Jury selection to begin in U.S. hate-crime trial of Arbery killers
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[February 07, 2022]
By Rich McKay
Atlanta (Reuters) - Jury selection was due
to begin on Monday in the U.S. federal hate-crimes trial of the three
white men who murdered Ahmaud Arbery, a Black jogger who was chased and
shot while running through a mostly white Georgia neighborhood.
The jury will be asked to decide whether racial animus drove the
defendants to fatally pursue Arbery in the Satilla Shores neighborhood
in coastal Georgia in February 2020. Gregory McMichael, 66, his son
Travis McMichael, 36, and neighbor William "Roddie" Bryan, 52, were
convicted of murder in an earlier state trial.
A state judge sentenced the men to life in prison, ruling that the two
McMichaels would not be eligible for parole, after a jury of one Black
man and 11 white men and women rejected the men's self-defense claims in
November.
Jury selection in the federal trial, which the U.S. District Court in
Brunswick has said could take two weeks, comes shortly after Gregory and
Travis McMichael offered to plead guilty to the hate crime charges in
agreements with prosecutors that were later scrapped..
Selecting a jury to hear the case will be complicated by the publicity
that surrounded both the murder and the earlier trial, said Julie
Campanini, a jury consultant based in Philadelphia.
"Potential jurors might have firm opinions," she said. "That doesn't
disqualify them though. The test is whether they can set that aside and
decide the case only on the evidence presented."
The McMichaels nearly avoided the federal trial by entering into a plea
deal with prosecutors.
At a hearing last week, Travis McMichael said he was willing to admit to
trying to apprehend Arbery because of his "race and color" as part of
the plea agreement.
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William "Roddie" Bryan looks on during the trial of William "Roddie"
Bryan, Travis McMichael and Gregory McMichael, who are charged with
the February 2020 death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery, at the Gwynn
County Superior Court, in Brunswick, Georgia, U.S. November 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Octavio Jones/Pool/File Photo
But he changed his mind after U.S.
District Judge Lisa Wood rejected that agreement. She said she would
not accept it because it bound her to a fixed sentence: 30 years in
federal prison before he would be handed back to the state of
Georgia to serve out the rest of his life sentence for murder.
Gregory McMichael had reached a similar plea agreement with
prosecutors, but also withdrew from it.
Arbery's father Marcus Arbery said the family wanted to see the case
go to trial. "We want the world to see a trial, see why these men
did what they did," he said in an interview.
The men are charged in federal court with using threatening force to
interfere with Arbery's rights on the basis of race, a hate crime.
The charge carries a maximum of life in prison.
The three are additionally charged with attempted kidnapping, and
the McMichaels face gun charges.
Judge Wood said in court that she plans to call 50 potential jurors
a day, drawn from 43 south Georgia counties, until a panel of 12
jurors and four alternates are found.
Campanini said that the court could struggle to call 50 people every
day, given there are only three sets of defense attorneys, as well
as the prosecution, all of whom could possibly interview each
potential juror.
"They'll seat a jury, but don't count on it being quick," she said.
"It will take a significant about of time."
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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