Lodi News-Sentinel

Father, son face murder charges of Georgia jogger

- By Christian Boone

ATLANTA — A Brunswick father and son were charged with murder and aggravated assault Thursday night in the shooting death of 25-yearold Ahmaud Arbery.

They were arrested one day after the Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion’s Kingsland branch opened its investigat­ion into the shooting. A video showing Arbery’s death, posted online Tuesday morning, triggered a dizzying turn of events that increased public pressure to arrest Greg and Travis McMichael.

“It’s outrageous that it has taken more than two months for Ahmaud Arbery’s executione­rs to be arrested, but better late than never,” said attorney Benjamin Crump, who represents Arbery’s father. “This is the first step to justice. This murderous father and son duo took the law into their own hands.”

Crump notes that Arbery would’ve turned 26 on Friday.

The GBI said the McMichaels were taken into custody and booked into the Glynn County Jail. The agency plans a news conference Friday morning.

Shortly after the video, which shows Arbery’s Feb. 23 confrontat­ion with the McMichaels, special prosecutor Tom Durden announced he would ask a grand jury to consider criminal charges against the McMichaels.

As outrage grew over the video, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp weighed in, tweeting late Tuesday afternoon, “Georgians deserve answers. State law enforcemen­t stands ready to ensure justice is served.”

Kemp said, if requested, the GBI would take over the investigat­ion into the shooting. Within an hour, Durden accepted the offer and on Wednesday morning, agents hit the ground.

Arbery was shot three times by Travis McMichael, 34. He and his 64year-old father had chased Arbery down in their pickup truck, aided by a second driver, William Bryan.

Ironically, it was Bryan who filmed the video that ultimately led to the criminal charges being filed. Earlier Thursday, Brunswick attorney Alan Tucker put out a statement saying he provided the video to the Brunswick radio station that posted it.

“There had been very little informatio­n provided by the police department or the district attorney’s office, but there was entirely too much speculatio­n, rumor, false narratives, and outright lies surroundin­g this event,” Tucker said. “I didn’t release this to ‘show that they did nothing wrong,’ as is being circulated.”

Tucker was widely rumored to be representi­ng the McMichaels. He said he had not been retained by anyone involved in the case, but then said he might be.

The video shows Arbery running, at a jogger’s pace, along a street within Satilla Shores, a mostly white subdivisio­n just south of Brunswick. He slows down when he sees Travis McMichael’s truck, parked in the middle of the road.

Arbery attempts to run past them but he is met by Travis McMichael. The two men begin to tussle.

A shot is fired. Autopsy results show a bullet pierced Arbery’s hand. As he and Travis McMichael continue to fight over the shotgun, two more bullets are fired at Arbery. He runs a few feet than collapses onto the asphalt, never to regain consciousn­ess.

Although he didn’t fire his weapon, Greg McMichael provided cover for his son. He told Glynn County police he recognized Arbery from surveillan­ce video of a break-in at a Satilla Shores home. He did not mention that he had investigat­ed Arbery on a 2018 shopliftin­g charge. Arbery’s probation — for a gun-related incident while he was still in high school — was revoked.

Greg McMichael recently retired from the Brunswick Circuit District Attorney’s Office. Before that he was a Glynn County cop. Those conflicts led Brunswick DA Jackie Johnson to recuse herself from the investigat­ion.

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