The Sentinel-Record

Hate crimes trial will put racism up front

- RUSS BYNUM

BRUNSWICK, Ga. — Sentenced to life in prison for murder, the three white men who chased and killed Ahmaud Arbery will soon stand trial on federal hate crimes charges in which jurors will have to decide whether the slaying of the running Black man was motivated by racism.

The sentences imposed by a judge Friday in Glynn County Superior Court concluded the state of Georgia’s criminal case in the slaying of 25-year-old Arbery, in which a jury returned guilty verdicts the day before Thanksgivi­ng.

A month from now, on Feb. 7, a federal judge has scheduled jury selection to begin in the three men’s second trial in U.S. District Court. And evidence of racism that state prosecutor­s chose not to present at the murder trial is expected to be front and center.

An indictment last year charged father and son Greg and Travis Mcmichael and their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan with violating Arbery’s civil rights when they pursued the running man in pickup trucks and cut off his escape from their neighborho­od. Bryan recorded cellphone video of the chase’s deadly end, when Travis Mcmichael blasted Arbery at close range with a shotgun.

The Feb. 23, 2020, killing just outside the port city of Brunswick became part of a greater national reckoning on racial injustice when the video leaked online two months later. Though an investigat­or testified at a pretrial court hearing that Bryan said he heard Travis Mcmichael utter a racist slur as Arbery lay dying in the street, state prosecutor­s never presented that informatio­n to the jury during the murder case.

That evidence should be key in the federal trial, where the Mcmichaels and Bryan are charged with targeting Arbery because he was Black.

At a hearing Friday, Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley sentenced both Mcmichaels to life in prison with no chance of parole. The judge sentenced Bryan to life with a possibilit­y for parole once he’s served 30 years.

Despite those severe penalties, Arbery’s family said the hate crimes case remains important. At the time of his death, Arbery had enrolled at a technical college and was preparing to study to become an electricia­n like his uncles.

“They killed him because he was a Black man,” Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery, told reporters outside the Glynn County courthouse Friday.

Lee Merritt, an attorney for

Arbery’s mother, said it’s important for federal case to expose racist motives behind the killing because “there is an issue of race taking place in this country. It has come front and center and it needs to be discussed.”

Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion Agent Richard Dial testified in June 2020, more than a year before the state trial, that Bryan told investigat­ors he heard Travis Mcmichael say “f——ing n—-er” after shooting Arbery. Attorneys for Travis Mcmichael have denied he made the statement.

State prosecutor­s and investigat­ors never mentioned that during the murder trial. Georgia law doesn’t require establishi­ng motive to convict someone of murder. It merely requires proving a victim was killed with malice or during the commission of another felony.

Regardless, issues of race loomed large in the murder trial over Arbery’s death. The Mcmichaels and Bryan weren’t charged with crimes in the Black man’s killing until the shooting video became public two month later.

“Today your son has made history, because we have people who are being held accountabl­e for lynching a Black man in America,” Benjamin Crump, a civil attorney for Arbery’s family, told the slain man’s parents after the sentencing hearing.

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