The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Prosecutor­s describe racist slur as Ahmaud Arbery lay dying

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BRUNSWICK, Ga. — A state investigat­or testified Thursday that a white man was heard saying a racist slur as he stood over Ahmaud Arbery’s body, moments after fatally shooting the black man with a pump-action shotgun.

The inflammato­ry revelation came amid a week of angry nationwide protests over law enforcemen­t biases against black victims that erupted after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

In a hearing to determine whether there was enough evidence to proceed with a murder trial, the lead Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion agent in the case testified that Travis and Greg McMichael and a third man in another pickup, William “Roddie” Bryan, used their trucks to chase down and box in Arbery, who repeatedly reversed directions and ran into a ditch while trying to escape.

Travis McMichael then got out of his truck and confronted Arbery, later telling police he shot him in self-defense after Arbery refused his order to get on the ground, GBI agent Richard Dial said. He said a close examinatio­n of the video of the shooting shows the first shot was to Arbery’s chest, the second was to his hand, and the third hit his chest again before he collapsed in the road in a subdivisio­n in the port town of Brunswick.

“Mr. Bryan said that after the shooting took place before police arrival, while Mr. Arbery was on the ground, that he heard Travis McMichael” make the racial slur, Dial said.

Bryan gave investigat­ors the informatio­n roughly a week after the McMichaels’ arrest, but there’s no indication he told Glynn County investigat­ors before that, Dial added.

Lee Merritt, an attorney for Arbery’s family, told reporters outside the courthouse that prosecutor­s had warned the family before the hearing of the coming testimony about the slur.

Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones called the release of new details in court “very, very heartbreak­ing.”

At the conclusion of the probable cause hearing Thursday, Magistrate Court Judge Wallace Harrell found that there was enough evidence for the cases against all three defendants to proceed.

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