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Cop City: Human Rights Groups Ask International Commission to Investigate Police Killing of U.S. Environmental Activist

Tortuguita’s mother, Belkis Teran (left) and Timothy Pratt covering COP City protests for the UK’s The Guardian Photo: Don Kimball
Tortuguita’s mother, Belkis Teran (left) and Timothy Pratt covering COP City protests for the UK’s The Guardian Photo: Don Kimball

On Friday, April 6th, 2024 three human rights groups filed a petition before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) requesting a Department of Justice investigation into Tortuguita’s murder. 

The following is their Press Release.

 
New York, NY, April 8, 2024 – Last week, Robert F. Kennedy Human RightsThe Southern Center for Human Rights, and the University of Dayton Human Rights Center filed a petition before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) requesting a Department of Justice investigation into the 2023 murder of Manuel Esteban Páez Terán (known as “Tortuguita”), an environmental activist who was killed by police while peacefully protesting the construction of Atlanta’s “Cop City” facility. The petition, which was filed on behalf of Manuel’s mother Belkis Terán, highlights the lack of accountability in Manuel’s case and the systemic issues that contributed to their death, including alarming national trends of criminalizing protesters and unchecked police violence. 
 
Manuel, a 26-year-old nonbinary activist, was killed on January 18, 2023 during a police raid in an Atlanta forest – marking the first-ever instance of U.S. law enforcement killing an environmental activist. Autopsy reports indicate that officers shot Manuel with at least 14 bullets, producing over 50 wounds, while they sat cross-legged on the ground with their hands raised.
 
“We’ve repeatedly asked the district attorneys and police for information, body camera footage, and other records about what happened that day. We’ve received nothing from them,” said Ms. Terán. “The lack of information in addition to the police’s attempts to destroy Manuel’s reputation has doubled our grief. Without more information, I feel that I haven’t had a fair opportunity to defend Manuel.” 
 
Since Manuel’s death, Georgia state officials and officers have refused to release evidence, omitted key details, and changed their narrative. The state’s original report claimed that Manuel fired at a state trooper, but autopsies later revealed that Manuel did not have gunpowder residue on their hands. Due to these and other inconsistencies, several Georgia lawmakers have called for an independent investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice – calls that remain unanswered. 
 
“More than a year after Manuel’s death at the hands of Georgia law enforcement, the Department of Justice still hasn’t launched an investigation,” said Delia Addo-Yobo, staff attorney at Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights. “The government’s refusal to pursue justice is disheartening. We are hopeful that the IACHR will succeed where the U.S. has failed, holding state actors accountable and providing some measure of closure for Ms. Belkis and her family.” 
 
“The tragic killing of Manuel Teran is instructive as to the dangers of unconstrained state power, especially when consolidated around policing and political repression. By petitioning this body and exposing the significant harm the City of Atlanta and State of Georgia have caused in their quest to build one of the largest police militarization facilities in the world, Manuel’s parents are demonstrating great courage,” said Tiffany Roberts, director of public policy at the Southern Center for Human Rights
 
“The U.S. government has obligations under international law to extend special protection to environmental human rights defenders. By petitioning this regional body, Terán’s mother has an opportunity to pursue justice and accountability for the killing of her child,” added Joel R. Pruce, director at the University of Dayton Human Rights Center.
 
Manuel’s murder is emblematic of the United States’ broader crackdown on civic spaces and the right to protest, and its longstanding issues with police brutality. Since December 2022, dozens of Stop Cop City protesters have been arrested and accused of domestic terrorism for acts that ranged from sleeping in hammocks to throwing fireworks. In September 2023, the Georgia Attorney General charged 61 Stop Cop City activists under Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (commonly referred to as “RICO,” an act originally intended to combat organized crime). In essence, this indictment alleged that opposing Cop City amounts to a criminal enterprise – a move that has far-reaching and chilling implications on First Amendment rights to speech, assembly, and association.
 
“Manuel’s death marks a new, terrifying trend as it relates to capitalism and environmental justice,” said Reverend Keyanna Jones, an Atlanta-based pastor and community organizer. “I implore the Commission to examine this petition, as human rights defenders in the United States need the support of the international community.”
 
Ms. Terán and the participating organizations have asked the Inter-American Commission to review Manuel’s case and call for necessary remedies, including an independent investigation, the release of requested police records, a public apology, and a national database that tracks police killings and misconduct. Read the petition in full . 
 
About Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights
We are a nonpartisan, not-for-profit organization that has worked to realize Robert F. Kennedy’s dream of a more just and peaceful world since 1968. In partnership with local activists, we advocate for key human rights issues—championing change makers and pursuing strategic litigation at home and around the world. And to ensure change that lasts, we foster a social-good approach to business and investment and educate millions of students about human rights and social justice.
 
About the Southern Center for Human Rights
The Southern Center for Human Rights is working for equality, dignity, and justice for people impacted by the criminal legal system in the Deep South. SCHR fights for a world free from mass incarceration, the death penalty, the criminalization of poverty, and racial injustice.
 
About the University of Dayton Human Rights Center
The University of Dayton Human Rights Center works to advance human rights by conducting research-driven, participatory advocacy; educating future practitioners; and fostering inclusive and reflective dialogue and learning that promotes innovation and deepens impact. Inspired by our Catholic Marianist identity, we work through sustainable partnerships with human rights practitioners and justice organizations in Ohio, the United States and around the world.
 
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Take Action!

6 KIMBALL

Sign on letter

Sign on to GJEP’s letter to demand Justice for Tortuguita.

In May of 2023 Global Justice Ecology Project mailed a letter calling for justice for Tortuguita to Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr and US Attorney General Merrick Garland.

The letter was endorsed by more than 400 people and 62 organizations representing millions of people from more than 30 countries. 

The letter made the following demands of Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr and US Attorney General Merrick Garland:

  • Arrest the officers involved in the shooting of Tortuguita and try them for murder.
  • Cancel the construction of “Cop City”– the $90 million Atlanta Public Safety Training Center,
  • Drop charges of “domestic terrorism” against Stop Cop City activists.
 

We will be re-sending the letter to Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr and US Attorney General Merrick Garland.

Breaking Green Podcast

The August 2023 episode of The Breaking Green Podcast, Muzzling Dissent and COP City with Basav Sen and Gabrielle Colchete, can be heard here.  Basav and Babrielle co-authored a July article in In These Times titled, “Cop City and the Escalating War on Environmental Defenders.” The story was based on a report they wrote for the Institute for Policy Studies on the increased criminalization of protest activities.  The Breaking Green Podcast is produced by GJEP.

Special exclusive report for Global Justice Ecology Project

In March 0f 2023, Don Kimball wrote a special exclusive report for GJEP on the decades-long persecution of Forest Defenders BEATEN, BOMBED AND BURIED  The exclusive report can be read here: BEATEN, BOMBED AND BURIED: The decades-long persecution of Forest Defenders.

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Global Justice Ecology Project logo -- abbreviated as GJEP
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