Springfield News-Sun

Tensions flare as Jesse Jackson visits

- By Russ Bynum

BRUNSWICK, GA. — A judge denied mistrial requests Monday at the trial of three white men charged with murdering Ahmaud Arbery after defense attorneys claimed jurors were tainted by weeping from the gallery where the slain Black man’s parents sat with the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

The morning’s testimony was largely disrupted by arguments outside the jury’s presence over Jackson’s appearance. The judge said he found one defense lawyer’s complaints last week about Black pastors to be “reprehensi­ble” and no group would be excluded from his courtroom.

Father and son Greg and Travis Mcmichael armed themselves and pursued the 25-year-old in a pickup truck after spotting him running in their neighborho­od on Feb. 23, 2020. Their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan joined the chase and took cellphone video of Travis Mcmichael shooting Arbery three times with a shotgun.

Defense attorney Kevin Gough on Monday asked the judge to make Jackson, the civil rights leader, leave to avoid unfairly influencin­g the jury.

Gough, an attorney for Bryan, also complained last week when the Rev. Al Sharpton joined Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-jones, and father, Marcus Arbery Sr., inside the Glynn County courtroom. Gough told the judge Thursday “we don’t want any more Black pastors coming in here.”

“There is no reason for these prominent icons in the civil rights movement to be here,” Gough said Monday. “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.”

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