The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

3 indicated for murder in Arbery death

Glynn grand jury holds all suspects accountabl­e in February shooting.

- By Bill Rankin | brankin@ajc.com and Alexis Stevens | astevens@ajc.com

A Glynn County grand jury Wednesday returned a murder indictment against the three men in custody for the killing of Ahmaud Arbery as he jogged through a neighborho­od near coastal Brunswick.

Both malice and felony murder charges were obtained against Travis McMichael, who fired the fatal shots; his father, Greg McMichael, once a local police officer; and William “Roddie” Bryan, who recorded the video of the shooting on his cellphone. Lawyers for the three men have said their clients committed no crimes.

Cobb County District Attorney Joyette Holmes announced the charges in a hastily called news conference on the steps of the courthouse in Brunswick.

“This is another step forward in seeking justice for Ahmaud,” Holmes said. “We will continue to be intentiona­l in the pursuit of justice for this family and the community at large as the prosecutio­n of this case continues.”

Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man who was unarmed, was killed Feb. 23. The McMichaels and Bryan are white.

Holmes said Arbery’s family had been notified of the indictment­s. “The family was ecstatic to hear it happened,” the district attorney said.

Ben Crump, a lawyer representi­ng Arbery’s family, predicted the case will end with conviction­s of all three men.

“This confirms what Ahmaud’s father has been saying for months — that this was a lynching,” Crump said. “This is a significan­t step on the road to justice, and while nothing will bring back Ahmaud’s life, it is important that a grand jury recognized his life had value and was wrongly and ruthlessly ended.”

Arbery’s killing burst onto the national news scene when Bryan’s cellphone video of the shooting first surfaced on May 5. Two days later, after the GBI was assigned the case, the McMichaels were arrested and charged with felony murder. Bryan would be arrested a few weeks later.

For a time, the Arbery case dominated a social narrative about Black men being killed by the unjustifie­d actions of white people. But on May 25, another video emerged of a Minneapoli­s police officer kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, for 8 minutes and 46 seconds.

Massive protests, some violent, erupted in Minneapoli­s, Atlanta and other cities, surging for days. The anti-racism demonstrat­ions soon spread across the nation and the globe.

Then on June 12, Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed by Atlanta police officer Garrett Rolfe at a Wendy’s parking lot in south Atlanta, fueling fresh protests throughout the city. The indictment in the Arbery case comes a day after Brooks’ funeral at Ebenezer Baptist Church.

Arbery was shot and killed as he ran through the Satilla Shores neighborho­od about 2½ miles from his home. Greg McMichael, a 64-year-old former DA’s Office investigat­or, saw Arbery pass by his house and said he thought he may have committed a burglary. He grabbed his .357-Magnum revolver and called for his 34-year-old son, Travis, who got his 12-gauge shotgun.

With Travis behind the wheel and his father in the passenger seat, they followed Arbery and tried to force him to stop, Richard Dial, an assistant GBI special agent in charge, testified ina preliminar­y hearing earlier this month. Bryan, 50, got in his truck and joined in the chase, trying to block Arbery and pin him down, Dial said.

Bryan’s video shows Arbery run up behind the pickup truck with Greg McMichael standing in the cab, holding a handgun. His son can be seen standing just outside the driver’s side door, armed with a shotgun.

It looks like Arbery, who was unarmed, wanted to avoid the McMichaels. He ran around the passenger side of the truck but Travis McMichael was there to meet him with his shotgun raised, Dial said. Instead of turning his back and trying the flee, Arbery chose to fight, the agent testified.

Travis McMichael shot Arbery three times, once in the chest, once near an armpit and once in his wrist.

Dial said when Bryan was interviewe­d by investigat­ors he recounted what he heard Travis McMichael say as Arbery lay dying and they waited for police to arrive. “F—-ing n——-,” McMichael said, according to Bryan, referring to a profanity followed by a racial slur.

During her press conference, Holmes said that although the Legislatur­e just enacted a hate crimes bill, it could not be used for an alleged offense that occurred before the law’s passage.

Holmes became the fourth DA to get the case because the first two DAs recused themselves and a third said his office was not equipped to handle it.

All three defendants now stand indicted of malice murder, felony murder, aggravated assault, false imprisonme­nt and criminal attempt to commit false imprisonme­nt.

Bob Rubin, one of Travis McMichael’s lawyers, said the DA’s office only had to present its side of the case to get the indictment.

“It’s unfortunat­e the DA did not seek to present to the grand jury all the facts in the case or seek our input to what evidence we would ask them to consider,” he said. “There’s more to this than has been revealed to the grand jury and we expect to plead not guilty to these charges and present the rest of the evidence in court.”

At the preliminar­y hearing, Frank Hogue, one of Greg McMichael’s lawyers, said his client committed no crime. While it may not have been a good idea for McMichael to leave home with a firearm, he was trying to intercept someone he believed may have been breaking into a nearby home under constructi­on, Hogue said.

Kevin Gough, Bryan’s attorney, said his client was merely a witness to what happened, not a party to any crime.

“Roddie did not act out of hate or prejudice that day but rather acted as would any patriotic American, whether white, Black or Martian, in the same circumstan­ce,” he said.

The indictment came as a surprise because Georgia is under a state of judicial emergency due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. But a recent order signed by state Supreme Court Chief Justice Harold Melton allowed for those grand juries impaneled before the crisis to reconvene, and that is what happened Wednesday, Holmes said.

The grand jurors, all wearing masks and practicing social distancing, met in the large jury assembly room to consider the indictment, the DA said.

 ??  ?? Gregory McMichael (from left), his son, Travis McMichael, and Roddie Bryan, who videotaped the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, were indicted on charges of murder by a Glynn County grand jury.
Gregory McMichael (from left), his son, Travis McMichael, and Roddie Bryan, who videotaped the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, were indicted on charges of murder by a Glynn County grand jury.
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 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Ahmaud Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery, waves as he thanks the crowd of supporters gathered outside the Glynn County Courthouse following a break from proceeding­s in Brunswick on June 4.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Ahmaud Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery, waves as he thanks the crowd of supporters gathered outside the Glynn County Courthouse following a break from proceeding­s in Brunswick on June 4.
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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? ABOVE: Wanda JonesCoope­r with her son, Ahmaud Arbery, who was shot to death in February. LEFT: Ahmaud Arbery is captured in a cellphone video in a fatal struggle with Travis McMichael in February.
CONTRIBUTE­D ABOVE: Wanda JonesCoope­r with her son, Ahmaud Arbery, who was shot to death in February. LEFT: Ahmaud Arbery is captured in a cellphone video in a fatal struggle with Travis McMichael in February.

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