an autonomous movement for the future of South Atlanta


Morehouse College faculty: “There is no Cop City in the Beloved Community”

Defend the Atlanta Forest received this submission of an open letter published and signed by more than 40 Morehouse College faculty. Reposted from its original version, with ongoing updates & signatures. A similar letter has been released by Emory healthcare professionals.


There Is No Cop City in the Beloved Community: 

An Open Letter from Members of the Morehouse College Faculty

February 2, 2023

As members of the Morehouse College faculty, we have grown accustomed to consoling and counseling our students as they attempt to grapple with cycles of police brutality. Year after year, as Black people continue to be abused and killed at the hands of the police, jailed and surveilled in barbaric ways, we struggle to make sense of it all. We struggle to help our students determine where we go from here.

But events that have transpired in Atlanta in recent months—specifically, the City’s initiative to build a $90 million police training facility, commonly known as “Cop City”—give us a clear indication of where we need to direct our energies. Atlanta, our home town, has become the epicenter of the struggle over the future of policing in America. Now is the time to STOP COP CITY. 

The proposal for a new police training facility was publicly announced in 2021, at a time when the nation was still reeling from the killing of George Floyd and a broad coalition of concerned citizens demanded that cities and states defund the police. Last fall, the Atlanta City Council formally approved the project, what amounts to a massive new investment in the police, despite widespread public opposition. In a city that is rapidly losing its famed tree canopy, the project is also environmentally disastrous; it would require the clearing of 85 acres of Atlanta’s lush South River Forest. Plans call for shooting ranges, spaces for militarized drills, a Blackhawk helicopter landing pad, and a mock city complete with buildings and roads to allow the Atlanta Police Department—as well as other police agencies drawn from all over the region—to practice urban warfare tactics along the lines of the SCORPION unit in Memphis or the TITAN squads in Atlanta. There is an undeniable and direct relationship between the fate of Michael Brown and George Floyd as well as Tyre Nichols and the pending plan to build Cop City. 

Let us not delude ourselves: Cop City, if built, will result in more death and destruction at the hands of the police. Indeed, the Cop City project already has blood on its proverbial hands. On January 18, 2023, as authorities conducted a sweep of the forest site, police shot and killed protestor Manuel Terán, known among friends as “Tortuguita,” under very suspicious circumstances. Details of the tragedy remain sparse. As we mourn Tortuguita’s death, we call for an independent and transparent investigation of the incident. 

In times like these, the name of Morehouse’s most famous alumnus is often bandied about, typically in an effort to tame a groundswell of rage, to channel the righteous frustration of Black and working-class people into nonviolent modes of protest. But we must not sanitize the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who sought to expose and challenge the “triple evils” of racism, militarism, and materialism; taken together, King opposed the commodification of Black bodies and he understood that police violence was a pernicious because systemic problem. “Armies of officials are clothed in uniform,” he said in 1964, “invested with authority, armed with the instruments of violence and death and conditioned to believe that they can intimidate, maim or kill Negroes with the same recklessness that once motivated the slave owner.”

It is telling that Cop City is slated to be developed on the site of the Old Atlanta Prison Farm. Before the site was sold to the City of Atlanta after the Civil War, it was a slave labor camp. And before that, the Weelaunee Forest of the Muscogee Creek people. The trail of tears is not a thing of the past.

We must listen to and learn from this history. We must study how state violence directed against Black, Indigenous, People of Color [BIPOC]—as well as working-class people of all colors—reproduces itself in different ways over generations. We must listen to the voices of those most affected by police violence and abuse. Our civic leaders have not done this. On the contrary.

Georgia has the highest rates of correctional control of any state in the nation by far, twice as many as almost every state, at 5,143 per 100,000. Only New York City’s police foundation raised more money in 2020—and that was before Atlanta’s fundraising roughly tripled in 2021. Atlanta is the most surveilled city in America. It is the most economically unequal major city in America. King said in 1967 that “a nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.” Today, we say that a city that continues year after year to spend more money on policing and urban warfare than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death. 

King claimed in 1966 that “only a refusal to hate and kill can put an end to the chain of violence in the world and lead us toward a community where men [and women] can live together without fear. Our goal is to create a beloved community, and this will require a qualitative change in our souls as well as a quantitative change in our lives.”

Strangely, we tend to celebrate Atlanta—and the so-called “Atlanta way”—as a Black Mecca. As an alumnus of Morehouse and a luminary of Atlanta, Dr. King articulated an inspiring vision of the beloved community. The dream has become a nightmare: There is simply no place for Cop City in the beloved community. 

We, the undersigned members of the Morehouse College faculty, call upon our civic leaders and fellow educators in Atlanta to denounce Cop City, to take immediate action to cancel the project, and to respond to the will of the people—and not merely the wealthy and well connected—in determining the character of our communities and the conduct of those who claim to serve and protect us.

#NamePosition
1Corrie Claiborne, PhDAssociate Professor of English
2Andrew J. Douglas, PhDProfessor of Political Science
3Kipton E. Jensen, Ph.D.Associate Professor of Philosophy
4Nathaniel Norment, Ph.D.Professor of English
5David Wall Rice, Ph.D.Professor of Psychology
6Adrienne Jones, PhDAssistant Professor of Political Science
7Sinead YoungeProfessor of Psychology
8Melvin Foster, DMAAssociated Professor of Music/Music
9Cindy LutenbacherProfesssor of English
10Elizabeth Topping, Ph.D.Visiting Assistant Professor of English
11Nathan NobisProfessor, Philosophy & Religion
12Clarissa Myrick-Harris, PhDProfessor of Africana Studies
13Stephane Dunn, Ph.DProfessor, Cinema, English 
14Samuel T. Livingston, PhDAssociate Professor, Africana Studies
15Dr. Haile M. LareboHistory
16Taura Taylor Assistant Professor of Sociology 
17Adria Welcher, Ph.D.Associate Professor of Sociology
18Monique Earl-Lewis, PhDAssociate Professor of Africana Studies/Interim Chair, Africana Studies and History
19Ruihua ShenProfessor of Chinese Language and Literature 
20Jann H. Adams, Ph.DProfessor of Psychology
21Vicki Crawford, PhDProfessor of Africana Studies
22Haakayoo ZoggyieAssociate Professor/Modern Foreign Languages
23María KorolAssistant Professor of Art, Visual Arts Program
24Nia ReedVisiting Assistant Professor/Sociology
25Karcheik Sims-Alvarado, Ph.D.Assistant Professor, Dept of Africana Studies
26Ida Rousseau Mukenge, PhDProfessor Emeritus, Sociology
27Avery O WilliamsAssistant Professor, Cinema, Television & Emerging Media Studies
28Kinnis K. Gosha, PhDProfessor of Computer Science
30Tina R. Chang, PhDAssociate Professor, Psychology
31Ulrica WilsonAssociate Professor of Mathematics
32Wallace SharifAsst. Professor/Biology
33Alexandra Peister Ph.D.Associate Professor, Biology
34Abdelkrim BraniaProfessor of Mathematics
35Kristin MoodyEducation, Leadership
36Yohance MurrayAssistant Professor of Psychology 
37Tuwaner Lamar, Ph.D.Assistant Professor of Mathematics
38Nathan AlexanderAssistant Professor of Mathematics
39Mikki HarrisAssociate Professor of Journalism
40Justin S McClintonVisiting Assistant Professor / Leadership Studies
41Ervin ChinaAdjunct Professor, Mathematics
42Cynthia Hewitt, PhDProfessor of Sociology
43Levar Smith, PhDAssistant Professor, Political Science 
44Keisha Tassie, Ph.D.Associate Professor of Communication

5 responses to “Morehouse College faculty: “There is no Cop City in the Beloved Community””

  1. The planned permit appears to be a Human Rights violation issue. The United States sits on the Human Rights Council as well as endorsing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People (UNDRIP). The state of Georgia doesn’t not have a good track record regarding the equal treatment of American Indians and in fact has a long destructive history against mis-classified American Aborigines. Misappropriating sacred land spaces is a crime against our humanity considering the state (including Dekalb County) promotes gentrification effecting Indigenous Communities of Color throughout the Atlanta area and the State as a whole.

    Georgia is a non-PL280 state and has no lawful standing over Indian sovereignty despite its fraudulent council on “American Indian” concerns {See The Marshal Trilogy}.

    We implore you to not only DENY the permit but to STOP participating in AMERICAN GENOCIDE

  2. To build a police training facility in a secluded area, in the woods no less, is clearly going to exacerbate the separation of the police from the reality of dealing with citizens when they are clearly now having difficulty relating to citizens. The shooting murder of an unarmed, non-threatening, protester because he was simply in the area is a sad example of the increasing separation from reality of the police. This police facility is already empowering and reinforcing police to create their own law, exclusive of justice and democracy.

  3. I AM FROM ATLANTA AND HAVE BEEN A CIVIL RIGHTS ATTORNEY FOR OVER 50 YEARS. I REPRESENTED THE FAMILIES OF CHICAGO PANTHER LEADERS FRED HAMPTON AND MARK CLARK AND AM THE AUTHOR OF “THE ASSASSINATION OF FRED HAMPTON: HOW THE FBI AND CHICAGO POLICE MURDERED A BLACK PANTHER” ATLANTA DOES NOT NEED COP CITY IT NEEDS POLICE ACCOUNTABILITY.

Leave a Reply to Damning video of deadly protester shooting won’t weaken the fight against Atlanta’s $90m ‘Cop City’ – Informative Updates™Cancel reply



Discover more from DEFEND THE ATLANTA FOREST

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading