The Borneo Post

Life in jail for killers of Black American jogger

-

WASHINGTON: Three white men convicted of murdering African American jogger Ahmaud Arbery after chasing him in their pickup trucks were sentenced to life in prison Friday in a case that highlighte­d US tensions over racial justice.

Travis McMichael, 35, and his father Gregory McMichael, 66, were sentenced to life without parole, while their neighbour, William ‘Roddie’ Bryan, 52, who had a less-direct role in the murder and cooperated with investigat­ors, was given life with the possibilit­y of parole.

The three were convicted in November of multiple counts of murder, aggravated assault and false imprisonme­nt for chasing down 25-year-old Arbery on February 23, 2020 as he ran through their Satilla Shores neighbourh­ood near Brunswick, in the southern US state of Georgia.

Pronouncin­g the sentence, Georgia Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley called the murder ‘a tragedy on many, many levels’.

Weighing the verdict, Walmsley said he kept thinking of ‘the terror of the young man running through Satilla Shores’.

“He left his home apparently to go for a run and he ended up running for his life,” Walmsley said.

“He was killed because individual­s here in this courtroom took the law into their own hands.”

The Arbery case had added to a burst of nationwide anger and protests in 2020 over police killings and mistreatme­nt of African Americans, sparked initially by the death in May that year of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.

In June last year Derek Chauvin, the police officer who was filmed pressing his knee on Floyd’s neck until he lost consciousn­ess, was sentenced to 22.5 years in prison for murder.

He left his home apparently to go for a run and he ended up running for his life. He was killed because individual­s here in this courtroom took the law into their own hands.

— Timothy Walmsley, Georgia Superior Court Judge

Three other now-former police officers who were at the scene will stand trial in March on charges of complicity in the homicide.

Before the sentencing, members of Arbery’s family asked the court to give the three the harshest possible penalty.

“They each have no remorse and do not deserve any leniency,” said Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones.

“This wasn’t a case of mistaken identity... They chose to target my son because they didn’t want him in their community.

“The man who killed my son has sat in this courtroom every

single day next to his father. I’ll never get that chance to sit next to my son ever again, not at a dinner table, not at a holiday and not at a wedding,” said his father Marcus Arbery.

Graphic cellphone video taken by Bryan showed the armed men following Arbery in their trucks for about five minutes, suspecting with no evidence that he might have been a burglar.

Arbery repeatedly tried to avoid them, but was blocked by the trucks and then shot and killed by Travis McMichael.

The men claimed they were trying to make a ‘citizens’ arrest’, which was legal in Georgia at the time.

But a mostly white jury rejected that argument.

Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski called their actions ‘vigilantis­m’.

“Vigilantis­m always goes wrong,” she said Friday.

Speaking outside the courthouse after the sentences were pronounced, civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represents members of Arbery’s family, said the case would not have been prosecuted without sustained pressure from the community.

“Think about all the Black people who have been lynched in the history of America, and Georgia, who never got their day in court,” he said.

The investigat­ion into the original incident was stalled by local law enforcemen­t for three months until the video was leaked, sparking national outrage.

A local prosecutor, Jackie Johnson, has been indicted for violating her oath of office and allegedly hindering the investigat­ion into Arbery’s death.

The sentencing does not end the case, however. Besides the possibilit­y of appealing the Georgia state case, the three men are also facing federal charges of civil rights violations in their pursuit and murder of Arbery.

 ?? ?? Annie Polite puts on a button for Ahmaud Arbery outside the Glynn County Courthouse as the jury deliberate­s in the trial of the killers of Arbery. — AFP file photos
Annie Polite puts on a button for Ahmaud Arbery outside the Glynn County Courthouse as the jury deliberate­s in the trial of the killers of Arbery. — AFP file photos
 ?? ?? Combinatio­n photos show (from left) William Roderick Bryan, Gregory McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael.
Combinatio­n photos show (from left) William Roderick Bryan, Gregory McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia