Morning, y’all! PEN America’s latest list of the most-banned books in America is out, and I was genuinely surprised at the author with the most bans in U.S. schools. I’ll put the answer at the bottom, and a hint: It’s a household name.

Let’s get to it.


DOWNTOWN ICE OVERCROWDING

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Credit: Philip Robibero / AJC

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Credit: Philip Robibero / AJC

The Atlanta Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office downtown on Ted Turner Drive isn’t built for long stays. There are no showers, no beds and no readily available food. Yet, more than 1,200 people have been held there for more than 24 hours this year. That’s a huge jump from the norm.

  • Overcrowding is already a problem in larger ICE detention centers, and the AJC has learned the agency now detains immigrants for long stretches in the basement of the Atlanta field office.
  • Immigration attorneys and advocates say the conditions are dangerous and inhumane. One attorney said a nursing mother spent nine days sleeping on the floor in a field office holding room. Another said her client had to sleep next to an open toilet for a weekend.
  • ICE’s own guidance says no detainee may be held in a holding room for more than 12 hours.
  • From September 2023 through the beginning of Donald Trump’s second presidency, a total of eight people were held for more than 24 hours at the facility. Since then, that number’s skyrocketed to 1,239 at the time of publication.

🔎 READ MORE: Attorneys say conditions can be even worse at the field office than already controversial ICE detention centers

Not signed up yet? What’re you waiting for? Get A.M. ATL in your inbox each weekday morning. And keep scrolling for more news.


THE SHUTDOWN WENT DOWN TO GEORGIA

The visitors center at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park in Old Fourth Ward closed on Wednesday morning.

Credit: abbey.cutrer@ajc.com

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Credit: abbey.cutrer@ajc.com

As promised, we know a little more about what’s open and what’s closed in Georgia during the government shutdown — and, more importantly, who’s being affected.

  • Two-thirds of workers at the Atlanta-based CDC have been furloughed.
  • The Department of Veterans Affairs’ regional benefits offices are closed and career counseling programs halted.
  • That much-needed Hurricane Helene disaster aid for farmers may be slowed down, agriculture officials said.
  • National parks and cultural sites may still be accessible, but amenities like bathrooms and visitors centers will be closed.

Interesting note: If you recall, during the shutdown of 2018, air travel got tied up because so many workers, laboring without timely pay, called out sick. That’s one of the reasons Congress eventually ended the shutdown.


COYOTES EVERYWHERE

I live near the woods, and as such, the haunting squeal of wandering coyote bands is a regular evening serenade. More than one visitor from coyote-less climes has been extremely freaked out by it.

  • Scientists know these non-native murder pups are growing far too common in Georgia. The problem is, there’s not much they can do to stop it.
  • New University of Georgia-led research shows lethal culling, a common method of controlling overpopulation, only works for a few years. After that, coyote numbers bounce right back up.
  • One researcher called culling “foolish and a waste of money” in such an instance.

Now, it’s back to the drawing board to find new solutions. The good news is, they don’t cause as much ecological harm as initially feared. Just keep your pets close and your ears closed.


MUST-KNOW POLITICS AND BUSINESS

🔋 Gov. Brian Kemp has walked a fine diplomatic line after that unprecedented ICE raid at a Georgia Hyundai plant. More on his strategy, which has included high-level talks with South Korea and measured rhetoric.

🏭 Ammunition-maker Underwood Ammo is planning a $41 million plant in Effingham County near Savannah, with the hope of 120 new jobs.

💰 The State Ethics Commission has expanded an investigation into Georgia-based First Liberty Building & Loan, which is accused of scamming investors out of millions.

Side note: I remember when chief political reporter Greg Bluestein first told me about this ongoing story. We were at the All-Star Game, and he asked how much I’d read into it.

You have to understand, the AJC publishes so much important content. I have to be judicious with the threads of stories A.M. ATL picks up and figure out when to hit the most crucial points of long-tail issues. It hadn’t risen to that level for me. “Look again,” he said. “It’s complicated and fascinating.” He was right.


A STAMP OF APPROVAL

Jimmy Carter, the longest-lived U.S. president, died Dec. 29, 2024.

Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

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Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

The late President Jimmy Carter was honored with a commemorative Forever stamp yesterday on what would have been his 101st birthday.

Members of the Carter family gathered for a ceremony unveiling the new stamp, which features a 1982 portrait of the nation’s 39th president by artist Herbert E. Abrams.

After the ceremony, former Carter Center CEO John Hardman was asked about Carter’s work.

“His work is never finished,” Hardman said.


IT’S BEEN REAL, SNIT

Brian Snitker is hanging up his Atlanta Braves skipper hat after 10 seasons.

  • This man’s done it all: Over 49 seasons with the organization, he played in the minors, coached in the majors and minors, and famously managed the Gwinnett Stripers née Braves until a surprise call-up at the beginning of the 2016 season. Five years later, he took the Braves all the way.
  • To recap, that’s 811 wins, six NL East division titles, one wild-card berth and a World Series title with Snit at the helm. Plus, he’s the third-winningest coach in Braves history. (“Winningest”: When sports make words happen.)
  • Don’t get too sad. Snitker says he’s entering a senior advisory role with the franchise. No word on possible replacements, but whoever comes in will have to take a firm hand. The Braves went 76-87 this season and finished fourth in the NL East.

NEWS BITES

Conservationist Jane Goodall has died at 91

Icon. Legend. What else is there to say?

That’s not trash! How to turn kitchen waste into treasure

In my experience, every marriage consists of one person who says stuff like this and one person who wearily tolerates it.

“Biketober” rolls into Atlanta to promote healthy commutes

It coincides with “Watch Out For Cyclists-tober” and “Don’t Get Hit By a Car-tober.”

“Ruth & Boaz,” Tyler Perry’s modern-day adaptation of the biblical story, hits No. 1 on Netflix

Coming soon: “Diary of a Proverbs 31 Woman.” (IYGIYGI)


ON THIS DATE

Oct. 2, 1946

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Credit: AJC

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Credit: AJC

Twelve shabby supermen have date with gallows. Twelve men, headed by shabby, frozen-faced Hermann Goering, Tuesday night faced death on the gallows — the end of a hideous trial of conquest and deception which ran over the broken bodies and shattered cities of millions of people. … Alone in their cells they knew they probably had only until Oct. 16 to live.

Now THAT’S how you write about Nazi war criminals sentenced in Nuremberg.


ONE MORE THING

Trivia answer: It’s Stephen King. According to the literary group PEN, King’s books were banned 206 times, including classic titles like “Carrie” and “The Stand.”

The most banned book is also a household name: 1960s classic “A Clockwork Orange” by Anthony Burgess. See other oft-banned titles here.


Thanks for reading to the very bottom of A.M. ATL. Questions, comments, ideas? Contact us at AMATL@ajc.com.

Until next time.

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