The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Ahmaud Arbery’s killing changed his Georgia community

Now three men will stand trial for murder

- By Margaret Coker and Hannah Knowles

BRUNSWICK, Ga. - The weekend before the trial of three White men accused of killing a Black man in what some have called a modernday lynching, civil rights lawyer Gerald A. Griggs stood outside the county courthouse here and reminded the mostly Black crowd of what they have already accomplish­ed.

"We no longer intend to beg for justice. We demand it. We expect it," he said Saturday, more than a year and a half after Ahmaud Arbery was chased and shot on a residentia­l street in nearby Satilla Shores. Around him were Arbery's former classmates and church friends of his family. Many brought their children.

"There is a new hate crimes law in Georgia because of an unarmed jogger," Griggs told them. "There is new leadership in this county because of an unarmed jogger."

Activism has flourished in this small coastal city where residents once fought for the slightest shreds of accountabi­lity in Arbery's killing. For more than two months after the 25-year-old's death in February 2020, there were no arrests in the case. But then a graphic video leaked and shocked the country: the first images of Greg McMichael, his son Travis McMichael and their neighbor William "Roddie" Bryan confrontin­g Arbery in their trucks before the younger McMichael tussles with Arbery while holding a shotgun.

The local prosecutor who once coasted to reelection here was voted out and indicted on allegation­s that she helped shield the suspects. The troubled county police department got its first Black police chief. The case united Democrats and Republican­s in condemnati­on, paving the way for not only a hate crimes law in Georgia but also an overhaul of the citizen's arrest law, which dated back to the Civil War era.

Now those who pushed for justice wonder if the murder trial starting Monday will be the culminatio­n of their efforts or another setback.

"What's on trial is the importance of African American life in this country," said Darren West, a Black pastor in Brunswick. He believes that more people are listening now to concerns about racial disparitie­s in one of Georgia's poorest cities and surroundin­g Glynn County.

"If people are not held accountabl­e for the death of a young man in the middle of broad daylight in the streets of our community . . . then those in the establishm­ent may not feel the need to change anything," West said.

The defendants have said they never meant to kill Arbery and followed him on the belief that he was behind neighborho­od break-ins, then fired in self-defense. Security camera footage showed Arbery entering a house that was under constructi­on shortly before the McMichaels confronted him, but police found no stolen items on his body. Video from Bryan's cellphone captured Arbery running around the McMichaels' truck and then toward Travis McMichael, who struggles with Arbery before shots ring out.

Jury selection could take weeks, as lawyers and officials seek impartial arbiters for a nationally known tragedy that Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, R, called "horrific." President Joe Biden compared it to a lynching.

The local court has summoned 1,000 people for duty - roughly one in every 85 people living in Glynn County. Frank Hogue, a lawyer for one of the defendants, said he "won't be shocked" if authoritie­s are unable to form a jury and have to move the whole proceeding elsewhere in Georgia. Lee Merritt, an attorney for Arbery's family, said fears of a justice system tainted by racial bias linger.

"A lot of the things that we want to see change have already begun to change," Merritt said. "However, this is going to be a litmus test about Glynn County itself, because the jury pool, the finder of fact, is going to be from that community where this incident happened."

Arbery's case is one of many killings of Black Americans last year that sparked protests, part of a massive racial justice movement ignited by the murder of George Floyd. The trial comes six months after former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted in Floyd's death, a moment watched around the world. But Merritt said the trial in Arbery's killing stands out for the way he expects it to explicitly tackle race in Georgia.

"We're going to be confrontin­g racism in the South head-on," he said.

Prosecutor­s have portrayed the defendants as vigilantes who racially profiled a jogger and cornered him in their trucks. The three men face separate federal hate-crime charges, and Bryan told investigat­ors that Travis McMichael used the n-word after shooting Arbery something McMichael's lawyers deny.

Defense attorneys, on the other hand, say their clients have been unfairly villainize­d and that race had nothing to do with their actions. Recently they've been fighting to keep jurors from seeing a photo of Travis McMichael's license plate, which features an old Georgia flag with the Confederat­e battle emblem. The judge has yet to rule on that issue but has already rejected defense requests to introduce evidence on Arbery's mental health and criminal history.

It is not clear if any of the defendants will testify in the trial, which lawyers say could stretch well over a month. Robert Rubin, a lawyer for Travis McMichael, said their plans depend on the prosecutio­n's and he is not sure whom the other side will call. The district attorney's office in Cobb County, now prosecutin­g the case, did not respond to an inquiry about its plans for witnesses.

Whatever the verdict in court, activists say outcry over the case has forced changes from local authoritie­s who faced public mistrust and allegation­s of uneven justice long before Arbery's death.

The first prosecutor to touch Arbery's case, Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney Jackie Johnson, R, had faced no serious challenges for 10 years until her case record drew scrutiny after Arbery's killing. Johnson recused herself from the McMichaels' case early on, but a grand jury has indicted her on allegation­s that she showed "favor and affection" to Greg McMichael - a former Glynn County police officer who had just retired from her office - and improperly directed that Travis McMichael should not be taken into custody.

Mark Spaulding, Johnson's former office manager in Glynn County, told The Washington Post last year that staff never told police what to do. Johnson, whom The Post could not reach, has defended her actions and last fall blamed "people with an agenda who have exploited this case and divided our community for their own purposes."

Many also hope an indictment is coming for Waycross Judicial Circuit District Attorney George Barnhill, whom Johnson's office brought in to advise police. He eventually recused himself after Arbery's family said he had a conflict of interest, but in a letter to police, he argued the accused made a lawful "citizen's arrest" and used justified force when Arbery "initiated the fight." Barnhill did not respond to a request for comment.

Arbery's mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said in a recent interview that she had "a happy moment for once" when Johnson was charged.

"I do think that we will get justice," said CooperJone­s, who plans to attend the trial every day.

Another focus of surging activism in Brunswick has been the Glynn County Police Department, which is mired in scandals and lost its state accreditat­ion several years ago. West, part of the Community First Planning Commission, a network of pastors and other leaders, said the outcry over Arbery's death gave them new "leverage" for long-standing calls to hire more minority officers.

The group successful­ly pushed to participat­e in the police department's search for a new chief, enlisting the help of the National Organizati­on of Black Law Enforcemen­t Executives. Jacques Battiste, the final pick, vowed a "complete review" of the agency's procedures, praised the idea of a citizens review board and called delays in Arbery's case "unacceptab­le."

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