San Francisco Chronicle

Deputy suspended over post about Arbery

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WARNER ROBINS, Ga. — A Georgia sheriff ’s deputy was suspended and faces being fired over comments posted on social media after a judge sentenced three white men to life imprisonme­nt in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, news outlets reported.

Reacting to a story on WGXA-TV’s Facebook page after the men were sentenced on their murder conviction­s in the shooting of Arbery, a Black man who was jogging through a neighborho­od, someone wrote: “That criminal arbery still got the death penalty though.”

The comment was later deleted, but screenshot­s were shared with news outlets and the Houston County Sheriff ’s Office, which investigat­ed and subsequent­ly suspended longtime deputy Paul Urhahn.

A letter from Sheriff Cullen Talton, posted on his department’s Facebook page, said the action was taken because of conduct that discredite­d the department and was unbecoming of an officer, WGXA reported.

Urhahn will be fired effective Jan. 20 unless he appeals, the sheriff ’s letter said.

Chief Deputy Billy Rape said Urhahn had been discipline­d in the past for other violations, but his firing was based solely on “the destructio­n of public respect for himself and our department through all of the social media outrage.”

Urhahn could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Thursday. It appeared his Facebook page had been deleted, and no telephone number was listed in his name.

Greg and Travis McMichael grabbed guns and jumped in a pickup truck to chase Arbery after spotting him running near Brunswick on Feb. 23, 2020. Their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, joined the pursuit and recorded video of Travis McMichael firing shotgun blasts into Arbery, 25.

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