The Day

Two charged in death of black jogger

White father, son accused; video sparked renewed investigat­ion of shooting

- By RUSS BYNUM

Savannah, Ga. — More than two months after a black man was shot to death while running through a Georgia neighborho­od, the white father and son arrested in the case were arraigned on charges of felony murder and aggravated assault Friday.

The investigat­ion by local authoritie­s had seemed stalled until this week, when a video of the shooting was shared widely on social media, prompting outrage across the nation.

“All that matters is what the facts tell us,” Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion Director Vic Reynolds said Friday, noting that his agency brought charges a day after it was brought into the case. Reynolds said “every stone will be uncovered” in the investigat­ion of the Feb. 23 shooting of Ahmaud Arbery.

Addressing the question of racial intent, Reynolds noted that Georgia has no hate crime law. That has prompted many civil rights activists to call for a federal investigat­ion.

Arrest warrants for Gregory and Travis McMichael filed in court Friday confirmed, as the initial police report stated, that Travis McMichael “pointed and discharged a shotgun ... at Ahmaud Arbery.” But there were no new details.

In a letter to Glynn County police in early April, a prosecutor previously assigned to the case outlined reasons he believed there was “insufficie­nt probable cause to issue arrest warrants” in the case. Waycross DA George E. Barnhill argued that the McMichaels’ actions were legal under Georgia laws on citizen’s arrests, the open carrying of guns and self-defense.

The McMichaels told police they pursued Arbery, with another person recording them on video, after spotting him running in their neighborho­od. The father and son said they thought he matched the appearance of a burglary suspect who they said had been recorded on a surveillan­ce camera some time before.

Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper Jones, has said she thinks her son, a former high school football player, was just jogging in the Satilla Shores neighborho­od before he was killed.

Arbery would have turned 26 on Friday, and a crowd of several hundred people, most wearing masks, sang “Happy Birthday” in his honor outside the Glynn County Courthouse. Many expressed frustratio­n at the long wait before arrests were made and fears that the justice system will fail them.

“The work is just beginning,” John Perry, president of the Brunswick NAACP chapter, told the crowd. “We can’t stop now. We can’t lose focus and we’ve got to make sure the prosecutio­n gets done.”

Anthony Johnson, 40, said Arbery was his neighbor for about a decade. He said he wants to see the McMichaels get the same treatment in the legal system as black defendants.

“Just arresting them, that ain’t doing nothing,” Johnson said. “We want them convicted. We want them sent to prison for life.”

Gregory and Travis McMichael made their first, brief court appearance­s Friday afternoon.

The father and son, both wearing orange jumpsuits, appeared individual­ly from jail on a videoconfe­rence screen in the courtroom of Magistrate Judge Wallace Harrell. Inmates aren’t appearing in person because of the coronaviru­s.

The judge spent roughly a minute reading each man his rights and the charges faced. A Superior Court judge will have to decide whether to grant them bond.

The McMichaels spoke only when asked to confirm their names. Neither had attorneys representi­ng them in court. No further hearing dates were scheduled.

The felony murder charges against Gregory McMichael, 64, and Travis McMichael, 34, mean that a victim was killed during the commission of an underlying felony, in this case aggravated assault. The charge doesn’t require intent to kill.

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE AP PHOTO ?? A woman wears a face covering with the likeness of shooting victim Ahmaud Arbery printed on it during a rally Friday to protest Arbery’s killing in Brunswick Ga. Two men have been charged with murder in the February shooting death of Arbery, whom they had pursued in a truck after spotting him running in their neighborho­od.
JOHN BAZEMORE AP PHOTO A woman wears a face covering with the likeness of shooting victim Ahmaud Arbery printed on it during a rally Friday to protest Arbery’s killing in Brunswick Ga. Two men have been charged with murder in the February shooting death of Arbery, whom they had pursued in a truck after spotting him running in their neighborho­od.

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