The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Arraignmen­t set for former Brunswick DA

Lawyers say unusual for judge to wait so long after an indictment.

- By Bill Rankin bill.rankin@ajc.com

More than 14 months after being indicted, former Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney Jackie Johnson finally has an arraignmen­t date.

On Tuesday, Senior Superior Court Judge John R. Turner scheduled Johnson’s first court hearing for Dec. 29. Turner’s order said on that day Johnson can formally enter her plea to two felony charges against her and that he will consider pending motions by her attorneys to dismiss one of the counts.

Lawyers following the case have said it is highly unusual for a judge to wait so long after an indictment to schedule such a hearing. The developmen­t comes after The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on reported on the unusual lag.

Johnson, who has been free on bond, was indicted Sept. 2, 2021. She stands accused of hindering the police investigat­ion in the aftermath of Ahmaud Arbery’s murder for allegedly telling two Glynn County police officers not to arrest Travis Mcmichael, the man who shot and killed Arbery. She is also charged with violating her oath of office.

Turner, a former Bulloch County judge, was assigned Johnson’s case because all the Glynn County judges recused themselves. His two-sentence order did not explain why there has been such a delay.

Johnson served as DA of the fivecounty Brunswick circuit from 2010 until she was defeated in 2020. She was indicted two months before Mcmichael; his father, Greg Mcmichael, who once worked for Johnson as an investigat­or; and a neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, were tried and convicted of Arbery’s murder.

Arbery, a 25-year-old, unarmed Black man, was chased by the

Mcmichaels and Bryan as Arbery ran through the Satilla Shores neighborho­od on Feb. 23, 2020. Once cornered by a pickup truck driven by Travis Mcmichael and a pickup driven by Bryan, Arbery charged at the shotgun-wielding Mcmichael, who fired three rounds, killing Arbery.

At trial, lawyers for the Mcmichaels and Bryan contended the three men chased Arbery to make a lawful citizen’s arrest. But the jury flatly rejected those arguments, convicting the Mcmichaels and Bryan of murder.

After the killing, Johnson recused herself from the case because Greg Mcmichael once worked for her. She then called District Attorney George Barnhill in a neighborin­g judicial circuit and asked him to look at the case. Barnhill oversaw the investigat­ion before ultimately deciding to recuse himself from the case. But before he did so, he wrote a highly controvers­ial letter in which he said he believed Arbery’s killing was justified.

The AG’S Office then assigned the case to the Cobb DA’S Office, which secured the indictment, tried the case and obtained the conviction­s.

A motion filed six months ago by Johnson’s lawyers contends there is “not a scintilla of evidence” that shows Johnson told two Glynn County police officers not to arrest Travis Mcmichael.

In the violation of oath of office charge, Johnson is accused of failing to treat Arbery’s family fairly and with dignity; showing favor to her former employee, Greg Mcmichael; and failing to tell the AG’S Office she had asked Barnhill for assistance with the case before recommendi­ng that he be assigned it.

 ?? ?? Jackie Johnson can enter her plea to two felony charges during her first court hearing Dec. 29.
Jackie Johnson can enter her plea to two felony charges during her first court hearing Dec. 29.

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