Guilty Verdicts In Arbery Case

The three men charged with mur­der­ing Ahmaud Arbery have been found guilty by a Georgia jury of their peers.
A jury has returned guilty ver­dicts against all three defen­dants in the mur­der of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia. Travis McMichael, who fired the fatal shots, was con­vict­ed on all counts, includ­ing the charge of mal­ice mur­der. His father Gregory McMichael and neigh­bor William “Roddie” Bryan was con­vict­ed of felony mur­der and oth­er charges

Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, was shot to death while jog­ging in the neigh­bor­hood in February 2020. Cellphone video showed the men chas­ing Arbery and cor­ner­ing him with their pick­up trucks before a scuf­fle that end­ed with Travis McMichael shoot­ing Arbery at close range with a shotgun.

As the first guilty ver­dict was read aloud, peo­ple in the pub­lic gallery were heard audi­bly gasp­ing. Marcus Arbery, the father of Ahmaud Arbery, could be heard say­ing, “Long time com­ing,” before being told by secu­ri­ty to leave the court­room. Judge Timothy Walmsley remind­ed the court­room to remain silent as he con­tin­ued to read the rest of the jury’s ver­dicts aloud. [See below for a full break­down of the charges against each defendant.]

As he stood to leave the court­room, Travis McMichael, look­ing red-faced, mouthed the words “love you” to his mother.

The Associated Press reports the three men face min­i­mum sen­tences of life in prison. The judge will decide whether that comes with or with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole.

A sen­tenc­ing date has yet to be scheduled.

The ver­dict today was a ver­dict based on the facts, based on the evi­dence, and that was our goal, was to bring that to that jury so that they could do the right thing, because the jury sys­tem works in this coun­try,” the lead pros­e­cu­tor in the case, Linda Dunikoski, said out­side the cour­t­house after the ver­dict was announced. “And when you present the truth to peo­ple and they can see it, they will do the right thing, and that’s what this jury did today in get­ting jus­tice for Ahmaud Arbery.”

Ahmaud Arbery
Ahmaud Arbery

I nev­er thought this day would come, but God is good,” Arbery’s moth­er, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said at a news con­fer­ence after the ver­dict, adding that her son “will now rest in peace.”

The McMichaels and Bryan are also fac­ing fed­er­al hate crimes charges. A sep­a­rate tri­al in the fed­er­al case is sched­uled to begin on February 7, 2022.

The defense in the mur­der tri­al cen­tered around the claim that the three men act­ed under the state’s cit­i­zen’s arrest law — which was in effect at the time but has since been repealed — because they were sus­pi­cious Arbery might have been involved in neigh­bor­hood bur­glar­ies. They argued they had a right of self-defense against Arbery who, one defense attor­ney said, “chose to fight.”

The pros­e­cu­tion dis­put­ed that and argued that the three men had no legit­i­mate rea­son to chase down and con­front Arbery.

All three of these defen­dants made assump­tions — made assump­tions about what was going on that day, and they made their deci­sion to attack Ahmaud Arbery in their dri­ve­ways because he was a Black man run­ning down the street,” Dunikoski told the jury.

Though Arbery had gone inside a house under con­struc­tion in the neigh­bor­hood, “noth­ing had ever been tak­en from the con­struc­tion site,” Dunikoski said, and the defen­dants had no direct knowl­edge link­ing him to any crime when they began their pursuit.

He was try­ing to get away from these strangers that were yelling at him, threat­en­ing to kill him. And then they killed him,” she said, adding that Arbery was killed “for absolute­ly no good rea­son at all.”

3-arbery-suspects.jpg
L‑R: Gregory McMichael, his son Travis McMichael, and William “Roddie” Bryan are charged with mur­der in the shoot­ing death of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Georgia.GLYNN COUNTY DETENTION CENTER VIA AP/​WJAX

The jury was able to hear from Travis McMichael when he took the stand in his own defense. He tes­ti­fied that he had heard about break-ins in the neigh­bor­hood and had pre­vi­ous­ly seen a Black man “lurk­ing” and “creep­ing” around a house under construction.

He tes­ti­fied that when his father spot­ted Arbery on February 23, they decid­ed to dri­ve up along­side him and ques­tion him. As the con­fronta­tion ensued, McMichael said he was forced to make a split-sec­ond “life-or-death” deci­sion when he said Arbery grabbed for his shotgun.

It was the most trau­mat­ic event of my life,” he told the court.

But under cross-exam­i­na­tion, McMichael acknowl­edged that Arbery was “just run­ning” and did not threat­en them.

The oth­er two defen­dants did not tes­ti­fy at the trial.(CBSnews.com)