The Morning Call

Testimony: 1 Arbery slaying defendant changed his story

- By Russ Bynum

BRUNSWICK, Ga. — The man who initiated the chase that ended in Ahmaud Arbery’s death quickly changed his story about why he suspected the 25-year-old Black man running in his neighborho­od was a criminal, two police officers testified Tuesday.

Glynn County police Officer Jeff Brandeberr­y told a jury that Greg McMichael — one of three white men on trial for murder in the case — at first told him that Arbery had been recorded by security cameras “breaking in all these houses out here.”

“Well, he makes frequent trips to the neighborho­od and gets caught on video cameras every third or fourth night breaking into places and no one’s been able to catch him,” McMichael told Brandeberr­y, who read in open court from a transcript of the conversati­on recorded by his body camera.

The officer said he spoke to McMichael at the scene of the shooting, with Arbery’s body lying under a sheet in the road nearby, as police first responded on Feb. 23, 2020.

McMichael’s account shifted when he spoke with a Glynn County detective at police headquarte­rs late the same day. Whereas he’d first blamed the slain man for break-ins at multiple houses, McMichael told Detective Parker Marcy the intruder had targeted a single home — one that was still under constructi­on with no doors or windows.

Marcy testified that McMichael told him he had seen “two or three videos” that showed “this guy breaking into or being or wandering around into this house.”

McMichael noted: “It’s been in that state with no doors, with no windows for over a year now.”

Greg McMichael; his adult son, Travis McMichael; and neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan are charged with murder and other crimes in the death of Arbery. None of them were arrested in the slaying until more than two months later, when cellphone video of the shooting leaked online and sparked an outcry amid a national reckoning over racial injustice.

Prosecutor­s say the men had no legal reason to pursue Arbery with guns, as there’s no evidence Arbery committed any crimes in a subdivisio­n outside Brunswick. Defense attorneys say the defendants had reason to suspect Arbery was a burglar.

Greg McMichael said the chase began when he saw Arbery running past his home on a Sunday afternoon. Saying he recognized Arbery from security camera videos shown to him by a neighbor who wasn’t charged in the case, he ran inside and grabbed a .357 magnum handgun. Travis McMichael armed himself with a shotgun before they went after Arbery in a pickup truck.

Bryan joined the chase in his own truck and recorded the video of Travis McMichael shooting Arbery at close range.

Defense attorneys say Travis McMichael opened fire in self-defense. Brandeberr­y testified that Greg McMichael told him at the scene: “He attacked my son. He came at him. He tried to get the damn shotgun away.”

Marcy testified that Greg McMichael said he armed himself because he suspected Arbery may have stolen a handgun from his son’s truck several weeks earlier, though he acknowledg­ed he had no proof. The detective said he asked whether the videos of Arbery inside the home under constructi­on showed him picking up or taking anything.

“You know, not that I recall,” Greg McMichael answered, according to the interview transcript that the detective read in court. “I don’t think the guy has actually stolen anything out of there, or if he did it was early in the process. But he keeps going back over and over again to this damn house.”

 ?? STEPHEN B. MORTON/AP ?? Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski shows a video of Ahmaud Arbery on Tuesday in Georgia during the trial of three men charged with killing him in February 2020.
STEPHEN B. MORTON/AP Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski shows a video of Ahmaud Arbery on Tuesday in Georgia during the trial of three men charged with killing him in February 2020.

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