Duo plead guilty to burning down Atlanta Wendy's during BLM riot; face no jail time and a $500 fine



Two of the three individuals accused of burning a Wendy's to the ground during the 2020 BLM riots have pleaded guilty. For reducing the business to ash and rubble, Chisom Kingston and the woman whom Rayshard Brooks indicated was his "girlfriend," Natalie Hanna White, will have to pay a $500 fine and complete 150 hours of community service.

What's the background?

On June 12, Atlanta police attempted to arrest 27-year-old Rayshard Brooks at a Wendy's drive-thru in Atlanta after he blew over the legal limit on a Breathalyzer test. However, Brooks struck APD officer Devan Brosnan, grabbed the officer's taser, and attempted to flee. When APD officer Garrett Rolfe gave chase, Brooks took aim at Rolfe with the stolen taser and fired, ultimately prompting a defensive and definitive response from Rolfe.

The officers were initially slapped with a litany of charges by former Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard. However, a Georgia special prosecutor ultimately found in August 2022 that both officers "acted as reasonable officers would under the facts and circumstances of the events of that night."

Special prosecutor Peter Skandalakis stated, "Both acted in accordance with well-established law and were justified in the use of force regarding the situation."

While clarity ultimately prevailed, it was evidently in short supply on June 13, 2020 — not only because the anti-police narrative had been set following George Floyd's death in Minneapolis the previous month, but because liberal publications repeatedly claimed police had killed "an unarmed black man," notwithstanding the Georgia Bureau of Investigation's clear indication that Brooks had been wielding an officer's stun gun.

Torching the burger joint

Rioters mobbed the Wendy's on University Avenue in southwest Atlanta and shutdown a nearby interstate the evening of June 13. In addition to torching cars in the area and clashing with police, rioters set the restaurant ablaze.

WAGA-TV reported that by 9:30 p.m., flames could be seen shooting out of the restaurant.

The fire raged for over 45 minutes until firefighters, protected by a line of police officers, were able to put it out.

When asked about the inferno at the time, one of the rioters, told CNN, "We burned this one specifically because of what happened here[.] ... This goes back to what our mission is, making sure that there is justice served for the person that died over here at this Wendy's."

According to Atlanta Fire Department officials, the Wendy's fire was started in multiple locations using various incendiary devices.

Footage shot moments before the fire began consuming the building showed a woman, later identified as White, ignite an aerosol can while others smashed the restaurant's windows.

White was arrested in June 2020. The following month, Kingston and arsonist John Wesley Wade were also arrested.

Indictments and pleas

White, Kingston, and Wade were indicted in January 2022. The indictment listed two counts of first-degree arson and a count of conspiracy to commit arson in the first degree, reported WSB-TV.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said at the time, "I think this indictment is particularly important. It sends a message that we are a community that supports protesting. We certainly know it's one of your constitutional rights but what we do not tolerate is violent protest."

"It is unacceptable to burn down a building in our community even in the name of a protest," added Willis.

Ahead of their trial this week, Kingston and White entered negotiated guilty pleas, according to Fulton County court documents.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that they both pleaded guilty to the aforementioned charges and each received five years on probation and $500 fines.

John Wesley Wade, who has been held in federal prison, is set to go to trial Tuesday over the Wendy's arson.

While Wade faces the same charges as Brooks' apparent girlfriend and Kingston, he previously pleaded guilty to federal arson charges, having torched five postal trucks in Atlanta after the Wendy's went up in smoke.

Atlanta protesters burn a Wendy's after police shootingyoutu.be

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Family of 8-year-old killed by ‘armed vigilantes’ during BLM protests sues Atlanta, its mayor, and others



The heartbroken family of Secoriea Turner — an 8-year-old girl who was shot and killed by spray gunfire during Black Lives Matter protests in Atlanta last year — has filed a lawsuit against the city, its mayor, and other officials.

In the complaint filed in Fulton County State Court on Monday, Turner's grieving parents alleged that city leaders failed to protect their daughter amid the violent riots that rocked the city in the aftermath of Rayshard Brooks' death.

The complaint cited numerous failures by city leaders, "including that they were negligent in their duties by failing to remove armed vigilantes who had gathered alongside peaceful protesters at the Wendy's where Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed," according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

"We are forced to live through this day by day," Secoriea's mother, Charmaine Turner, said during a press conference announcing the lawsuit. "We deserve justice. Someone needs to be held accountable."

"There is no dispute that this little girl was innocent — that this family was innocent, did nothing wrong. On their way home, and they lost their little one," attorney Shean D. Williams of the Cochran Firm, which is representing the family, added.

Secoriea, who was a rising third-grader, was tragically killed on July 4 when she and her mother encountered a group of armed rioters who had blocked a street near where Brooks was killed. Police said the rioters opened fire on the vehicle as it tried to drive around the blockade, sending eight bullets into the car and striking Secoriea in the back.

News of her death made national headlines, especially after the young girl's parents delivered an impassioned rebuke of the killers following her death.

"They say black lives matter," the girl's father, Secoriya Williamson, said during a news conference. "You killed your own this time. ... You killed a child. She didn't do nothing to nobody."

"They say Black Lives Matter. You killed your own." Secoriya Williamson, father of 8-year-old Secoriea Turner, addr… https://t.co/VMV5OjJyJC

— Natisha Lance (@NatishaLance) 1593990732.0

"She was only 8 years old," the girl's mother said before breaking down in tears. "She would have been on TikTok dancing on her phone, just got done eating. We understand the frustration of Rayshard Brooks. We didn't have anything to do with that. We're innocent. My baby didn't mean no harm."

According to the Atlanta-Journal Constitution, the complaint requests that the family receive financial compensation "in an amount to be determined" and a jury trial "on all claims so triable."

The crime occurred during a wave of elevated violence in the city. In the aftermath, residents have been calling on city leaders to take aggressive action to protect the public.

Family of Secoriea Turner filing lawsuit www.youtube.com

Atlanta officer who was fired after fatally shooting Rayshard Brooks to be reinstated



The Atlanta police officer who was fired after fatally shooting Rayshard Brooks during an attempted DUI arrest last year has been reinstated after an independent review by the city's Civil Service Board.

What's the background?

Rolfe and his former partner, Devin Brosnan, responded to a call on June 12, 2020, about an allegedly intoxicated person asleep at the wheel in a Wendy's drive-through.

Upon arrival, they found Brooks, who was seen on video footage battling with the officers when they attempted to arrest him, stealing Brosnan's Taser, and attempting to fire the device at Rolfe. Rolfe then fired his service weapon at Brooks, striking him twice in the back and killing him.

The next day, Rolfe was terminated amid outcry. The next week, he was charged with felony murder and ten other charges by then-Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard, who has since been ousted from office.

Rolfe filed a lawsuit against Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lane Bottoms (D) and interim Police Chief Rodney Bryant in the aftermath, with the officer claiming he had acted within the scope of his position during his interaction with Brooks and that his termination was done illegally.

What now?

The City of Atlanta's Civil Service Board determined that "due to the city's failure to comply with several provisions of the Code and the information received during witnesses' testimony," Rolfe "was not afforded his right to due process." The panel granted the fired officer's appeal and revoked his dismissal as an employee of the Atlanta Police Department.

But while Rolfe might be back in uniform, the charges against him still remain — and the Civil Service Board emphasized that it "is not charged with determining if the Appellant's actions were criminal in nature nor will it make any reference thereto."

Fox News reported that Howard's successor, Fani Willis, "has twice asked Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr to reassign the case [against Rolfe], saying actions by Howard made it inappropriate for her office to continue handling the case," but "Carr has refused, saying the potential problems she cited were specific to Howard, so the responsibility for the case remained with her office."

Meanwhile, Mayor Bottoms stands by her original decision to terminate Rolfe in the incident that occurred shortly after the death of George Floyd, saying in a statement on Wednesday, "Given the volatile state of our city and nation last summer, the decision to terminate this officer, after he fatally shot Mr. Brooks in the back, was the right thing to do."

She added, "Had immediate action not been taken, I firmly believe that the public safety crisis we experienced during that time would have been significantly worse."

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