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World/ United States & Canada

Wendy’s restaurant where Atlanta officer killed Rayshard Brooks is demolished

  • The June shooting heightened protests against US race-based police violence, and the burned-out Wendy’s became a gathering place for demonstrators
  • The occupation ended on July 4, when Secoriea Turner, 8, was killed across the street from the restaurant while in a vehicle with her mother
The Wendy's where Rayshard Brooks was killed by Atlanta police last month has been torn down. Photo: AP

The sound of a balloon flapping in the wind with the message “You’re so special!” was overpowered on Tuesday by excavators and backhoes demolishing a charred Wendy’s restaurant that had become a symbol of Atlanta’s civil unrest.

The balloon was for Rayshard Brooks, the 27-year-old father shot and killed by a now-fired Atlanta police officer.

The killing set off intense protests against race-based police violence, while the burned-out restaurant became a gathering place for demonstrators – some of whom armed themselves and threatened others while occupying the site for days on end.

The occupation ended on July 4, when 8-year-old Secoriea Turner was shot and killed across the street from the restaurant while riding in the back seat of a vehicle with her mother.

A private demolition crew tears down the now infamous burned-out Wendy's restaurant in Atlanta, Georgia, where Rayshard Brooks was killed on June 12. Photo: EPA-EFE
A private demolition crew tears down the now infamous burned-out Wendy's restaurant in Atlanta, Georgia, where Rayshard Brooks was killed on June 12. Photo: EPA-EFE

Two days later, the city cleared the property and forced protesters off the site at University Avenue and Pryor Road.

Secoriea will be buried on Wednesday.

“My prayers remain with the Brooks and Turner families. It is my hope that today is another meaningful step in the journey of healing for the entire community,” Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said in a written statement on Tuesday.

A Wendy’s spokesperson wrote in an email that the building would be razed “in a thoughtful way, with safety as the priority and in cooperation with city officials”.

It is not known what will become of the property, and the Wendy’s spokesperson did not respond when asked about future plans for the site.

“The demolition of the building and any future decisions regarding the property are that of the owner’s – not the city,” said a spokesman for the mayor.

An Atlanta Police Department vehicle is seen in front the burned down Wendy's restaurant as it is cleared of protesters and their belongings. Photo: EPA-EFE
An Atlanta Police Department vehicle is seen in front the burned down Wendy's restaurant as it is cleared of protesters and their belongings. Photo: EPA-EFE

Protesters who have rallied around the Wendy’s want the private property to become a community centre honouring Brooks.

Khalid Kamau, a member of the South Fulton City Council, visited the site on Tuesday only to find it had been demolished. He said he was disappointed the public was not notified of the teardown, in case people wanted to have a moment of closure at the lot.

“Demolishing this structure is not going to demolish the movement started here to reimagine policing in Atlanta,” said Kamau.

Two days after Secoriea was killed, the Atlanta City Council approved several police reform measures, including a ban on chokeholds and expansion of the citizen review board’s powers.

Considering it has been the site of an incident that spurred so much widespread outrage, few were there to witness the demolition. But 17-year-old Derante Wilkins, a recent Carver High School graduate, said he was walking around when he stumbled upon it.

Wilkins bought some Moose Tracks ice cream and an orange Fanta and sat down outside a package store across the street to get a view. Looking past the store’s car park where Secoriea was shot, Wilkins said he was worried the demolition would stir up protests again. When asked about solutions, the teen said he wished officers had more medical training in case they use violence.

An Atlanta Police Department officer stands watch before the restaurant is demolished. Photo: EPA-EFE
An Atlanta Police Department officer stands watch before the restaurant is demolished. Photo: EPA-EFE

The scene was oddly quiet on Tuesday compared to how it has been since June 12, when ex-police officer Garrett Rolfe shot Brooks in the back. Brooks was being interrogated for suspected DUI after falling asleep in the drive-through line at the restaurant. A struggle broke out as officers tried to place Brooks under arrest. He ran away with an officer’s taser and fired the device toward officers as he ran, just before Rolfe shot him.

Less than 24 hours later, police say a woman who knew Brooks, Natalie Hanna White, used a lighter and some sort of can to burn the restaurant. She has been charged with first-degree arson but is out on bond. Rolfe has been charged with felony murder and is also out on bond.

The site has hosted peaceful protests, but armed occupiers at the Wendy’s also threatened people.

Secoriea was riding in an SUV with her mother when they exited onto University Avenue shortly before 10pm on July 4, police said. Protesters were holding a block party. When the car in which Secoriea was riding tried to turn into the package store car park, they were confronted by a “group of armed individuals who had blocked the entrance”, investigators said. As many as four armed civilians shot into the SUV, police said.

Mawuli Davis, a lawyer representing the family, said the reward for information leading to arrest and conviction is US$50,000. He said the family spent Tuesday receiving condolences from visitors to their home.

Many questioned why the occupiers were allowed to stay at the Wendy’s site.

Bottoms said during an Atlanta Journal-Constitution editorial board meeting last week that police had planned to shut down the site weeks before the shooting. But the mayor said she allowed Atlanta City Councilwoman Joyce Sheperd more time to negotiate with demonstrators.

Looking at the site on Tuesday, Vicki Lynn Buckley-Ameen said she had been coming there to protest since Brooks was killed. The 57-year-old was also present the night Secoriea was killed.

“God’s going to get them,” she said of Secoriea’s killers. “That’s not how you be a warrior.”