The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Race hovers over murder trial in Brunswick

Community on edge as it awaits verdict in killing of Black man.

- By Asia Simone Burns asia.burns@ajc.com and Shaddi Abusaid shaddi.abusaid@ajc.com

In the jury box and throughout the courthouse gallery where the trial over Ahmaud Arbery’s death is taking place, tension and tedium hang in the air like humidity in the Georgia summer. Outside the courthouse hangs an impatience for court proceeding­s to end. In between, anxiety.

The criminal trial of the three men accused of murder is nearing its end, and many in this coastal community have no doubt Arbery’s race factored into his killing.

Arbery was shot twice with a 12-gauge shotgun after being pursued by men who suspected him of entering an empty home under constructi­on. Glynn County police initially told Arbery’s mother her son was killed following a burglary and confrontat­ion with a homeowner.

“You’ve seen in the videos and the things that have been presented in the trial,” said Arbery’s aunt, Thea Brooks. “There were white people that entered into the home, and no one ever said anything to them. I feel like if he was white he would still be alive.”

The shooting turned her into an activist and an advocate.

“Once Ahmaud’s death occurred, something just came over me,” said Brooks, who visited the home at the center of the case and felt things didn’t add up. “We were sending emails, cutting out articles in the paper, trying to make comparison­s to where Ahmaud’s body was in the street versus the story that (police) gave his mom in the beginning.”

Arbery’s death — and the subsequent trial of the three men involved in it — has been inundated with allegation­s of racism. In Brunswick, a city where more than half the population is Black, all but one member of the jury is white. A defense attorney has repeatedly complained about Black pastors, including the Revs. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, sitting in on court proceeding­s.

Arbery’s family has called the fatal shooting a “public lynching.” The attorney who represents Arbery’s father has likened the 25-year-old’s death to that of Emmett Till. His mother’s attorney has called her “the Mamie Till of our generation.”

Arbery was a Black man. Defendants Greg McMichael, his son Travis McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan are all white. Bryan, who captured the fatal shooting on his cellphone, would later tell the GBI he heard Travis McMichael

utter a racial epithet over Arbery’s body as he lay bleeding in the street. That conversati­on wasn’t brought up in front of the jury.

Attorney Kevin Gough, who represents Bryan, has filed about a half-dozen motions for a mistrial — all rejected — and asked the judge to prohibit “high-profile members of the African American community” from sitting in on court proceeding­s.

“We don’t want any more Black pastors coming in here,” Gough said, arguing the presence of such prominent figures could pressure or intimidate the jury.

That request also was rejected, drawing a rebuke from the trial judge and widespread outrage.

“I think Gough’s comments were a distractio­n. I think they were wildly inappropri­ate,” said

Rabbi Rachael Bregman, who leads Temple Beth Tefilloh in Brunswick. “I think suggesting that Black pastors might be intimidati­ng to a jury made up of almost exclusivel­y white women is beyond the pale.”

On Wednesday, Bregman, other clergy members and county leaders stood outside the Glynn County courthouse for a prayer vigil. The mayor of Brunswick, Cornell Harvey, was among those who attended.

Harvey, elected eight years ago, is the city’s first Black mayor. He said the racial undertones of Arbery’s slaying have disturbed the entire community.

“Whether they chased him because he was Black or they chased him because he was somebody in their neighborho­od, it’s still the same thing,” said Harvey,

who leaves office in January. “You just don’t do those things. I’d like to think that you could jog through my neighborho­od … and nothing would happen to you.”

Still, he said, “All and all, we have stayed together. The community has rallied around unity, so that’s one of the things that we are going to continue to do.”

Glynn County has a population of 85,000 people, 69% of whom are white and more than 26% of whom are Black. In Brunswick, the county seat, 55% of residents are Black.

Local leaders say Arbery’s killing has unified the area.“It shocked our community, for obvious reasons, but it has also brought our community together,” said Pastor Alan Dyer of St. Simons Presbyteri­an Church, “especially around issues of racial reconcilia­tion.

“To many, it’s evident that race was a factor, in all likelihood, that motivated the actions of the accused,” he said.

He pointed behind him as hundreds of people — Black and white — ate lunch together outside the courthouse. “This, to me, is the true Glynn County,” he said.

On Thursday, hundreds of supporters, clergy and civil rights leaders from across the United States convened on the courthouse to stand in prayer with the Arbery family.

Among their ranks were Sharpton, Jackson, broadcast journalist Roland Martin and Martin Luther King III, son of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

That gathering was followed by additional inflammato­ry statements from Gough on Friday, ratcheting up the tension surroundin­g the racial implicatio­ns of the case. During a conference about how to charge the jury deliberati­ng in the case, Gough called the ongoing demonstrat­ions “what a public lynching looks like in the 21st century.”

“This is not 1915. This is not 1923. There are not thousands of people outside with pitchforks and baseball bats,” Gough said. “But I would respectful­ly submit to the court that this is the 21st century equivalent. This case has been infected by things that have nothing to do with the guilt or innocence of these defendants.”

The statements came one day after the defense rested its case, marking the close of evidence. The defense presented its entire case in less than two days and called seven people to the stand to testify, including Travis McMichael. State prosecutor­s rested their case on Tuesday after testimony from 23 witnesses.

And in an abrupt fashion on a single afternoon, it marked the near-end of a murder trial fraught by a laborious, two-anda-half-week jury selection process, news conference­s from public safety officials detailing their plans to keep the peace during the proceeding­s and a familiar, heart-wrenching discussion of racial inequality that’s placed the national spotlight on Brunswick.

Arbery’s death lodged complaints of racist vigilantis­m, and many have drawn parallels to the Kyle Rittenhous­e murder trial in Wisconsin. Rittenhous­e killed two people and injured a third during a 2020 protest over the police shooting of Jacob Blake. Like the younger McMichael, Rittenhous­e took the stand in his own defense, saying he fired his AR-15 style rifle in self-defense during the demonstrat­ions. The 18-yearold was acquitted on all counts Friday after nearly four days of jury deliberati­ons.

Wayne Neal, the chairman of the Glynn County Board of Commission­ers, acknowledg­ed the killing put unwanted attention on his county. But he said the image that’s been created in the wake of the high-profile killing is inaccurate.

“The media would have you believe that this is a redneck, outof-touch community. That’s not the way it is,” he said. “We work together. We all get along here, and this incident is just a horrible, horrible anomaly. It doesn’t speak to who we are. It speaks to incredibly bad judgment.”

Other local leaders hope he is correct. Closing arguments are to begin Monday, then the case goes to the jury.

Harvey said he hopes the outcome of the case will be one that not only promotes justice but demonstrat­es racial equity.

“If there is an acquittal — I pray there’s not,” Harvey said, “I pray that the healing of this land will be something that will change all America. I pray if there’s an acquittal, that we are able to deal with whatever comes.”

Outside the courthouse, overlookin­g the flood of clergy and civilians of all creeds, Harvey said simply, “Justice is on trial.”

 ?? ?? Travis McMichael
Gregory McMichael, a former local law enforcemen­t officer, his son, Travis McMichael, and their neighbor Willie “Roddie” Bryan are being tried on charges of murder for their role in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, 25, a Black man they chased down in pickup trucks after they saw him running in their neighborho­od.
Travis McMichael Gregory McMichael, a former local law enforcemen­t officer, his son, Travis McMichael, and their neighbor Willie “Roddie” Bryan are being tried on charges of murder for their role in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, 25, a Black man they chased down in pickup trucks after they saw him running in their neighborho­od.
 ?? STEPHEN B. MORTON/AP ?? With the help of her walker, Annie Polite, 87, of Brunswick leads a protest march Thursday outside the Glynn County Courthouse. The Rev. Al Sharpton organized the event after defense attorney Kevin Gough tried to bar Black pastors from the murder trial of three white men accused in the death of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man.
STEPHEN B. MORTON/AP With the help of her walker, Annie Polite, 87, of Brunswick leads a protest march Thursday outside the Glynn County Courthouse. The Rev. Al Sharpton organized the event after defense attorney Kevin Gough tried to bar Black pastors from the murder trial of three white men accused in the death of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man.
 ?? OCTAVIO JONES/POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Defense attorney Kevin Gough has repeatedly argued for a mistrial in the case of the three white men accused of murder in the killing of a 25-year-old, unarmed Black man running though their Brunswick-area neighborho­od.
OCTAVIO JONES/POOL PHOTO VIA AP Defense attorney Kevin Gough has repeatedly argued for a mistrial in the case of the three white men accused of murder in the killing of a 25-year-old, unarmed Black man running though their Brunswick-area neighborho­od.
 ?? ?? William “Roddie” Bryan
William “Roddie” Bryan
 ?? ?? Gregory McMichael
Gregory McMichael

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States