‘Defund the Police’ Advocate Stacey Abrams Spent over $450K on Private Security
Democrat faces backlash after filings

Georgia's Democratic gubernatorial nominee Stacey Abrams has poured hundreds of thousands of dollars into private security since 2021 despite calling to abolish the police and personally backing an anti-police initiative.
Abrams' campaign doled out over $450,000 to Executive Protection Agencies (EPA Security) between December 2021 and April 2022.
According to the company’s website, the group provides executive protection that comes with a "keen eye with a thorough knowledge of the venue through threat assessment" for its clients.
The nine payments from the Abrams campaign to EPA Security ranged from $39,335 to $56,760.
But it's not the first time Abrams has paid for private security.

The Fair Fight PAC spent over $1.2 million on security services last year with the same firm as the Abrams campaign, according to filings.
Abrams recently told Axios that she supports increased police funding and officer pay in her role with the Seattle-based Marguerite Casey Foundation.
More than 100 sheriffs condemned Abrams over her ties to the foundation and her "soft-on-crime policies," which followed Gov. Brian Kemp calling on her to resign from its board.
The Marguerite Casey Foundation regualry voices support defunding and abolishing the police.
They also awarded millions to professors and scholars who advocate prison abolitionist views.
"I do not, and have never said, and have never supported defunding the police," Abrams told Axios while emphasizing that she has no control over the group's grants as a board member.

But Abrams backed an expanded anti-police initiative from the foundation shortly after joining its board in early May 2021, Fox News Digital also reported.
The board, including Abrams, unanimously approved the 'Answer the Uprising' campaign in late May 2021, which involved increasing financial support to left-wing groups working on law enforcement issues.
The initiative also established a coalition with other grant-making organizations that provide backing to defund the police groups.
The Marguerite Casey Foundation in 2020 directed grants to left-wing groups that want to defund police, including the Movement for Black Lives, Black Organizing Project, and Louisville Community Bail Fund.
She also signaled support for defunding police while attempting to redefine it.
Abrams repeatedly tried to rebrand the "defund" aspect of the movement and favored "reformation and transformation" of law enforcement instead of abolishing policing.
"We have to have a transformation of how we view the role of law enforcement, how we view the construct of public safety, and how we invest not only in the work that we need them to do to protect us but the work that we need to do to protect and build our communities," Abrams said in June 2020.
"And that's the conversation we're having: We'll use different language to describe it, but fundamentally we must have reformation and transformation."
"We have to reallocate resources, so, yes," she said in another interview that same month when asked if police budgets should be reduced.
"If there is a moment where resources are so tight that we have to choose between whether we murder Black people or serve Black people, then absolutely: Our choice must be service."
Abrams later advocated for the "redistributive allocation of dollars" from police budgets so "we are not simply investing in public safety, but we're building a safer public through education, through health care, through food security, through affordable housing, and that we not see these things as being in conflict, but they have to be part of a holistic vision of what America should look like, what law enforcement and what society should look like in the 21st century."