient” to sustain a racketeering case. A Fulton County Superior Court judge dismissed the case on Nov. 26.
Public filings reviewed by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution show Trump’s PACs spent upward of $5.5 million on Georgia-based attorneys since 2021. That includes:
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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Georgia’s winter temperatures and high winds didn’t stop crowds from gathering inside and outside of the Morrow Center on Monday afternoon in anticipation of the arrival of some special guests. Two dozen Buddhist monks, led by Bhikkhu Pannakara, have embarked on a 2,300-mile Walk For Peace, which included, among other counties, Clayton and DeKalb.
In Decatur, hundreds of people gathered along Rainbow Drive to watch the men march up the drive and into the center. Hours before the monks arrived, mothers, daughters, fathers, sons, grandparents, friends, and interested parties sat, stood, and walked in place to stay warm while they waited.
Belinda T. lives down the street from the temple and took the short drive over to witness what she called “history.”
“This is a historical event. I have lived to see a Black president, a Black vice president, and now this,” Belinda T. said. “I feel like I’m witnessing history.”
Steven Gibson echoed her sentiments. He was there with a couple of family members. Gibson and his party made their way to Decatur from Douglasville. He told The Atlanta Voice that he planned on making the trip because he, too, wanted to witness something he had never seen before. He also agrees with the monks’ overall mission of peace.
“I agree with what they are doing. It’s noble,” Gibson said. “Where we are as a country, we need something positive to lift our spirits.”
A mother and her four children moved closer and closer together in order to stay warm. She wanted her kids, an older boy and three small girls, to see the monks for various reasons. The top reason being proof of life.
“I support their walk for peace, I believe it is bringing us all together,” Nyah S. said. “But I also want my children to witness different walks of life.”
Kyah S. didn’t intend to use the perfect pun, but it landed right on target. She said her children are way too young to have witnessed the Civil Rights marches of the 50s and 60s, or even the Black Lives Matters protest of 2020 and 2021, but they can see this.
“Especially, peaceful ways of life. There are people of all colors and religions out here,” Nyah S., who is Muslim, said. “It’s important for them to witness this.”
Following brunch inside the arts and community center, there are plans for the monks to remain in Dekalb County for a peace gathering at the Beacon Municipal Complex. Senator Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), DeKalb County CEO Lorraine Cochran-Johnson, State Representative and gubernatorial candidate Ruwa Romman (D-Ga.), and Congressman Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) are invited speakers along with lead monk Bhikkhu Pannakara.
In Morrow, massive crowds gathered along Tara and Mt. Zion boulevards, while some people stood on cars, bundled in blankets, and used walkers as they awaited the monks’ arrival at the Morrow Center at Southlake Mall. Due to the number of people in the crowds, the monks were moved inside the building for safety reasons.

Residents peered into the windows near the entrance of the Morrow Center to catch a glimpse of the modestly dressed monks in their traditional saffron and brown robes.
This peace walk began in Fort Worth, Texas, and is expected to conclude in Washington, D.C., according to the steady stream of social media posts associated with the monks’ mission. The goal is to promote national healing, unity, and compassion. The Walk for Peace will traverse 10 states on its route to Washington, D.C., stopping at state capitols, historic landmarks, and local communities to share its message and invite moments of reflection and prayer.
This 110-day pilgrimage began at the Huong Dao Vipassana Bhavana Center in Fort Worth, the future site of one of the most significant Buddhist projects in the United States: The Ancient Sacred Buddhist Scripture Stupas, Dhammacetiya.
This visionary $200 million development spans 14 acres and will feature 840 stupas, each inscribed with sacred Buddhist scriptures symbolizing the boundless wisdom and compassion of the Buddha.
The project stands as a testament to Texas’s vibrant and growing Buddhist community and its commitment to strengthening the moral and spiritual fabric of the nation.

Buddhist monks dedicate their lives to preserving, practicing, and sharing the teachings of the Buddha through renunciation, meditation, study, and compassionate service. Following the Buddha’s example, monks often undertake long walking pilgrimages, spiritual journeys that may last for months.
During the Walk for Peace, participating monks will observe a strict ascetic code inspired by these ancient traditions, including eating only one meal per day and sleeping beneath trees, as a practice of humility, endurance, and spiritual focus.
Rooted in both spiritual devotion and civic purpose, the Walk for Peace looks to remind Americans that peace is not a destination; it is a practice. As the nation faces challenges of division, mental health crises, and conflict both at home and abroad, this pilgrimage offers a simple yet profound message: peace begins within the heart of each person and extends outward to families, communities, and the nation.

Walk For Peace Spiritual Leader Bhikkhu Pannakara said they walk not to protest, but to awaken the peace that already lives within each of us.
“The Walk for Peace is a simple yet meaningful reminder that unity and kindness begin within each of us and can radiate outward to families, communities, and society as a whole,” he said.
Supporter Monique Funches says this movement, in which the monks are participating, has inspired her own healing journey.
“For me, this walk means a lot and contributes to my healing journey because of my own experiences, personally being adopted from foster care,” she said. “It has taught me the value in being able to come to peace and to terms with my circumstances and with being separated and longing and yearning for that connection with my first family.”

She also says the Walk For Peace pilgrimage’s goal is to promote unity, peace, and a color-blind perspective, seeking wholeness and embracing differences.
After watching so many people unite for a single goal, Funches says it feels like everyone is “finally coming together,” especially in a time when it seems like everyone is divided.
The monks continue their 2,300-mile pilgrimage on Tuesday with a public stop planned in Decatur. The pilgrimage will culminate Feb. 13, 2026, at the U.S. Capitol, where participants hope to deliver a brief message symbolizing healing and renewal.
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Community members, staff, friends, and family all came together on a Saturday afternoon at the nerve center of Policing Alternatives & Diversion Initiative (PAD) as the nonprofit hosted its community open house.
PAD is an Atlanta-based nonprofit that provides an alternative to police response for individuals experiencing mental health concerns, poverty, and substance use. Often, when police are called to respond to individuals who may be trespassing due to being unhoused or struggling with substance use, those individuals are taken to jails throughout the city. This contributes to a disproportionate number of people being incarcerated despite primarily needing support rather than punishment.
“If we can interrupt a cycle of arrest and incarceration that leaves everybody worse off, then we’re able to really support our communities and everybody’s wellness,” said PAD Executive Director Moki Macias.
PAD’s origins trace back to Midtown Atlanta in the early 2010s, when sex workers were frequently targeted by law enforcement for activities tied to survival rather than violent crime. Rather than expanding services, some community members pushed for their removal from public spaces, prompting organizers to search for alternatives that focused on support instead of punishment.
“At the time, people didn’t want to provide services — they just wanted them banished,” said Denise White, PAD program director.
Community organizers and local officials later studied a diversion program in Seattle that connected individuals facing arrest to resources and case management instead. That model became the foundation for PAD, which launched in Atlanta in 2017.
The open house offered a look inside how PAD operates and why the organization has become a critical resource in Atlanta. Visitors got a glimpse of PAD’s clothing closet, where staff organize and distribute essentials to people in need, alongside food, housing support, and other resources. The organization’s services are especially important in a city where jails are severely overcrowded, and housing instability remains widespread. Local data show that about 1 in every 8 people booked into Atlanta jails has experienced housing instability.
Fulton County’s jail population regularly exceeds capacity, with many people held for low-level offenses connected to poverty, substance use, or unmet mental health needs. PAD works to reduce that cycle by responding to those situations without police involvement and connecting people to services before they enter the jail system.
PAD’s approach is informed not just by professional experience, but by the lived experiences of staff who have navigated the challenges PAD addresses. Bean Peters, a current PAD care navigator, said his own story helps instill “hope” in those he helps serve today. “Well, when I was 13 years old, I went to prison for five years,” Peters said. At a young age, Peters also experienced being unhoused. “I was homeless downtown, you know, and so sometimes people are caught up out there and don’t know how to navigate the system.”
“For me it’s all about passing out hope,” Peters said. In his role, he goes out into encampments and other areas across Atlanta to meet with people experiencing being unhoused, helping them navigate the system and obtain the documentation they need to access housing, behavioral health services, and other support.
“I’ve always been a humanitarian at heart,” Peters said. “If I can give somebody something, plus help them navigate the system and get into housing… that’s what I’m after.”
The work at PAD extends beyond the staff who go out into the city each day, providing food, housing, and other resources. The work can begin with you. PAD offers routine training for anyone who wants to learn how to help someone struggling with mental health, substance use, or other challenges, and how to connect them to the right services.
“We invite community members to take one of our training sessions if they want to learn how to support somebody who may be experiencing mental health distress and how to navigate the resources that exist in Atlanta,” said PAD Executive Director Moki Macias.
Macias said it’s all part of the idea that safety isn’t just about police — it’s about people having what they need. “When people have what they need, our communities can be safer for everybody,” she said.
Anyone in the city can also call 311 instead of 911 if they see someone in need of assistance. Calling sends PAD’s community response team to provide support and connect that person to resources.
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The prosecutor who recently took over the Georgia election interference case against President Donald Trump and others said in a court filing Wednesday that he has decided not to pursue the case further.Pete Skandalakis, the executive director of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, took over the case last month from Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who was removed over an “appearance of impropriety” created by a romantic relationship with the special prosecutor she chose to lead the case.After Skandalakis’ filing, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee issued a one-paragraph order dismissing the case in its entirety.It was unlikely that legal action against Trump could have moved forward while he is president. But 14 other defendants still faced charges, including former New York mayor and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani and former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.After the Georgia Supreme Court in September declined to hear Willis’ appeal of her disqualification, it fell to the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council to find a new prosecutor. Skandalakis said last month that he reached out to several prosecutors, but they all declined to take on the case. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee set a Nov. 14 deadline for the appointment of a new prosecutor, so Skandalakis chose to appoint himself rather than allowing the case to be dismissed.
The prosecutor who recently took over the Georgia election interference case against President Donald Trump and others said in a court filing Wednesday that he has decided not to pursue the case further.
Pete Skandalakis, the executive director of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, took over the case last month from Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who was removed over an “appearance of impropriety” created by a romantic relationship with the special prosecutor she chose to lead the case.
After Skandalakis’ filing, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee issued a one-paragraph order dismissing the case in its entirety.
It was unlikely that legal action against Trump could have moved forward while he is president. But 14 other defendants still faced charges, including former New York mayor and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani and former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.
After the Georgia Supreme Court in September declined to hear Willis’ appeal of her disqualification, it fell to the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council to find a new prosecutor. Skandalakis said last month that he reached out to several prosecutors, but they all declined to take on the case. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee set a Nov. 14 deadline for the appointment of a new prosecutor, so Skandalakis chose to appoint himself rather than allowing the case to be dismissed.
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Former Atlanta Police Department officer Kalema Jackson wants to be the next mayor of Atlanta, and he is not allowing the fact that he doesn’t know how to do that to stop him.
Jackson is one of three men running against the current Atlanta Mayor, Andre Dickens. Last week, he participated in the Atlanta Press Club Loudermilk-Young debate series. The debates, which were not televised live but aired on YouTube and WABE, were Jackson’s first opportunity to speak to Fulton County voters. He was nervous and hesitated to listen to or watch a replay. His mother texted him and let him know he did well.
“That’s when I decided to take a look, and I gave myself a B-,” Jackson said with a laugh.
Jackson has not allowed his lack of political experience to keep him from believing he can run the city. He believes his time on the street as a police officer helped him understand what the people of Atlanta need from its leaders. Jackson served the city for 13 years, most in Zone 3, and wants to return to continue his service, this time from City Hall, he said.
“I want to do right by the city,” said Jackson, 50, who is unmarried and without children. “I am proud of my career as a police officer. I wanted to make a contribution to this community, and I want to do it again.”

Jackson was born and raised in Dothan, Alabama, and moved to Atlanta in 1996 to attend college. He recalled that the city he encountered when he arrived had changed for better and worse. After graduating from art school, Jackson saw an Atlanta Police Department recruitment advertisement in the newspaper and decided to see what it was about.
In 2002, Jackson completed his Atlanta Police Department academy training and joined the force. For the next 13 years, he patrolled the streets and cemented relationships, not with major players in the halls of City Hall, but with people who live, work, and play within the communities of Atlanta.
When asked if he misses working as a police officer, Jackson, who retired in 2015, said, “Kind of.”
“I am proud that the community would call on me, and I’m proud that I had that type of impact,” Jackson said. “I took every case and call seriously.”
Voting turnout for the mayoral elections in Fulton County has routinely been low. Just under 50% of the nearly 900,000 registered voters participated in the 2024 general election, so turnout was low among Atlantans, too. Jackson believes voters want a candidate whom they can be excited about.
“I have been watching the progress of the current administration, and I think I can do a better job,” said Jackson. “I feel I have a lot to offer.”
Jackson told The Atlanta Voice that he wants to bring more development to the city’s southside and provide more job fairs for residents.
“Have companies there that are actually hiring,” Jackson said of the job fairs.
The underdog mayoral candidate has done little campaigning, with only three weeks until Election Day, November 4. Asked what his campaign plans are, Jackson said it was to get out amongst the people more.
“I’d like to get a little more exposure, get more support, because I want to just do right for the people,” he said.
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Donnell Suggs
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On a warm Florida night in May 2013, Christopher “Super” Green learned he was HIV-positive.
“I got my diagnosis on a date, actually,” he said. “I was dating a guy, and we wanted to be intimate. He was studying public health, so we went to a clinic together.”
The result stunned him. Just months earlier, he had tested negative. “I remember feeling like my world had ended,” Green said. “At this point, I felt like my life was over. No one was going to love me. This is it. Get ready. I have three years to live.”
Those early days were marked by fear and shame. Shame made him feel isolated, unwanted, untouchable. But Green’s best friend, T.J., promised to stand by him. That support, combined with meeting J.J.—a young, Black case manager who spoke his language and understood his experiences—shifted everything. J.J. inspired Green to pursue public health himself.
Ten years later, Green is thriving. He works as a lead prevention navigator at Here’s to Life, a nonprofit in Atlanta’s West End serving men with HIV and substance use disorders. He tells his story openly because silence, he said, only fuels stigma.
“For many people, the stigma is more dangerous than HIV itself,” Green explained. “It keeps people from getting tested, starting treatment, or reaching out for support.”
Green’s story mirrors a larger crisis: HIV continues to disproportionately affect Black communities in the South, where systemic inequities drive persistent disparities.
Structural Inequities
Nationwide, more than 1.13 million people were living with HIV in 2023, according to AIDSVu, a project of Emory University. Those aged 55–64 made up the largest group, 26%. Black individuals accounted for 39% of people living with HIV—despite being just 12% of the U.S. population. The prevalence rate among Black Americans was seven times higher than among white Americans.
The disparities start with prevention. In 2023, Black Americans made up 38% of new HIV diagnoses but just 14% of those eligible for PrEP, a highly effective prevention pill.
“These systemic inequities are the main driver,” said Rashad Burgess, vice president of corporate responsibility at Gilead Sciences. “We’ve known this for a long time, and it’s still true today.”

Atlanta is one of the nation’s HIV hotspots, with Fulton County reporting that Black residents account for more than 60% of new diagnoses, though they make up roughly 40% of the population. AIDSVu maps show the hardest-hit neighborhoods concentrated in southwest Atlanta and along the I-20 corridor, areas shaped by housing instability, limited transportation, and scarce access to culturally competent healthcare.
“Having the ability to get a ride to a doctor’s office is key,” Burgess said. “If you’re unstably housed, it’s hard to stay on medications. And if you’re not virologically suppressed, you’re more likely to transmit the virus and your health outcomes decline.”
Gaps in Prevention
Access to PrEP remains one of the biggest gaps. Even when Black patients are engaged in healthcare, Burgess said, they are less likely to be offered PrEP due to provider bias.
“What we find to be really successful are systems that routinize HIV screening,” he said. “That way, people know their status and, if negative, can be offered PrEP as a natural next step.”
Longtime Atlanta activist Daniel Driffin said too many providers still refer patients to specialty clinics instead of prescribing PrEP themselves. Combined with high uninsured rates and Georgia’s refusal to expand Medicaid, many fall through the cracks.
“We’re waiting for people to learn they’re living with HIV before we intervene,” Driffin said. “That’s a horrible place to be in public health.”
Driffin and other activists launched a community-led prevention model to address the gap. Over 60 days, more than 150 participants helped design a program focused on three pillars: robust HIV testing, a pooled “people’s purse” to fund prevention efforts, and culturally resonant messaging.
“We create a hand-holding situation until that person begins care,” Driffin said. “Community-led solutions alongside public health oversight ensure that people aren’t being forgotten.”
Progress and Threats
Medical advances have made HIV manageable. In 2023, 82.8% of newly diagnosed individuals were linked to care, 76.3% of people living with diagnosed HIV received care, and 67.2% achieved viral suppression.
“You can live a normal life, have a normal lifespan, with your virus being managed by therapy,” Burgess said.
But progress is fragile. More than 80% of CDC prevention funding supports state and local health departments through the federal Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative. Proposed cuts of nearly $1.5 billion to Medicaid and CDC budgets could erode years of gains, leading to more infections nationwide.
The Weight of Stigma
Even with medicine and prevention tools, stigma remains the hardest barrier to break, particularly in the South.
“As a matter of fact, many argue stigma is the number one barrier,” Burgess said. “It impacts whether people access PrEP, whether they seek treatment, and whether they’re diagnosed late or with AIDS.”
To shift perceptions, Gilead invests in campaigns featuring trusted voices—from faith leaders to barbershops to celebrities like Tamar Braxton, who has publicly shared her use of PrEP. Partnerships with Morehouse School of Medicine extend outreach to rural Georgia.
“We have to normalize HIV prevention and care as part of overall wellness,” Burgess said. “That means visual representation, trusted messengers, and community-driven dialogue.”
For Green, that mission is personal. Each time he shares his story, he chips away at the silence that once left him isolated.
“I learned what care looks like from another Black man because he knew how to relate to me, how to pour into me what I needed as opposed to giving me just clinical information,” Green said.
“We often talk about the social determinants of health within public health spaces, such as housing, employment, and access to a phone. But we can’t leave out the most important thing, and that is the person and meeting them where they are.”
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Dyana Bagby
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Debra Shigley and Jason T. Dickerson will face off in another special election on Tuesday, Sept. 23. This will be the second election the two State Senate candidates have been involved in a month. A Democrat, Shigley, has received support from the Democratic National Committee in the past, but on Saturday, Sept. 20, she got that helping hand on the ground.
Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martic was in Alpharetta and stumped alongside Shigley and others in District 21 on Saturday. The district includes parts of Fulton County (Alpharetta) and Cherokee County (Canton), and though Shigley is popular among voters in both parts of the district (she won 62% of the Fulton County votes, for example), she has to gear up for another election. Winning this special election may not seem like a big deal on the national level, but Martin thinks otherwise. Wins are wins, he says.
“It’s important for us to realize that we make sure we get Democrats elected on all levels,” Martin told The Atlanta Voice. “That’s where the rubber hits the road.”
Martin took part in door-knocking in Alpharetta and met Shigley supporters and local voters. He told The Atlanta Voice that he came away impressed with the level of support and interest. The DNC Chair used the phrase “off the charts” to describe the energy around the Democratic candidate.
“There was a lot of excitement and energy,” Martin said. “It seems like people in this district understand what’s at stake.”
On August 26, Debra Shigley won nearly 40 percent of the vote during a special election for the District 21 State Senate seat. But that wasn’t enough to get the job done. Two of her opponents, Jason T. Dickerson, a Republican, and Steve West, also a Republican, brought home 17.36% and 17.04% of the votes, respectively.

There are more than a half-dozen mayoral elections taking place in majority Black cities around the country in November. Along with Atlanta, Cleveland, Detroit, and Greensboro, North Carolina are holding elections. There are also mayoral elections taking place in Seattle, Jersey City, New Jersey, Charlotte, and in Martin’s hometown, Minneapolis.
Over the past 18 months, Democrats have won or overperformed in more than 40 elections. The phrase “overperform” can be misleading, but it is seen as a sign of momentum, according to Martin.
“We really believe that when you organize everywhere, you can win anywhere,” Martin said. “We believe we have a shot at winning the election on Tuesday. We have to compete on all levels.”
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Donnell Suggs
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Neighbors say Atlanta shootings getting out of hand after 4 injured
In a matter of hours in Fulton County, at least six young people were shot. Four of those victims were all injured at the same apartment complex.
Channel 2’s Michael Seiden was in southeast Atlanta during Channel 2 Action News at 5 p.m. where four people were shot on Thursday night.
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Atlanta police say each of the four victims, ages 12, 14, 15 and 18, were shot in the leg and are expected to survive.
Seiden watched as police installed a surveillance camera tower in the parking lot of the Capitol Vanira Apartments on Hank Aaron Blvd. SE.
“I see the kids,” witness Robert Jackson said. “They were bleeding. I wanted to cry.”
He said he ran outside with a gun of his own when he heard the shots.
“I said, ‘Oh, my God!’ I’m looking for a car, but I didn’t see no car. I was making sure the kids were okay,” he said. “They had holes this big in these little babies!”
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Neighbors say it may have started over a stolen watch, but police have not commented on motives or made any arrests.
Despite added safety measures, some say they have had enough of the violence.
“We fixing to probably move out of Georgia soon. It’s getting more hectic and crazy,” witness Romeo Fuller said.
Residents told Seiden that the surveillance camera tower is a good start, but they want to see off-duty officers and security guards in the area as well.
Seiden reached out to the apartment complex’s management company, but has not received a response.
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(CNN) — Young Thug has entered a guilty plea deal in an agreement that will end the Grammy-winning rapper’s racketeering trial – the longest court case in Georgia history.
Young Thug, whose given name is Jeffery Williams, has entered a non-negotiated guilty plea deal Thursday with the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office to several charges — including firearm possession and participation in criminal street gang activity — while he pleaded no contest to racketeering and leading a criminal street gang — a sudden conclusion to a dramatic and tumultuous trial that included three different judges, the jailhouse stabbing of a codefendant and an alleged in-court drug transaction.
In 2022, Williams was charged alongside more than two dozen others under Georgia’s sprawling Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act – known as RICO.
Defense attorneys have accused Williams of misusing the racketeering statute.
Prosecutors accused the rapper of leading a criminal street gang that committed murder and a slew of violent crimes in Atlanta.
The case had dragged on for months, including multiple motions for a mistrial, the most recent being last week. The jury selection process alone took over a year.
Three codefendants in the YSL racketeering trial have accepted plea agreements this week from the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office.
Rodalius Ryan, known as “Lil Rod,” and codefendant Marquavious Huey, known as “Qua,” entered guilty pleas Wednesday to charges of violating the state’s RICO Act.
As part of the terms, Ryan accepted a 10-year prison sentence, which was commuted to time served. Other counts in the indictment, including armed robbery, were dropped as part of the agreement.
Ryan is currently serving a life sentence for a separate murder case. The prison times will run concurrently, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Paige Reese Whitaker said.
As part of his plea deal, Huey admitted guilt to multiple counts in the indictment, including armed robbery. He was sentenced to a total of 25 years, with nine years in custody, nine years on probation, and five years suspended as part of the agreement.
Quamarvious Nichols, also known as “Qua,” accepted a plea deal Tuesday for Count 1 of the indictment, conspiracy to violate the RICO Act. He received a negotiated sentence of 20 years, with seven years to be served in custody and the remaining years on probation. In exchange, multiple counts, including murder, were dismissed.
None of the three individuals who entered guilty pleas will be required to testify against the remaining codefendants, including the main target of the case, Young Thug.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
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Nick Valencia, Jason Morris and CNN
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The polling places located across the state of Georgia were busy during the first week of the early voting period. Ranging from Oct. 15 to Nov. 1, the early voting period in Georgia saw a record number of participants during the first day in 2020 (136,000 votes cast), but that record was broken and more than doubled in 2024 with more than 300,000 votes cast on the first day. As of Sunday, Oct. 20, more than 1.3 million Georgians voted early.
Knowing where your local polling place is and what you need to properly vote early or on Election Day, November 5, is important to the process of a fair election. Fulton County, Georgia’s largest county, has the majority of the state’s 2,300-plus polling places.

The importance of easily accessible polling places has had an immediate impact on the current presidential election and local down ballot elections. As of Sunday, 160,676 ballots were cast in Fulton County, according to data provided by the Secretary of State’s online election data hub. The often-used phrase “know before you go” is going to be important in Georgia heading into the second week of the early voting period.
In Dekalb County, the fourth largest county in Georgia, 98,006 voters cast ballots during the first week of the early voting period. Georgia Senator Rev. Raphael Warnock cast his vote at a polling place on the campus of a local church where the nearest polling station was once inside the Gallery at South DeKalb mall before closing. The once popular polling place inside the metro Atlanta shopping mall recently closed, and thus the need for a new local polling place inside the auditorium at New Life Church. In a county Like Dekalb County where there are 509,896 registered voters, knowing where the polling places are is crucial.

DeKalb County polling places:
Berean Christian Church
2201 Young Road
Stone Mountain, GA 30088
Bessie Branham Recreation Center
2051 Delano Drive, NE
Atlanta, GA 30317
Beulah Missionary Baptist Church
2340 Clifton Springs Road
Decatur, GA 30034
Briarwood Recreation Center*
2235 Briarwood Way, NE
Brookhaven, GA 30319
Clarkston Library
951 N. Indian Creek Drive
Clarkston, GA 30021
County Line-Ellenwood Library
4331 River Road
Ellenwood, GA 30294
DeKalb Voter Registration & Elections Office
4380 Memorial Drive
Decatur, GA 30032
Dunwoody Library*
5339 Chamblee Dunwoody Road
Dunwoody, GA 30338
Emory University
1599 Clifton Road
Atlanta, GA 30322
Greater Piney Grove Church
1879 Glenwood Avenue, SE
Atlanta, GA 30316
Hairston Crossing Library
4911 Redan Road
Stone Mountain, GA 30088
Lynwood Recreation Center
3360 Osborne Road, NE
Atlanta, GA 30319
Neighborhood Church
1561 McLendon Avenue, NE
Atlanta, GA 30307
New Bethel AMEC
8350 Rockbridge Road, SW
Lithonia, GA 30058
New Life Community Alliance*
3592 Flat Shoals Road
Decatur, GA 30034
North DeKalb Senior Center
3393 Malone Drive
Chamblee, GA 30341
Salem-Panola Library
5137 Salem Road
Lithonia, GA 30038
Stonecrest (former Sam’s Club) *
2994 Turner Hill Road
Lithonia, GA 30038
Tucker-Reid H. Cofer Library*
5234 Lavista Road
Tucker, GA 30084
Wesley Chapel-William C. Brown Library
2861 Wesley Chapel Road
Decatur, GA 30034
Fulton County polling places:
Adams Park Library
2231 Campbellton Road SW
Atlanta, GA 30311
Alpharetta Library*
10 Park Plaza
Alpharetta, GA 30009
Buckhead Library*
269 Buckhead Avenue NE
Atlanta, GA 30305
C.T. Martin Recreation Center*
3201 M.L.K. Jr Drive SW
Atlanta, GA 30311
Chastain Park Recreation Center
140 Chastain Park Avenue NW
Atlanta, GA 30342
East Point First Mallalieu United Methodist Church
2651 N Church Street
East Point, GA 30344
East Roswell Library*
2301 Holcomb Bridge Road
Roswell, GA 30076
Elections Hub**
5600 Campbellton Fairburn Road
Union City, GA 30213
Etris-Darnell Community
Recreation Center
5285 Lakeside Drive
Union City, GA 30291
Evelyn G. Lowery Library at Cascade
3665 Cascade Road
South Fulton, GA 30331
Fairburn Annex
40 Washington Street
Fairburn, GA 30213
Flipper Temple AME Church
580 Atlanta Student Movement Blvd SW
Atlanta, GA 30314
Fulton County Customer Service Center at Maxwell Road
11575 Maxwell Road
Roswell, GA 30009
Fulton County Government Center**
130 Peachtree Street SW Suite 2186
Atlanta, GA 30303
Gladys S. Dennard Library at South Fulton
4055 Flat Shoals Road
South Fulton, GA 30291
Grant Park Recreation Center
537 Park Avenue SE
Atlanta, GA 30312
Heritage Hall at Sandy Springs
6110 Blue Stone Road
Sandy Springs, GA 30328
High Museum of Arts
1280 Peachtree Street NE
Atlanta, GA 30309
Hugh C. Conley Recreation Center
3636 College Street
College Park, GA 30337
Joan P. Garner Library at Ponce De Leon
980 Ponce De Leon Avenue NE
Atlanta, GA 30306
Johns Creek Environmental Campus
8100 Holcomb Bridge Road
Roswell, GA 30022
Louise Watley Library at Southeast Atlanta
1463 Pryor Road SW
Atlanta, GA 30315
Metropolitan Library
1332 Metropolitan Parkway SW
Atlanta, GA 30310
Milton Community Center
1785 Dinsmore Road
Milton, GA 30004
Milton Library
855 Mayfield Road
Milton, GA 30009
North Fulton Service Center**
7741 Roswell Road
Sandy Springs, GA 30350
Northeast Spruill Oaks Library
9560 Spruill Road
Johns Creek, GA 30022
Northside Library
3295 Northside Parkway NW
Atlanta, GA 30327
Northwest Library at Scotts Crossing
2489 Perry Boulevard NW
Atlanta, GA 30318
Palmetto Library
9111 Cascade Palmetto Highway
Palmetto, GA 30268
Robert F. Fulton Ocee Library
5090 Abbotts Bridge Road
Johns Creek, GA 30005
Roswell Library
115 Norcross Street
Roswell, GA 30075
Sandy Springs Library*
395 Mount Vernon Highway
Sandy Springs, GA 30328
South Fulton Service Center**
5600 Stonewall Tell Road
South Fulton, GA 30349
Southwest Arts Center
915 New Hope Road SW
South Fulton, GA 30331
Welcome All Recreation Center
4255 Will Lee Road
South Fulton, GA 30349
Wolf Creek Library*
3100 Enon Road
South Fulton, GA 30331
Fulton County has designated days for students, teachers and staff at Atlanta Metropolitan State College, Georgia State University, and Georgia Tech to cast their ballots.
Atlanta Metropolitan State College
October 15 & October 16
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Edwin Thompson Student Center
1630 Metropolitan Parkway SW, Atlanta, GA 30310
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Donnell Suggs
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Fulton County Voter Education and Outreach manager Lashandra Little spoke to several Spelman College students on Monday, Sept. 16 about ways they can actively prepare for the upcoming presidential election. The Spelman Student Government Association (SGA) and the Spelman Bonner Program collaborated so the student body could have the opportunity to become informed about topics ranging from voter eligibility to various methods of voting.
“This is a very pertinent election that’s coming up and we want to make sure we engage our voters, educate them on the requirements to vote, about who’s eligible to vote and the importance of voting in all elections,” 19-year-old Bonner scholar and SGA secretary of institutional advancement Taniyah Taitano said.
Covering 538 square miles in Fulton County, Little and her team aim to educate the population on all things related to the voting process in a non-partisan manner. From high schools to senior homes, they better educate voters on how to become engaged with the election process. This is particularly critical for out-of-state students and a handful of senior citizens to ensure that they are registered to vote, have acquired an absentee ballot, and remain up to date in how to pursue their early voting.
“The senior centers are my favorite places to go because they’re very excited and they’re always engaged with the voting process, so just helping them in any way we can is really rewarding for me,” Fulton County Voter Education Outreach coordinator Naomi Wagner said.
Following the presentation of several slides including crucial concepts about this year’s election process, as well as the details of the Fulton County ballot, Little proceeded to allow students to ask questions. While college students may perceive the voting process as tedious, they are often reminded that the results of local and national elections will bear a direct influence on their livelihood.
“This event sparked my interest because I believe voter education is just as important as actually casting your vote, said Kennedy Clemmons, a Spelman College student. “A big misconception we hear is that one vote won’t really affect anything, so it’s important to know that your vote matters.”
Voter suppression bills in Georgia such as SB 202 have limited access to ballots, restricted the number of ballot dropboxes, shortened the window for absentee and early ballots and banned the distribution of food and water in voting lines. Ideally, Little’s efforts to inform the residents of Fulton county will successfully prevent these bills from adversely affecting voter turnouts.
“Voter suppression has been an issue in Georgia for a number of years now. As someone who is from a very democratic area, it is so crucial for me to implement initiatives I see at home here,” Bonner Liaison Samaya Goodwin said.
The session concluded with a skit presented by the Bonner scholars, in which they accurately portrayed the process of voting.
“Vote for democracy , do your research and take the time to diligently focus on what’s happening around the world, not just in the US domestically but also globally,” Taitano said.
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Erinn Gardner, DTU Intern
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Incumbent Fulton County Sheriff Patrick Labat was re-elected in what can be considered a landslide on Super Tuesday. As of 10 p.m., three hours after polls were closed in Georgia’s largest county, Labat was leading the other three candidates, Kirt Beasley, James “JT” Brown, and Joyce Farmer by more than 23,000 votes.
Labat earned nearly 40,000 votes while Farmer finished second overall with just under 17,000 votes. Both Beasley and Brown earned 11% of the vote with just over 8,000 votes each.
Asked how he feels about having been in such a comfortable lead with more than 60% of the votes having been counted earlier in the evening, Labat said he was “fortunate.”
“We worked really hard and were very intentional about what we wanted to do which is protect and serve our community.”
Asked what this victory meant to him, Labat said it was, “The opportunity for us to continue to serve the community.”

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens made his way into the watch party a few minutes after 9 p.m. after having spent some time at Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ watch party. Willis won her primary election by 60,000-plus votes over Democratic challenger Christian Wise Smith. A supporter of Labat in the past, Dickens shook hands and hugged Labat and his wife Jacki. Labat’s daughter Maya arrived a few minutes earlier. She was following the election results on her phone. “On my way down here I heard it was 58%,” she said.
Looks like 54% is all Labat will need to continue representing Fulton County in the role of sheriff. Just under 90,000 votes were cast in the race for sheriff. Fulton County has 751,192 registered voters, according to date provided by the Secretary of State’s Office.
Other Fulton County races:
Fulton County Superior Court Clerk was won by the incumbent Che Alexander with 52% of the vote. Former Atlanta City Councilmember Keisha Waites finished with 33% of the vote.
The race for Fulton County Commissioner District 4 seat looks like it is headed to a run off between incumbent Natalie Hall and Georgia State University professor and lawyer Mo Ivory. The pair were stuck at 41% of the vote each well into the 11 o’clock hour on election night.
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Donnell Suggs
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The Metro Atlanta American Heart Association (AHA) is partnering with Fulton County Libraries for a project to help Georgia residents combat high blood pressure issues. Libraries with Heart is an initiative that places blood pressure kits in Fulton County libraries for locals to rent for free. The kits contain devices that read blood pressure, material that tells what your numbers mean, and a list of health care providers near the area of the library branch. The two organizations are collaborating to meet people where they are so that more Georgia residents know their status regarding high blood pressure.
“Many people may have high blood pressure and do not know. Having the ability to access these devices where you can check them out or go to the library to check your blood pressure every day will allow us to increase the number of people who know their numbers so that they are not walking around with undiagnosed hypertension,” said Shauna Scott, Vice President of Community Impact for Metro Atlanta American Heart Association.
The Libraries with Heart Initiative launches on Monday, May 20. Seventeen libraries across Fulton County will have blood pressure kits for guests to check out. Blood pressure stations to check your numbers at your local branch will also be available. High Blood pressure is a health obstacle that many Georgia citizens face today. According to the American Heart Association, about 75 million adults suffer from high blood pressure nationwide, and about 13 million don’t know that they have it.
Access to blood pressure machines and health care providers are barriers that several people face. Lack of transportation, inadequate health insurance, or needing the financial means are common access challenges. A peculiar obstacle Georgia locals face is medical provider desserts. Scott explains that Georgia needs more medical providers. Specific communities need more doctors and staff to serve residents. This creates more healthcare barriers. The American Heart Association researched to find the high-risk areas in Fulton County. College Park, South Fulton, Fairburn, and Hapeville are among the high-risk areas on that list.
“The American Heart Association already did research on areas that are higher risk. We purposely looked for libraries that fit within the range to start this project,” said Teryn Gilliam, Branch Group Administrator and Adult and Volunteer Services Coordinator for the Fulton County Library System.
“We always try to provide the services that our communities need. Libraries with Heart coincide with our strategic plan that involves literacy with action. I believe this service will impact many people and potentially save lives,” said Gilliam.
Libraries were the best place to do this initiative because they are central to all communities and accessible to members within communities. Scott shares that libraries are safe, convenient spaces for people. They were the most accessible place to get information to locals, and it was part of the American Heart Association’s strategy to reach people where they live, work, and play.

The number of times kits are checked out, and blood pressure stations are used will determine whether the initiative is successful for both organizations. AHA has estimated that libraries with hearts will reach 56,440 library guests monthly.
Metro Atlanta AHA intends to expand this program to more areas where people congregate. The organization launched a health hub at The iVillage @ MLK, located at 2491 MLK Jr Dr. SW, Atlanta, GA 30311. Residents of that area will have access to check their blood pressure numbers. The following step is to partner with churches in East Point to reach more people. Libraries With Heart is an Initiative designed to make a difference in Georgia locals’ health. For more information, log on to heart.org.
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Clayton Gutzmore
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