San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)
Georgia AG vows to probe handling of man’s slaying
BRUNSWICK, Ga. — The state attorney general pledged to investigate the handling of a young black man’s slaying as a furious public demands action against the local officials who waited more than two months to arrest the suspected killers.
A graphic video taken of the final moments of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery’s life show him jogging on a residential road here when two white men approach him in a pickup. The men tussle, gunshots are heard and Arbery stumbles to the ground. The release of that grisly footage earlier this week sparked widespread horror, leading authorities to charge two men with murder on Thursday night — 74 days after Arnery was killed.
But the arrests of father and son, Gregory and Travis McMichael, did little to quell the outrage of a reeling public clamoring for an explanation of how so much time could have passed without an arrest.
“I will be looking into how the Ahmaud Arbery case was handled from the outset,” Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said in a statement. “The family, the community, and the state of Georgia deserve answers. We need to know exactly what happened, and we will be working tirelessly with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, the Brunswick community and others to find those answers.”
Glynn County commissioner
Peter Murphy said he also plans to call for an investigation into the prosecutors and police agencies that investigated Arbery’s shooting over the past two months.
Murphy echoed widely held concerns that three separate district attorneys had reviewed the video but that the McMichaels were arrested only after the footage was publicly released and pressure intensified.
“When the highest levels of our federal government are criticizing what’s happening here, I think that speaks to the needs of not just a look at Arbery’s killing, but at the entire system that investigated it,” he said.
The video of Arbery’s February death was met with swift and emotional responses from a cadre of public officials that included former vice president and likely Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, basketball great LeBron James and Oprah Winfrey.
George Barnhill, the second prosecutor to examine the case who later recused himself, took the unusual step of telling law enforcement he did not see grounds for the arrests of the McMichaels, arguing their actions were lawful because they were making a citizen’s arrest of a person they believed to be involved in a burglary.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is now conducting the investigation with District Attorney Tom Durden of the neighboring Atlantic Judicial Circuit, now the third prosecutor on the case.