Ahmaud Arbery case: What to know about the murder trial of Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and William "Roddie" Bryan - CBS News
By: Clare Hymes (CBSNews)
By Clare Hymes
November 19, 2021 / 12:33 PM / CBS News
Defendant takes stand in Ahmaud Arbery trial Defendant takes stand in Ahmaud Arbery trial03:06
The trial for the three men charged with killing Ahmaud Arbery is underway in Glynn County, Georgia. It took national outcry and a video of the attack for charges to be brought in the case, 74 days after Arbery was shot and killed in February 2020.
Arbery was Black and the three men charged with his murder are White. Prosecutors say Arbery was out for a jog when the suspects chased him through the neighborhood, cornered him with their pickup trucks and shot him. The defendants say they thought he was a burglary suspect, and that they acted in self-defense.
Their assumptions, prosecutors say, were false, and a 911 call made by one of the defendants suggested the central role race would play in the case:
"All of this, and what does he say his emergency is?" lead prosecutor Linda Dunikoski told the jury. "'I'm out here in Satilla Shores, and there's a Black male running down the street.' That's the emergency."
Who was Ahmaud Arbery?
Ahmaud Arbery was 25 years old and was born and raised in and around Brunswick, Georgia. At Brunswick High School, Arbery was a star football player known for his speed. Exercising continued to be important to him and was known to run often through the neighborhood.
"Ahmaud just wasn't a jogger that was jogging in that neighborhood in south Georgia," his mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said in an interview with "CBS Mornings."
"Ahmaud was actually my son. Ahmaud was loved, and Ahmaud was loved by many."
He worked various jobs after high school and had recently enrolled at a technical college.
How was he killed?
On February 23, 2020, Ahmaud Arbery went out for a jog in Brunswick, Georgia.
Travis McMichael called 911 after claiming to see Arbery walk into an open home that was under construction in the Satilla Shores subdivision. Surveillance footage from the home shows Arbery walk inside, look around and leave.
Travis and his father Gregory McMichael armed themselves and chased after the 25-year-old in Travis McMichael's pickup truck. They said they thought he was a burglary suspect after a string of thefts in the neighborhood. A neighbor of the McMichaels, William "Roddie" Bryan, joined in with his own vehicle and recorded cellphone video as they tried to stop Arbery.
At trial, a police officer testified that Gregory McMichael told law enforcement they had Arbery "trapped like a rat."
Travis McMichael, who was armed with a shotgun, scuffled with Arbery in the street and then fired three times, hitting Arbery twice at close range. The shots created a hole in his chest and massive bleeding, according to the medical examiner, Dr. Edmund Donoghue, who testified at the trial.
"Is there anything law enforcement or EMS could have done to save his life at the scene?" prosecutor Dunikoski asked the medical examiner.
"I don't think so. No," Donoghue replied.
The suspects claimed to police that they acted in self-defense during the confrontation that resulted in Arbery's death. Travis McMichael testified that Arbery struck him and was trying to grab his gun.
The disturbing video of Arbery's final moments, filmed by Bryan on his cellphone, drew a national outcry. An investigator later testified that Bryan said he heard Travis McMichael using a racial slur as Arbery lay dying, which Travis denies.
Two and a half months passed before they were charged with murder and aggravated assault, shortly after the state began investigating and the video of the shooting became public.
Who are the men charged?
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Gregory McMichael, 65, is a former law enforcement officer who used to work as an investigator for the local district attorney's office. He is the father of co-defendant Travis McMichael.
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Travis McMichael, 35, is seen on video pursuing Arbery in a pickup truck with his father before getting out of the vehicle, scuffling with Arbery and fatally shooting him with a shotgun. He previously served in the Coast Guard as a mechanic and trained in search and rescue.
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William "Roddie '' Bryan, 52, drove a second truck that prosecutors said was used in tandem with Travis McMichael's truck to repeatedly box Arbery in. The cellphone video Bryan filmed of the incident is credited with leading to charges in the case. He is a neighbor of the McMichael family.
The charges
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Count 1: Malice murder
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Count 2: Felony murder
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Count 3: Felony murder
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Count 4: Felony murder
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Count 5: Felony murder
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Count 6: Aggravated assault
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Count 7: Aggravated assault
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Count 8: False imprisonment
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Count 9: Criminal attempt to commit a felony
The three men are also facing federal hate crimes charges. In April, the Justice Department returned an indictment alleging that Gregory McMichael, Travis McMichael and William "Roddie" Bryan used force and threats of force to intimidate and interfere with Arbery's right to use a public street because of his race. It also alleges all three defendants attempted to unlawfully seize and confine Arbery and detain him against his will.
After the murder trial in state court comes to an end, the legal saga will continue in federal court. The trial in the federal case is scheduled to begin on February 7, 2022.
Prosecutors say defendants acted on "assumptions" instead of evidence.
Prosecutors argue that the defendants had no legitimate reason to chase down and confront Arbery.
The lead prosecutor, Linda Dunikoski, told the jury, "All three of these defendants did everything they did based on assumptions — not on facts, not on evidence."
The state rested its case after calling 23 witnesses over eight days of testimony. They showed the jury graphic photos of the shotgun wounds that punched a gaping hole in Arbery's chest and unleashed bleeding that stained his white T-shirt entirely red.
Due to the state of his wounds, prosecutors asked Dr. Edmund Donoghue, the state medical examiner who performed Arbery's autopsy, how the 25-year-old was able to fight back after the first gunshot. Donoghue called it a "fight or flight reaction" which raised Arbery's heart rate and blood pressure while sending adrenaline coursing through his body.
The same police officer who testified about Gregory McMichael's statements to law enforcement read from a transcript of the interview that took place at police headquarters hours after the shooting. Glynn County Police Sergeant Roderic Nohilly told the jury he spoke with Gregory McMichael, who said Arbery "wasn't out for no Sunday jog. He was getting the hell out of there."
He later told police about shouting to Arbery: "I said, 'Stop,' you know, 'I'll blow your f***ing head off,' or something. I was trying to convey to this guy we're not playing, you know?"
Gregory McMichael previously worked as an investigator for the local district attorney's office, which led to three local prosecutors recusing themselves before the trial due to conflicts of interest. The Georgia Attorney General's Office has assigned the Cobb County District Attorney's Office to prosecute the case.
In September, former Brunswick District Attorney Jackie Johnson was indicted on charges of violating the oath of a public officer and obstruction of a police officer for her conduct in the murder investigation. The indictment said Johnson failed "to treat Ahmaud Arbery and his family fairly and with dignity" by using her past work with Gregory McMichael as motivation to shield the men from charges.
The defense argues the men acted in self-defense.
The defense team is arguing that the three men acted out of self-defense and within the legal grounds of making a "citizen's arrest." One year after the killing, Georgia lawmakers repealed the state's "citizen's arrest" law, which dated back to the Civil War.
"They got in the truck to pursue Mr. Arbery for the purpose of detaining him long enough for the police to arrive to take over and investigate whether in fact he had committed any crimes," said defense attorney Franklin Hogue. "That turned from a citizen's arrest into self-defense."
Travis McMichael took the stand in his own defense, testifying 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.
When his father spotted Arbery on February 23, they decided to drive up alongside him and question him. Travis McMichael acknowledged under cross-examination that Arbery did not threaten them. But 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.
An attorney for one of the defendants also made requests to have the Reverends Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson removed from the courtroom after they had separately attended court proceedings with Arbery's parents. Attorney Kevin Gough, who represents Bryan, said he feared Sharpton was trying to influence the jury, telling the judge, "we don't want any more Black pastors coming in here."
Several days later, Gough renewed his concerns with respect to Jackson and requested a mistrial: "How many pastors does the Arbery family have? We had the Reverend Al Sharpton last week."
He added: "There is no reason for these prominent icons in the civil rights movement to be here. With all due respect, I would suggest, whether intended or not, that inevitably a juror is going to be influenced by their presence in the courtroom."
Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley repeatedly declined to ask Jackson to leave and denied the request for a mistrial. Courtrooms are normally open to the public; however, the judge has instituted limited seating for the public due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The jury
In a case where race plays a key role, only one Black juror and 11 Whites were chosen to decide the fate of the three defendants. State prosecutors objected, arguing that several potential Black jurors were cut because of their race.
The judge conceded that "intentional discrimination" by defense attorneys appeared to have shaped jury selection but said his authority to intervene was limited under Georgia law. In Glynn County, where Arbery was killed and the trial is being held, Black people account for nearly 27% of the population of 85,000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The judge said 25% of the pool from which the final jury was chosen was Black.
The lead prosecutor said many prospective jurors who were questioned in open court had expressed strong opinions about the case. 1,000 jury duty notices were mailed and a pool of nearly 200 people were questioned by the judge and attorneys at the courthouse.
Seems like a pretty straightforward verdict, doesn't it? So why is this case national news?
That's why.
Here's more:
I'm glad I'm not in land of cotton. old times there still aren't forgotten.
Too stupid to drive away from the jogging man?
Either that, or thought they'd have the support of law enforcement, and that prosecutors would turn a blind eye. For several months, they were right.
All this makes me sad.
It was being swept under the rug until the video surfaced.
Self-defense when there are three of them and two of them were armed, yes I'm sure that it was self-defense. /s
Not to mention the fact that they were chasing him in a truck, while he was on foot.
Three White men jump into their pickups (one with confederate flags on it) and chase down a Black jogger. Then when he won't do what they say they pull out a weapon...
Of course it would make the national news.
Not to mention the misconduct from the supposed investigators/prosecutors.
Yeah, some on NT are saying that the only reason that parts of the trial were on cable was that the killers were white and the victim was black.
Not that it was being swept under the rug, not that authorities were playing games with this or that it was a cold-blooded killing. A lot of ignorant moosh nooshes floting around, NT.
Nothing new there. NT has become the home grounds for the super ignorant moosh nooshes that worship the Golden Fat Calf that now leads the once respected GOP down the path of total destruction.
they don't even hide their sheets anymore...
What I know about this case really infuriates me. It smacks of pure racism.
Although the defendant shooter is claiming self-defense because he claims Aubrey was grabbing for his weapon, it seems that Aubrey could be considered to have been acting in self-defense trying to get the weapon away from that guy.
As always, however, we won't know the result until the jury reaches its decision. Any prediction as to the outcome is merely speculation.
I'm really hoping for some accountability, not just from the murderers, but from those who tried to shelter them from prosecution.
And to think, some accuse independents and leftists of starting a race war. It seems the only way not to start a war, to some, is for black and brown people to just sit down and shut up when one of their own are murdered and nobody wants to prosecute.
their race war started 156 years ago...
I'm hoping for accountability, too. Justice needs to be served.
I have only contempt for the racist reactionaries' phony arguments.
I don't think you'll see any accountability from those that tried to hide his murder. If you look back at prior cases some that had lying witnesses, false evidence etc it seems that little to nothing was done to them.
I hope that I'm wrong.
As there seems to be a preponderance of evidence pointing to blatant hate crime from those 3, I sincerely hope they are found guilty and removed from society along with appropriate charges against those felt to have harbored them in any form.
As do I, Ed.
I also hope the willfully obtuse realize why this case made national news. If it hadn't, I doubt these guys would have been charged.
The prosecution has to prove 'beyond a reasonable doubt' that they murdered Arbery with intent. I think they succeeded.
I find it interesting that these defendants actually claim that they were afraid of Arbery and that they were merely defending themselves. This after THEY chased Arbery down with their vehicles for no other reason than Arbery was running while black.
I don't see how this could be anything but a guilty verdict...
....however...I'm not on the jury so am not seeing all the evidence.
But seriously...self defense???