Georgia
Del Taco’s locations in this Southern state have closed. See where.
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Del Taco’s Georgia locations have abruptly closed as the franchise owner of the restaurants navigates Chapter 11 bankruptcy, the company said.
As of Friday, Feb. 20, when searching for the American-Mexican fast-food chain’s Georgia locations, its website says, “Sorry, this location no longer exists.”
When reached by email on Feb. 20, Del Taco said the franchisee operating its Atlanta, Columbus, Macon and Chattanooga (Fort Oglethorpe) locations closed all 14 restaurants.
“This closure occurred without prior notice to Del Taco,” the company said in its statement. “The franchisee is currently undergoing bankruptcy proceedings, and we are actively exploring options to reopen these locations as soon as possible. Updates will be shared as plans are finalized.”
Del Taco was owned by Jack in the Box from 2021 until late 2025, when Yadav Enterprises, which operates more than 300 franchise restaurants across the United States, bought the company in December 2025. At the time, Del Taco said it operated more than 600 locations across the country, with most of its restaurants in California, where the company is based.
A Redditor shared on Tuesday, Feb. 17, that the location in Georgia’s Warner Robins, about 20 miles south of Macon, closed.
“Manager was told all the Del tacos in the state of Georgia are closing effective today,” the user wrote on Feb. 17. “There’s nothing in the news about this. Anyone know what’s up? She said it had to do a chapter 11 bankruptcy.”
Court records obtained by USA TODAY show that a franchise owner running 22 Del Taco locations in Georgia and Alabama filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in July 2025 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of South Carolina.
USA TODAY contacted the franchise owner, Matador Restaurant Group, but did not immediately receive a response on Feb. 20. According to the documents, the company has about 336 employees.
Del Taco franchise owner took out high-interest loans to fight money woes
The restaurant group said in the July 2025 court documents that the company has “cash flow issues” and previously closed two of its underperforming locations.
According to the court filing, the restaurant group’s financial woes began in late 2024 due to company growth, an “unexpected decline in sales, and rising operational costs.”
After discussing the issues with brokers, the company took out Merchant Cash Advance (MCA) loans to resolve the issue. MCA loans involve a company paying a “lump sum of cash up front in exchange for a percentage of the business’s future sales or revenue,” according to the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation.
The restaurant group said the MCA loans put the company “into further financial distress due to the excessive fees, excessive effective interest rate, and aggressive payback schedules.”
“Despite its efforts to reduce expenses, (the restaurant group’s) revenue has not been able to keep up with the MCA obligations,” the company wrote in the documents, adding that as of July 15, 2025, the company had 10 MCA loans with nine different creditors.
Per the documents, the restaurant group said it owed $2.701 million.
Another franchisee, Newport Ventures, abruptly closed 17 of Colorado’s 18 locations in March after issues with Del Taco and a bankruptcy filing, the Pensacola News Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported. Del Taco confirmed to USA TODAY in June 2025 that the 17 locations are reopening.
How recently did Del Taco closures begin?
Online reports of Del Taco closures in Georgia date back to at least August 2025, when a Redditor and fan of the chain shared that they tried to visit a location in Kennesaw, only to find “its doors locked with signs plastered everywhere stating the location is permanently closed.”
“This is the second DT in town to close in as many months,” the user wrote. “GA has already lost Del Taco once before, and I fear we may be headed towards a second dark age.”
Another user added that they, too, stopped by a Georgia location in August, this time in Morrow, and it was boarded up as well.
Elsewhere in the U.S., Del Taco locations in Florida have closed. Pensacola Del Taco District Manager Kimberly Garrasi previously confirmed to the Pensacola News Journal that five Del Taco locations in Florida would close.
The Tallahassee, Florida, location closed about a year after opening, according to the Tallahassee Democrat, part of the USA TODAY Network. Per the Democrat, a note posted on the Del Taco drive-thru read “This location is now closed. We appreciate your support!”
However, while franchise closures have been reported in multiple states, Del Taco has announced plans to expand.
Per the Louisville Courier Journal, also part of the USA TODAY Network, Del Taco announced in summer 2025 plans to open five locations with a new franchisee, Karan Pandher, in Louisville, Kentucky.
According to the Courier Journal, Del Taco said the first location will likely host its grand opening by 2027.
Contributing: Kyla A Sanford, Tallahassee Democrat; Brittany Misencik, Pensacola News Journal; Amanda Hancock, Louisville Courier Journal
Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY’s NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Email her at sdmartin@usatoday.com.
Georgia
Georgia woman charged in abortion case granted bond as questions grow over murder charge
A Georgia woman facing a rare murder charge tied to an alleged abortion has been granted bond.
Alexia Moore, 31, was granted bond Monday by a judge in Camden County, according to the Georgia Public Defender Council. The court set bond at $1 on the malice murder charge and $2,000 total for two drug-related charges.
Prosecutors agreed Moore was entitled to bond and to an amount she could reasonably pay, the public defender’s office said.
Moore had been jailed since early March after police accused her of taking pills to end a pregnancy in violation of Georgia law, which bans most abortions after about six weeks.
Authorities allege Moore was about 22 to 24 weeks pregnant when she went to a hospital in late December, reporting abdominal pain. According to an arrest warrant, she told medical staff she had taken misoprostol, a drug commonly used in medication abortions, along with oxycodone. Investigators said the fetus was delivered alive and survived for about an hour.
The case has drawn national attention because it could be one of the first times a woman in Georgia is prosecuted for murder in connection with ending a pregnancy since the state’s 2019 abortion law took effect.
In a statement, the Georgia Public Defender Council said the bond decision reflects the importance of due process.
“Today’s decision is a reminder that justice is not served by accusation alone,” the agency said. “Our system works best when courts carefully weigh the facts, uphold constitutional protections, and safeguard the rights of every person.”
Moore also faces charges of possessing controlled substances, including oxycodone and misoprostol.
The case comes as states across the country navigate legal questions following the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 decision overturning Roe v. Wade, which allowed states like Georgia to enforce stricter abortion laws.
Moore’s attorneys have also filed motions seeking a speedy trial as the case moves forward.
Georgia
Georgia school weapons detector bill clears Senate committee vote
ATLANTA – A proposal to mandate weapons-detection systems at every public school entrance in Georgia is one step closer to becoming law following an emotional hearing at the State Capitol on Monday.
What we know:
The State Senate Public Safety Committee on Monday unanimously approved House Bill 1023. The move comes in response to the Sept. 4, 2024, shooting at Apalachee High School that killed two students and two teachers.
“A place of nightmare”
What they’re saying:
The committee heard harrowing testimony from Apalachee High School students who survived the gunfire.
Daria Lezczynska, a junior, and Sasha Contreras, a senior, are members of “Change for Chee,” a group advocating for increased school safety measures.
READ APALACHEE SHOOTING COVERAGE HERE
“The place where we used to feel safe, turned into a place of nightmare,” Lezczynska said through tears.
She told the committee that the gunfire erupted directly outside her classroom.
“The fear, the blood and the chaos that is burned into my memory,” she said.
Contreras, who was locked down inside the school with her mother during the attack, remembered a teacher who was gunned down that day.
“I left feeling happy, not knowing it would be that last time,” she said. “No child should step into school anxious about coming out alive.”
A proactive step
The legislation, originally introduced by Georgia House Majority Leader Chuck Efstration, R-Dacula, seeks to create a physical barrier against firearms entering school buildings.
“Ensuring that weapons cannot come into our public schools is a first step to make sure that students are safe,” Efstration said. “Georgia students deserve to know that they’re going to be safe at school. Parents need to know when they drop their kids off at school in the morning, they’re going to be able to pick them up safe at the end of the day.”
The student advocates believe the technology would have changed the outcome at Apalachee, where investigators say a student killed four people and injured seven others.
“If there had been weapons-detection systems in every place at every entry of the school on that day, that rifle never would have reached our hallways,” Lezczynska said, calling the proposal a “very good bill.”
Contreras added that the unanimous committee vote was a necessary step forward.
“This is a proactive measure that I think is necessary,” she said. “I’m glad that people today stepped up and were able to pass it.”
What’s next:
The bill now moves to the full Georgia Senate. Lawmakers have just over a week to pass the measure before the legislative session concludes.
The Source: This is a FOX 5 original report where Christopher King gathered information from Georgia State Capitol legislative proceedings, the text of House Bill 1023, and public testimony from students and state representatives.
Georgia
Republicans fear this Democrat in Georgia Senate race: ‘This guy’s no slouch’
Rep. Buddy Carter warned a crowd of Republicans in Roberta, Georgia, in January that he faced an uphill battle in November to unseat Democrat Sen. Jon Ossoff in the purple state, if he becomes the Republican nominee.
“Look, this guy’s no slouch,” the Georgia congressman said, according to a recording of the remarks obtained by The Washington Post. “He’s pretty sharp, he’s articulate, he’s young, he’s handsome, he talks well. You better have somebody who can go toe to toe with him.”
Publicly, Republicans in the state and in Washington continue to list Georgia as their top pickup opportunity in the Senate as they defend their 53-seat majority in a midterm year in which their party faces fierce political headwinds. Donald Trump won the state by more than two percentage points in 2024, and Republicans have painted Ossoff as too liberal for Georgia.
But behind closed doors, Republicans have tamped down their hopes of unseating the 39-year-old powerhouse fundraiser as he seeks another term. They’re lamenting their bitterly divided primary field made worse by a recruiting failure when popular Republican Gov. Brian Kemp declined to run for the seat. Carter, Rep. Mike Collins and Derek Dooley, a former college football coach endorsed by Kemp, are the main competitors in the May 19 GOP primary.
Collins – a close Trump ally with a blisteringly MAGA social media presence that could alienate moderate voters – leads in most polls of the Republican primary. The Cook Political Report rates the general election as a toss-up.
“I’m not feeling bullish about it,” said one Republican strategist who was granted anonymity to provide a more candid assessment. “[Ossoff] has wisely avoided the temptation of going on cable news for six years and playing to the base for social media likes. … I think he’s going to reap the benefits of that.”
Sen. Thom Tillis, a Republican retiring from his North Carolina seat this year, said Ossoff has done “a good job presenting as a moderate candidate,” although Tillis does not believe he actually is moderate.
Republicans risked ceding crucial independent and moderate Republican voters to Ossoff if they nominate a more hard-right candidate, Tillis said.
“If these people want a purity test and they put somebody forth that’s the darling of the MAGA base, but doesn’t resonate with unaffiliated [voters] and right of center fiscal Republicans, that’s a recipe for losing,” said Tillis, whose neighboring state shares similar political characteristics to Georgia.
The skinny former House staffer who won his Senate seat in a runoff election in 2021 did not always inspire the same fear from his opponents. Republicans believed Ossoff, then a political neophyte, had ridden the coattails of Sen. Raphael G. Warnock (D-Georgia), a charismatic preacher he shared the ticket with, and also benefited from an odd election season in which Trump depressed Republican turnout by falsely claiming widespread voter fraud. Just a couple of years earlier, Ossoff had lost a House special election that took place shortly after Trump was first sworn in, disappointing Democrats across the country.
“The first time I ever saw him was when he was running in that Georgia 6 special election and I was like, ‘Oh God, just what we need: Another former staffer,’” recalled Caitlin Legacki, a Democratic strategist. “But he has got game.”
When he got to Washington, Ossoff built a Senate office that prioritized responsiveness to constituents and a hyper focus on local Georgia issues. Inspired by the late Republican senator Johnny Isakson, Ossoff said he wanted his office to provide excellent constituent services to any Georgian, regardless of their political affiliation. In 2025, he joined the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee, allowing him to steer more money to projects back home.
“I don’t crave attention. I’m not doing this for the spotlight,” Ossoff said in a brief interview in the Capitol. “I want to do a great job for the state.”
Attention is exactly what the senator has been getting, however, as he’s broken from his hyper-local focus in recent months to deliver stinging attacks on Trump and his administration that have won him admiration from national Democrats. A speech he gave in suburban Atlanta excoriating Trump for empowering a wealthy “Epstein class” to rule the country while slashing public services went viral. And in recent remarks at a Black church, Ossoff lashed out at the Trump administration’s actions as evil, criticizing Republicans from a biblical perspective.
“There’s a wickedness to the program,” he said earlier this year. “I don’t know, pastor, where it is in scripture that it says deny care to the sick, take from those with the least to give to those with the most, violate the house of worship to hunt down the refugee. Where in the scripture are those lessons taught?”
The rhetoric is not the standard, careful stump speeches many vulnerable lawmakers up for reelection in purple or red states stick to to avoid missteps or alienating middle-of-the-road voters. And it could add another element of risk to his strategy of winning over moderate voters in the state.
It’s also sparked speculation that he has an eye on a future presidential run that may be taking precedence over his reelection bid. But Ossoff’s fans believe his fiery approach makes him seem more authentic to voters in Georgia, who wouldn’t buy an election-year makeover from the senator.
“One of the biggest mistakes that vulnerable members make is that in an election year they all of a sudden start tacking to the middle, and that’s just transparently obvious to all the voters,” said Dan Pfeiffer, a longtime former Barack Obama aide who now co-hosts the “Pod Save America” podcast popular among liberals. “He’s standing strong.”
Pfeiffer called Ossoff “one of the best communicators in the Democratic Party.”
At a recent event Ossoff held in Savannah, several fans in the audience said they hoped Ossoff would consider a presidential run in the future.
“In his recent speeches, he’s sounded very presidential,” noted Ray Mosley, a Bulloch County commissioner.
But Ossoff brushed off that speculation as a “curse,” and said he is remaining focused on what he believes will be a bruising race in the state.
“The Republican field is a mess, but I’m running every day like I’m behind and I expect this to be an extremely close and competitive race,” he said.
Republicans are planning to pour millions into the race, and have already attacked him in ads on illegal immigration and for “chaos” at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, blaming the long security lines on his votes against funding the Department of Homeland Security.
They believe Ossoff has not broken enough from Democrats on key votes to adequately distance himself from the party in a purple state that voted for Trump just over a year ago. Ossoff broke with Democrats to support the Laken Riley Act on final passage, which expanded detention for immigrants accused of some crimes. (The bill is named after a college student in Georgia who was murdered by an undocumented immigrant.) But he usually votes with his party.
“His record is Joe Biden’s record,” said Rep. Brian Jack (R-Georgia), who added Georgians found Biden toxic. “I’m not sure what legislation he could advocate for that wasn’t a Biden priority.”
Ossoff is known to be extremely deliberative about votes – to the point of hand-wringing – and discusses legislation extensively with colleagues before making a decision.
“He’s incredibly methodical, but also thoughtful about the impact that the policies we pass or don’t pass have on the people he represents,” said Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Arizona), another swing state politician who campaigned with Ossoff in Georgia earlier this year.
Shortly after Trump’s election in 2024, Ossoff voted for a Sen. Bernie Sanders-backed resolution to block some arms transfers to Israel as the war in Gaza had devolved into a humanitarian crisis. Just 19 members of the Democratic caucus backed the resolution, and Ossoff faced a fierce backlash back home for his vote.
Jeremy Ben-Ami, the leader of the liberal Jewish group J Street, said he spoke with Ossoff ahead of the vote, and that the senator was under intense pressure to vote against the resolution. “He knew what he was getting himself into and he took a principled stand,” Ben-Ami said of the Jewish senator. Now, Ben-Ami said, as public opinion has turned against Israel’s actions in the war, “time has proven him right and the wind has shifted.”
Republicans in Georgia hope that the MAGA base will show up for whichever Republican emerges from their primary in the fall. “We won the state of Georgia for President Trump, proving that it is indeed a red state,” Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-Georgia) said. “We just need to do the same thing for whoever our Senate candidate is going to be.”
Ossoff and his allies say he has the support of a coalition that extends beyond the Democratic base, however. Trump’s approval rating was only 43 percent in Georgia in a 2025 Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll.
“In order to win in Georgia, you need a coalition,” Warnock said. “The Democratic faithful, the base and reasonable people in the middle who want to see us focus not so much on the politics and more on the everyday concerns of ordinary people. That’s what Jon Ossoff is doing.”
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