AHMAUD ARBERY: Georgia vs Greg & Travis McMichael & William Bryan for murder *GUILTY*


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Mother seeks justice after son shot while jogging in Brunswick, pair involved in killing not arrested

It’s been over two months since a young black man jogging in Brunswick, Ga., was gunned down by two white men who said they thought he was a possible burglar.

Ahmaud Arbery’s mother wants to know where is the justice.

“I just think about how they could allow these two men to kill my son and not be arrested, that’s what I can’t understand,” Wanda Cooper told news partner First Coast News.

A police report states about 1 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 23, Glynn County officers responded to Satilla and Holmes drives where shots were fired. They found Arbery, 25, dead on the scene.

Gregory McMichael, who worked several years for the Brunswick Police Department before serving as an investigator in the Brunswick District Attorney’s Office, told police there were several break-ins in the neighborhood. He said he saw Arbery running down Satilla Drive and asked his son Travis McMichael to help him confront him.

McMichael and his son got a shotgun and handgun because they “didn’t know if Arbery was armed or not.”

The father and son got into their truck and drove down Satilla toward Burford Drive. Gregory McMichael stated when they arrived at Holmes Drive, they saw Arbery running down Burford, according to the report.

Gregory McMichael told police they attempted to cut off Arbery and shouted “stop, stop, we want to talk to you.”

McMichael pulled up next to Arbery, and Travis McMichael got out of the truck with the shotgun. According to statements, that’s when the father said Arbery attacked his son and the two men started fighting over the shotgun. Travis McMichael fired a shot and then a second shot.




After video appears to show black jogger gunned down by 2 white men in coastal Georgia, family demands arrests

The fatal shooting of a black man — apparently recorded on video in February and posted online Tuesday by a local radio station host — will go to a grand jury in coastal Georgia, according to a district attorney.

Elements of the disturbing video are consistent with a description of the shooting given to police by one of those involved in the incident.

Ahmaud Arbery, 25, was jogging in a neighborhood outside Brunswick on February 23 when a former police officer and his son chased him down, authorities said. According to a Glynn County Police report, Gregory McMichael later told officers that he thought Arbery looked like a person suspected in a series of recent break-ins in the area.

After they chased down Arbery, McMichael told police, Arbery and McMichael’s son Travis struggled over his son’s shotgun. McMichael said two shots were fired before Arbery fell to the street, the report said.


S. Lee Merritt, an attorney for the Arbery family, said in a statement that the two men involved in the chase “must be taken into custody pending their indictment.”

Gov. Brian Kemp said the Georgia Bureau of Investigation has offered resources to Durden for his investigation. “Georgians deserve answers,” Kemp tweeted.

Kemp also retweeted the GBI’s post that Durden “formally requested the GBI to investigate the death of Ahmaud Arbery.”
 

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There's a good podcast interview with Ms. Linda at the following link:
cafe.com/stay-tuned/convicting-ahmaud-arberys-killers-with-ada-linda-dunikoski
(Sorry I can't hyperlink it-damn tablet). It's also in transcript form so you can read it if you like.
 
There's a good podcast interview with Ms. Linda at the following link:
cafe.com/stay-tuned/convicting-ahmaud-arberys-killers-with-ada-linda-dunikoski
(Sorry I can't hyperlink it-damn tablet). It's also in transcript form so you can read it if you like.
I fixed it for you. ;)
 
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Georgia deputy resigns after fallout over Ahmaud Arbery ‘criminal’ comment​

Former Houston County Sheriff’s Deputy Paul Urhahn was suspended earlier this month pending termination.

<snip>

Former Houston County Sheriff’s Deputy Paul Urhahn wrote in a letter of resignation that he was stepping away over the department's handling of the incident.

In the letter, which the department shared with NBC News, Urhahn wrote that he was exercising free speech when he called Arbery a "criminal" who "got the death penalty."

<snip>

:shakinghead:
 

Man who shot, killed Ahmaud Arbery files motion for new trial​

(article is too short for snippage, but the motion is included in its entirety at bottom)
 

Man who shot, killed Ahmaud Arbery files motion for new trial​

(article is too short for snippage, but the motion is included in its entirety at bottom)
What a joke!!
(From the link above)

Motion is filed under the following grounds:​

1. "The defendant should be acquitted and discharged due to the state's failure to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt," the document stated.

2. "Although the state proved the defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the evidence was sufficiently close to warrant the trial judge to exercise his discretion to grant the defendant a retrial."
 
I couldn't find anything on Jackie, but found this on the other SA

He's the other one I think should face something. I was shocked that first she did that and then when they had it looked at by another, he did pretty similar, same excuses to not charge, etc. She, however, was responsible for the way the incident was handled or not handled from the first moment, the fact they were not arrested nor even brought in for questioning, etc. as I recall.

It stood out to me that there wasn't only one with that kind of "attitude in their system in this area but the male D.A. did it too... And it is probably pervasive with their LE as well... Imo.
 
I don't know what I think of this quite honestly. I know I don't like the federal prison part of it rather than State prison but what would have happened if they were convicted? Wouldn't federal prison have taken over state then too? Not sure how that works. And in either case the judge would have the say--whether a plea deal or sentencing at trial. I'm not 100 percent sure his mother has this right but I don't know how that works.

I couldn't read this article because of an ad blocker but read another that I'm sure is similar I imagine. What I don't get is it says in the article I read the details of the deal are not released nor known and yet they know of the federal prison part and know of the deal (Arbery's parents and lawyer).

I don't think a deal is necessarily a bad thing. These men were convicted, his mother stood by her son well and everyone in this nation knows that was a hate crime even if the state charges couldn't be charged as a hate crime due to no Georgia law on the books at the time. They are admitting to it (the men) and for me, that would be almost bigger than a sentence. So many criminals never give victims the satisfaction of saying yes, I did it.
 

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