‘Cop City' legal case could cast spotlight on US police foundations' activities
A legal case in Atlanta stemming from the controversial 'Cop City' project is being closely watched because it has the potential to cast a spotlight on the activities of police foundations nationwide.
The case raises the issue of state open records laws, and whether they apply to police foundations. The private foundations exist in every major US city, with more than 250 nationwide, according to a 2021 report by research and activist groups Little Sis and Color of Change.
The foundations have been used to pay for surveillance technologies in cities like Baltimore and Los Angeles without the contracts being subject to public scrutiny, according to the report.
In the Atlanta case, a judge is considering 12 hours of testimony, related case law and evidence in a lawsuit that concerns whether records such as board meeting minutes from the Atlanta Police Foundation (APF) are subject to the state's open records law. If they are, they must be released to plaintiffs – a local digital non-profit news outlet and a Chicago-based research organization.
Although it is a private entity, the police foundation is the driving force behind the controversial police training center colloquially known as 'Cop City' and which has attracted global headlines after police shot dead Manuel Paez Terán, or 'Tortuguita', an environmental activist protesting the project.
At the same time, the prosecution of anti-'Cop City' activists – especially using Rico laws usually reserved for organized crime – has prompted accusations that the state is using police and the courts to crush dissent and free speech.
The open records complaint, filed last year on behalf of non-profit news outlet Atlanta Community Press Collective (ACPC) and digital transparency research organization Lucy Parsons Labs, details how numerous records queries to the foundation under Georgia's Open Records Act were ignored.
After a two-day bench trial last week, Fulton county superior court judge Jane Barwick must now decide whether to order the foundation to release those records, including a 'line-item construction budget' and contracts.
It was probably the first such lawsuit nationwide, University of Chicago sociology professor Robert Vargas told the Guardian last year – and is being followed closely by researchers and activists alike.
One of the hallmarks of police foundations is how difficult it is to get information out of them,' said Gin Armstrong, executive director at LittleSis and the Public Accountability Initiative. 'From a research point of view, this case could open up possibilities … in understanding where money is coming from for policing.'
'A ruling here that the Atlanta police foundation is subject to meaningful public oversight [by releasing the records] would send a very important signal,' said Jonathan Manes, senior counsel at the MacArthur Justice Center.
One reason, he said, was the high profile of the $109m training center project. Built on a 171-acre (70-hectare) footprint in a forest south-east of Atlanta, opposition to the center has come from a wide range of local and national organizations and protesters and is centered on concerns such as unchecked police militarization and clearing forests in an era of climate crisis.
Atlanta police, and the foundation, say the center is needed for 'world-class' training and to attract new officers.
The movement against the center dates to 2021 and has included the destruction of construction equipment and the arson of Atlanta police motorcycles and a car. It has also included efforts to mount a referendum on the training center that gathered signatures from more than 100,000 voters – and continues to languish in court – as well as historic levels of public participation in city council meetings, lawsuits, numerous protests, and support from national environmental and civil rights groups.
Despite the years of protests and worldwide media coverage – and although the APF built the center, with corporate and taxpayer funds – the foundation and its CEO, former Secret Service leader Dave Wilkinson, have largely escaped public notice. Most attention has centered on Atlanta's police department, which will be using the center, and local and state governments.
Because of this, the lawsuit, and last week's bench trial – meaning the judge decides, not a jury – draw attention to the APF. The APF is one of the nation's largest and most well-funded police foundations, with support from companies like Delta, Wells Fargo and Home Depot. Wilkinson is also the highest-paid among police foundation CEOs nationwide, with a 2022 salary of $500,000.
In his hours of testimony last week, Wilkinson revealed his take on ACPC, which began reporting on the training center in late 2021, filling a vacuum left in local media exemplified by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution failing to disclose in much of its news and opinion coverage of the project that Alex Taylor, CEO of the paper's owner, Cox Enterprises, had led a multimillion-dollar fundraising drive for the foundation.
Wilkinson testified that he thought ACPC would be 'giving information to … anarchists' – referring to protestors who committed acts of property destruction or vandalism – and that, in withholding information, he was 'trying to protect people from harm'.
He and others – including Alan Williams, project manager for the training center – offered hours of detailed descriptions of protests, including cellphone videos and news clips showing protestors throwing rocks, lighting fireworks and screaming such chants as 'Fuck you Alan!'
Matt Scott, executive director of ACPC, said: 'They were doing the best they could to make ACPC look like an organization intent on causing harm – but they brought no evidence against ACPC.'
Manes found the APF's stance 'deeply chilling – the idea that the press is responsible for how people use or react to information'.
In her closing argument, Joy Ramsingh – one of three attorneys who represented plaintiffs pro bono, along with Samantha C Hamilton and Luke Andrews – said that Wilkinson 'clearly believes that if … he feels [open records requestors] are bad people, then they should be denied Open Records Act requests. But [the law] is not governed by our feelings.'
The police foundation and its lawyer, former Georgia supreme court chief justice Harold Melton, also argued that the foundation was no different from other private entities that work with government, whether corporations such as Chick-fil-A or other non-profit organizations – and so, like these entities, it should not be subject to open records laws.
Melton declined to comment on the case. The APF did not respond to a query from the Guardian.
Ramsingh countered this notion rhetorically in court: 'Is there any Chick-fil-A that calls itself Atlanta police Chick-fil-A and only serves chicken nuggets to APD?'
Ed Vogel, a researcher at Lucy Parsons Labs, said: 'If APD didn't exist, APF wouldn't exist – it gives the ability to wealthy people and corporations to organize and mobilize funds in a way that supports their interests, without any public oversight.'
Ramsingh said she hopes the case 'helps shine a light on what police foundations do, and illuminates their reach'. In Atlanta, that includes not just raising money for the training center, but building and managing it. 'Most people have no idea there's this whole other entity making decisions on public safety.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
22 minutes ago
- CBS News
Police seek 4 teens in shooting that wounded bystander near Wrigley Field
Chicago Police have issued a community alert asking for help in finding four teens wanted in a shooting that wounded a bystander right across from Wrigley Field last month. Police said a 26-year-old man was shot in the arm around 7 p.m. Thursday, May 15, at Sheffield and Waveland avenues, across from the northeast corner of the ballpark and near the famous Murphy's Bleachers bar. Witnesses described a group of teens getting into a quarrel next to Murphy's Bleachers before the shooting. Police have identified four boys believed to be between the ages of 15 and 17, all of whom they say were involved in discharging the gun. Police released surveillance video of the teenage boys on an 'L' train. Chicago Police Chicago police took a person of interest in custody right after the shooting, but that person was released without charges the following day. Anyone with information about the boys being sought in the shooting is asked to call Belmont Area detectives at 312-744-8261, or submit an anonymous tip to and use reference #JJ-256188.
Yahoo
42 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Connect to Care Global Launches to Drive Post-Aid Development Across Global South
Singapore-based consultancy offers political, digital, business-driven and South–South solutions to overcome reduction in Global North aid budgets. SINGAPORE, June 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Connect to Care Global (CTCG), a Singapore-based development organisation, officially launched today to help international agencies and regional partners across the Global South navigate a rapidly changing aid landscape. As the Global North reduces its traditional aid commitments, a post-aid world is emerging that demands smarter, faster, and more locally grounded solutions. "It's a critical time for all of us in the Global South as we grapple with a multitude of problems in the face of declining Global North aid budgets," said Chandita Samaranayake, Founder and Director of CTCG. "Connect to Care Global is both a comprehensive response to this challenge and an opportunity to build a more resilient development sector across the Global South." Backed by a regional network of experienced consultants based across South and Southeast Asia, CTCG brings together deep local knowledge with cross-sector expertise in technology, strategic communications, and non-profit operations. The team includes former diplomats, advisors to governments, private sector and CSO leaders and has delivered projects in every part of Asia, offering a unique ability to bridge global strategic thinking with local execution. While officially launching today, CTCG has been delivering for the past 12 months, including nutrition, water resource management and recycling projects in Sri Lanka, Indonesia and Rwanda. CTCG's approach is built upon three core pillars: Think and acting politically – by aligning with local power structures and governance dynamics Adopting digital solutions – leveraging tech to scale impact across health, education, agriculture, governance, and finance Building South–South cooperation – promoting peer learning, context-aware solutions, and regional capacity-building The organisation's fundamental approach relies on unlocking the power of local and regional talent. Designing projects that include local private sector stakeholders and align with government priorities while taking into account the priorities and needs of development sector partners. Now open for partnerships, Connect To Care Global invites development agencies, multilateral institutions, private sector organizations and foundations to collaborate on politically smart, digitally enabled, and regionally grounded programs. For more information, please visit the CTCG website. – END – About CTCG Connect to Care Global is a mission-driven consulting and implementation partner helping development actors accelerate sustainable impact across South and Southeast Asia. Headquartered in Singapore, CTCG combines regional expertise with global insights to support the next generation of development programs. View original content: SOURCE Connect to Care Global
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Feds pause operations at 3 Michigan Job Corps centers as part of nationwide move
This story has been updated with new information from the city of Detroit. The federal goverment began pausing operations late last week at dozens of Job Corps centers across the country, including three in Michigan. The "phased pause" by the U.S. Department of Labor started May 29 after an internal review of the program, according to a news release. Job Corps, a federally funded residential career training program that has been around for more than 50 years, helps low-income young people ages 16 to 24 years old finish high school and get jobs. The program provides room and board and skills training for up to three years, alongside other services, such as child care and transportation. More than 700 students were enrolled at three Michigan centers in the 2023 program year, according to federal data. Democratic lawmakers from Michigan pushed back against the move and called for a reversal of the decision. In a June 2 letter to U.S. Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer, U.S. Reps. Rashida Tlaib of Detroit; Hillary Scholten of Grand Rapids; Kristen McDonald Rivet of Bay City, and Shri Thanedar, also of Detroit, said the decision was made without advance notice to the centers, and left students and staff scrambling. "This abrupt disruption has destabilized our communities, which rely on these centers. We understand and share the Department's interest in improving cost-efficiency and long-term effectiveness. Indeed, there is much work to be done to enhance the services here," the Michigan delegation wrote. "But an unplanned and abrupt pause in all operations does not support these goals. Instead, it derails the lives of thousands of young people and dedicated staff committed to strengthening our country's workforce, at a time of great worker shortage across the state." Michigan has Job Corps centers in Detroit, Flint and Grand Rapids, according to a U.S. Department of Labor website. The Detroit and Flint location is operated by Tucson-based Serrato Corp. The Grand Rapids center is run by Atlanta-based Human Learning Systems LLC. The labor department stopped contracts at 99 contract-operated centers, according to an FAQ, leading to a "suspension of program operations." The pause in operations at all contractor-run centers is slated to occur by the end of June, the news release states. The move, the release said, aligns with President Donald Trump's 2026 budget proposal and his administration's "commitment to ensure federal workforce investments deliver meaningful results for both students and taxpayers." More: 7 questions for Michigan's chief growth officer as state population edges up More: Big impact of tariffs on small Michigan suppliers could mean a loss of thousands of jobs A Labor Department official confirmed that the three Michigan-based centers had paused operations. The Free Press reached out to the Michigan centers and operators for comment on Monday. "Center operators began implementing transition plans to mobilize students safely to their home of record and suspend program activities. Funds will be used to pause program operations, which includes managing facilities, maintaining student records,and ensuring students are connected with necessary employment and program resources," according to the FAQ posted on the U.S. Department of Labor website. Of 217 Job Corps participants in Detroit, 19 were referred to the city of Detroit and indicated needing a place to stay, Deputy Mayor Melia Howard said in a statement Monday. Of those participants, 12 found accommodations themselves or declined help. Six others were put in temporary shelter and the city is trying to make contact with one other person, she said. "Our workforce development and housing teams have been in close contact with the Job Corps office in Detroit since late last week when this issue arose. ... Job Corps youth participants are eligible for similar training though Detroit at Work and we are confident we will be able to provide training opportunities for those that have been displaced from Job Corps," Howard said. "Because we know the closure also affects Detroit job corps employees, we will be providing them with job placement support through Detroit at Work." About 25,000 students are enrolled in Job Corps nationwide. The labor department is working with state and local partners to help current students with their training and job opportunities, according to the news release. Students will get copies of their personal documents, can get connected to job opportunities by the labor department and they will get registered with their nearest American Job Center, a nationwide network of services for job seekers. According to the FAQ, the labor department "will arrange transportation and cover costs to transfer students back to their homes of record," by the end of June. Staff are employed by contractors, not the federal government. The labor department will provide staff information about employment services, job fairs and unemployment compensation. The program was paused because Job Corps has been in financial crisis, according to the federal government. A press release cited a $140 million deficit in 2024 and projected shortfall of $213 million for the 2025 program year. The U.S. Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration released a report in April on the Job Corp program's performance and cost. The average graduation rate was under 40% and the average cost for a student per year was roughly $80,000, according to the report. 'Job Corps was created to help young adults build a pathway to a better life through education, training, and community,' Chavez-DeRemer said in a news release. 'However, a startling number of serious incident reports and our in-depth fiscal analysis reveal the program is no longer achieving the intended outcomes that students deserve. We remain committed to ensuring all participants are supported through this transition and connected with the resources they need to succeed as we evaluate the program's possibilities.' More than 4,500 students were homeless before joining Job Corps, according to a news release from the Washington, D.C.-based National Job Corps Association, which represents staff and students. The association published its own "transparency report context" on the government's report, which it called an "unsound analysis of the program based on incorrect and misleading information." 'Job Corps has transformed the lives of millions of Americans. ...This decision, based on a deeply flawed report, needlessly endangers the futures and the lives of thousands and potentially millions more young Americans," said Donna Hay, president and CEO of the National Job Corps Association, in the news release. The Job Corps program was created in 1964 to tackle youth unemployment. Concerns about the program's cost effectiveness have cropped up during various points of its history, according to a 2022 report from the Congressional Research Service. A 1993 study, regarded as the most rigorous, found short term benefits and immediate wage increases, but also said wage increases did not remain over time, except for those enrolled at 20 years old or older, the report says. At the Detroit Job Corps Center on May 30, students were left scrambling and dozens were reportedly lugging garbage bags full of belongings, according to Fox 2 Detroit. "The staff ... they broke the news to us and they had us go to the dorms, pack our stuff," a student told the TV station. Mariyah Louis graduated from Detroit Job Corps Center in 2017. She was in the foster care system and had a turbulent relationship with her mother and needed some guidance and assistance in life, she said. The Job Corps program provided stable housing, allowed her to focus and get her high school diploma, trade certificate, driver's license, health care and mental health resources. Because of Job Corps, she pursued higher education and now owns a car detailing business, she said. "It broke my heart," Louis, 27, said when she found out about the pause in operations. "I can relate to that feeling of not knowing what I'm gonna do next, especially being a young adolescent." In the last few days since the pause, she created a Facebook group for people affiliated with Detroit Job Corps to access resources and is raising $12,000 for toiletries, home goods and bus passes for students left displaced. "Job Corps was a safe haven," she said. Contact Nushrat Rahman: nrahman@ Follow her on X: @NushratR. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Feds pause operations at 3 Michigan Job Corps centers