East Bay Times

Man who shot Ahmaud Arbery testifies: ‘He had my gun’

- By Russ Bynum

BRUNSWICK, GA. >> The man who fatally shot Ahmaud Arbery testified Wednesday that Arbery attacked him and grabbed his shotgun after he and his father pursued the 25-year-old Black man in their Georgia neighborho­od.

Travis McMichael’s testimony came as defense attorneys in the murder trial for the three White men accused of killing Arbery opened their case by building on arguments that their clients were lawfully trying to stop burglaries in their neighborho­od.

Asked by his attorney why he shot Arbery, McMichael responded: “He had my gun. He struck me. It was obvious that he was attacking me, that if he would have gotten the shotgun from me, then this was a life or death situation, and I’m going to have to stop him from doing this so I shot.”

McMichael said he followed Arbery on Feb. 23, 2020, after his father came into their home in “almost a frantic state” and told him to “get your gun.” He said he believed Arbery was the same man he’d seen “creeping” outside a nearby unfinished house and that he might have broken in there.

He and his father, Greg McMichael, got into Travis McMichael’s truck and tracked down Arbery, asking him to stop and saying the police were coming. A neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, also joined the pursuit. Eventually, McMichael stopped his truck and got out. That was when he said Arbery came running toward him and grabbed his gun.

Defense attorney Jason Sheffield asked Travis what he’s thinking at that moment.

“I was thinking of my son,” he said, choking up a bit. “It sounds weird, but that’s the first thing that hit me.”

“What did you do?” Sheffield asked.

“I shot,” McMichael said. Bryan told police that he tried to run Arbery off the road and then recorded cellphone video as McMichael fired three shotgun blasts before Arbery fell facedown in the street.

The defense began its case after Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley denied a request from defense attorneys to ban prominent civil rights leaders and other high-profile visitors from the courtroom. and require instead that they view the trial on a video screen in another room that has been set up for additional spectators. as part of COVID-19 precaution­s.

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Travis McMichael

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