Ex-High School Coach Makes Racist Comment About Hanging Black People From Trees & Says There Are Too Many Black People In Atlanta

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Video footage of a former Georgia athletics coach is surfacing the internet with him using extremely racist and vile language towards black people. 

The clips shown above were shared on Facebook by Lauren Angelica Law, a self-proclaimed civil rights activist. She posted the 3 clips and captioned the post, “RACIST Mark Taylor, Warner Robins Ga, speed training trainer/coach for High school athletes, leaked video showing gross racial behavior in Atlanta Ga,” her post read. “Murderous threats towards the same race of people he coaches. Most of his clients are the same color he despises. Share this everywhere.”

In the first clip, a man who appears to be Taylor shows that he’s driving through downtown Atlanta at night and says, “Ain’t seen a white person in sight. Homeless ones on the street. Every restaurant, looking here, is Black. Every car… beside me is Black. They can have Atlanta. It used to be a fun place to come to, up here,” he says, before criticizing a billboard that allegedly pictured Obama.

He mentions people going to Atlanta “to go hunting” before turning the camera around to show his face. “Ain’t nothing but Blacks up here,” he says. “It’s all it is. Atlanta’s just gone down, man. Just gone.”

In a second clip, a person appearing to be Taylor films a Black woman driving a white car as he says, “Look at that n—– trying to pull out in front of me, right here.”

“Do you see that tree, right there?” he says, turning the camera towards a tree by the street. “Ro will hang you from that tree. Yeah!”

In a third clip, Taylor films a bedside table with a Glock, then turns the camera on himself as he picks up the phone and jokes, “Room service.”

“I need y’all n—— to bring me somechicken wings, two hoes. A redbone and a white girl. Yeah, I want the white girl. Ro want to try the redbone…. Ro. …He probably throw her out the window when he done with her.”

“Atlanta, Atlanta,” Taylor continues. “N—– town.”

It is unclear who Taylor is referencing when saying “Ro.” But according Lauren Angelica, “The “Ro” he’s talking about is either a cop or someone on the planning and zoning board, possibly chairman.” She said in her post on Facebook. 

 

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