Ahmaud Arbery appeared 'tired of running' before he was shot, jury hears
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[November 09, 2021]
By Jonathan Allen and Rich McKay
BRUNSWICK, Ga. (Reuters) -One of the three
white men in pickup trucks who pursued Ahmaud Arbery through their
southern Georgia neighborhood told police the Black jogger appeared
tired from the chase before he was shot dead, a jury heard on Monday at
the men's trial.
Police body-worn camera footage of the first moments following Arbery's
killing was played, giving jurors a glimpse of the demeanor of
defendants Gregory McMichael, 65; his son Travis McMichael, 35; and
their neighbor William "Roddie" Bryan, 52.
"You had no choice," Gregory McMichael could be heard telling his son,
hands on his shoulders, as the first police officer on the scene walked
over. Arbery's body lay in a pool of blood in the middle of the road a
few steps away.
Jurors were also shown graphic police photographs showing close-ups of
large gaping shotgun wounds in the center of Arbery's chest, below his
left armpit and in one of his wrists.
The three men have pleaded not guilty in Glynn County Superior Court to
charges of murder, aggravated assault and false imprisonment. They face
life in prison if convicted on the most serious charge by the jury,
which is composed of 11 white people and one Black person.
The men say they thought Arbery might have been fleeing from a crime
when he ran through Satilla Shores, a quiet cluster of family homes
outside the small coastal city of Brunswick, on a Sunday afternoon in
February 2020.
Prosecutors say they had unfairly assumed the worst about a 25-year-old
Black man out for a Sunday run.
The men pursued Arbery in pickup trucks for several minutes before the
younger McMichael opened fire with his shotgun as Arbery ran toward him
and appeared to reach for the weapon.
Larissa Ollivierre, a prosecutor from the Cobb County District
Attorney's Office, sought to undermine the defense argument that the men
were trying to detain Arbery under a citizen's arrest law, which
requires a person to have reasonable suspicion that a felony has just
been committed.
Bryan told county police officer Ricky Minshew, the first officer to
arrive at the shooting, that he never heard a word from Arbery, but he
heard one of the McMichaels call out to Arbery: "What'd you steal?
What'd you do?"
"Did he ever say that he told Ahmaud he was under arrest for anything?"
Ollivierre asked Minshew.
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Prosecutor Paul Camarillo carries the shotgun used in the shooting
death of Ahmaud Arbery at the Glynn County Courthouse, in Brunswick,
Georgia, U.S. November 8, 2021. Sean Rayford/Pool via REUTERS
"No, ma'am," Minshew said.
Later, Bryan's lawyer, Kevin Gough, asked Minshew about Bryan's
reason for pulling out his cellphone to record the shooting.
"Well, I thought he was going to get away," Bryan told Minshew at
the scene, "so that was the reason."
'SUSPICIOUS BLACK MALE'
Minshew said he was checking out a report of a "suspicious Black
male" in a white T-shirt in Satilla Shores when he heard gunshots as
he drove into the neighborhood. He found the McMichaels and Bryan
"pacing" near Arbery's body.
Bryan told the officer that he recognized neither Arbery when he ran
by Bryan's driveway, nor the McMichaels as they drove by in pursuit
in their pickup truck, Minshew testified.
"He said he hollered at the truck: 'Y'all got him?'" before jumping
in his own truck to join the chase, Minshew said, referring to a
transcript of the body-camera video.
"Should I have been chasing him? I don't know," Bryan told Minshew
minutes after the shooting, a few steps away from Arbery's body in
the road. Bryan noted he never put on his seatbelt, and could have
been "thrown through the damn windshield trying to chase this
joker," according to the transcript.
Bryan noticed Arbery stop to catch his breath.
"When I rounded the corner out there, it was almost like the Black
guy was tired of running," Bryan told Minshew. Bryan also told the
officer that Arbery tried to open his truck door at one point.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen and Rich McKay; Editing by Ross Colvin
and Peter Cooney)
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