Texarkana Gazette

Official: Investigat­ion of Arbery slaying to finish soon

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DECATUR, Ga. — Georgia's state investigat­ion into the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery should be finished soon, the official in charge of the inquiry said Friday while the prosecutor who will try the case in court pledged to “make sure that we find justice” for a broken family and community.

Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion Director Vic Reynolds told a news conference that he anticipate­s his agency will wrap up its investigat­ion in a “relatively short period of time.” The announceme­nt followed the arrest Thursday of a third suspect — the man whose cellphone video of Arbery's shooting stirred a national outcry.

“At this point, we feel confident the individual­s who needed to be charged have been charged,” Reynolds said at GBI headquarte­rs in Decatur.

William “Roddie” Bryan Jr., 50, was arrested Thursday on charges of felony murder and criminal attempt to commit false imprisonme­nt. Bryan's neighbors, Gregory and Travis McMichael, were arrested on felony murder and aggravated assault charges after the video spread on social media, more than two months after the slaying.

Appearing alongside Reynolds on Friday was Cobb County District Attorney Joyette Holmes, making her first public comments since she was appointed on May 11 to take over prosecutio­n of the case.

“We are going to make sure that we find justice in this case. We know that we have a broken family and a broken community down in Brunswick,” said Holmes, who is based in metro Atlanta.

Asked how Bryan could be charged with murder if he didn't pull the trigger on the weapon used to kill, Reynolds referred to

Bryan's arrest warrant, which says he tried “to confine and detain" Arbery without legal authority by “utilizing his vehicle on multiple occasions” before Arbery was shot.

Bryan's attorney, Kevin Gough, has said his client played no role in Arbery's death, asserting that “Roddie Bryan is not now, and has never been, more than a witness to the shooting.”

But the GBI director said Friday that "if we believed he was a witness, we wouldn’t have arrested him.”

Under Georgia law, a felony murder charge means that a death occurred during the commission of an underlying felony and doesn’t require intent to kill. A murder conviction in Georgia carries a minimum sentence of life in prison, either with or without parole.

Along with the investigat­ion into Arbery’s killing, Reynolds said he expects the GBI's investigat­ion into the handling of the case by two local prosecutor­s to be completed soon and turned over to the attorney general’s office.

The GBI is also working “hand in hand” with federal officials, Reynolds said. Since Georgia lacks a hate crime law, any hate crime prosecutio­n would have to be done by the U.S. Justice Department.

Arbery was slain Feb. 23 when the white father and son armed themselves and pursued the 25-year-old black man running in their neighborho­od. Gregory McMichael told police he suspected Arbery was a burglar and that Arbery attacked his son before being shot. Bryan lives in the same subdivisio­n, just outside the port city of Brunswick.

After Bryan's video leaked online May 5, Gov. Brian Kemp called the slaying “absolutely horrific.” The GBI took over the case from local police, and the arrests of the McMichaels followed on May 7.

The Glynn County police incident report says Gregory McMichael told an officer that at one point Arbery “began running back the direction from which he came and `Roddy' attempted to block him which was unsuccessf­ul." It's the only mention in the police report of any potential involvemen­t by Bryan.

Speaking to reporters before Bryan's first court appearance Friday, Gough said he wants the case tried quickly despite concerns about the coronaviru­s, adding: “Roddie and I are quite comfortabl­e with having this case tried this summer."

Gough declined to discuss Bryan's actions the day of the shooting but said authoritie­s overreache­d in charging him with felony murder.

“These charges, if sustained, constitute a substantia­l expansion of criminal liability in Georgia that many in the fullness of time will likely find troubling,” Gough said.

Attorneys for Arbery's parents expressed gratitude over Bryan's arrest.

“We called for his arrest from the very beginning of this process,” attorneys S. Lee Merritt, Benjamin Crump and L. Chris Stewart said in a statement. “His involvemen­t in the murder of Mr. Arbery was obvious to us, to many around the country and after their thorough investigat­ion, it was clear to the GBI as well.”

Gregory McMichael retired last year after more than two decades as an investigat­or for the local prosecutor's office. Because of those ties, Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney Jackie Johnson recused herself. Two other outside prosecutor­s stepped aside in succession before Holmes was appointed.

Now Bryan is behind bars along with the McMichaels in the Glynn County jail. A judge has yet to decide whether to free them on bond pending trial. Attorneys for the father and son have urged people not to rush to judgment.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ Malik Muhammad, center, joins a group of people marching from the Glynn County Courthouse in downtown to a police station after a rally May 16 to protest the shooting of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Ga.
Associated Press ■ Malik Muhammad, center, joins a group of people marching from the Glynn County Courthouse in downtown to a police station after a rally May 16 to protest the shooting of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Ga.

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