Police showed defendants video of Ahmaud Arbery before shooting, Georgia
jury hears
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[November 13, 2021]
By Jonathan Allen
BRUNSWICK, Ga. (Reuters) - Two white men on
trial in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery were shown surveillance video of
the Black man walking around a half-built house in their southern
Georgia neighborhood 12 days before they chased and shot him, a jury
heard on Friday.
"Nobody seems to know who this kid is or where he's coming from," Robert
Rash, a Glynn County police officer, told the two men, Gregory McMichael
and his son Travis McMichael, on the night of Feb. 11, 2020, after
showing them the clips, according to body-worn camera video played in
court.
The McMichaels and their neighbor William "Roddie" Bryan have pleaded
not guilty to murder, aggravated assault and false imprisonment for the
shooting, cellphone video of which sparked outrage when it emerged more
than two months later.
They face life in prison if convicted of murder at the trial in Glynn
County Superior Court in Brunswick, a small city in coastal Georgia.
The men say they thought Arbery might have been the same man caught on
camera in the half-built house when he ran past the McMichaels' driveway
in Satilla Shores, a leafy, mostly white residential community outside
Brunswick, on Feb. 23, 2020.
They pursued him in pickup trucks for several minutes before the younger
McMichael pointed a shotgun and fired as Arbery ran toward him and
reached toward the weapon. Their lawyers say this was justified
self-defense, while prosecutors say the men "assumed the worst" about a
Black man out for an afternoon jog.
Arbery was first captured on security cameras going into the house under
construction in Satilla Shores on the night of Oct. 25, 2019. Larry
English, the property owner, previously testified he wanted police to
identify the man in the videos and tell him he was trespassing and not
to enter the property again.
Arbery was recorded again walking around the unfenced construction site
on Nov. 18, 2019, though once again nothing was taken that day,
according to English. Rash told the jury he would show screenshots of
the videos to people as he made his rounds but no one was ever able to
identify him.
On Dec. 20, 2019, Rash saw Greg McMichael, whom he knew from McMichael's
old job as an investigator for the local district attorney, in front of
his house.
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A mural of Ahmaud Arbery is painted on the side of The Brunswick
African American Cultural Center in downtown Brunswick, Georgia,
U.S. October 19, 2021. REUTERS/Octavio Jones/File Photo
"I talked to him in reference to the unidentified
Black male," Rash said.
McMichael asked the officer to give his cellphone number to English.
Rash said he did this because McMichael had the "training and
experience" to be a good witness to make a helpful call to 911 if
the man returned.
Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski asked if Rash was deputizing McMichael.
Rash said no.
"So you wanted him to be a witness, to get this guy identified?"
Dunikoski asked.
"Yes," Rash said.
Prosecutors are seeking to rebut a defense argument that the men
were trying to make a citizen's arrest on Arbery under a
now-repealed Georgia law. That law required there to be reasonable
belief that someone is fleeing from a serious felony crime they just
committed.
On the night of Feb. 11 neighbors saw Arbery again on the property,
and Travis McMichael rushed over with his gun and saw Arbery briefly
in his car headlights.
Rash soon arrived on the scene and played for the McMichaels some of
the videos English had sent to his cellphone.
"This guy's always on foot, nobody in the neighborhood knows who he
is," Rash tells the McMichaels, according to video from his
body-worn camera. He tells them that English has only ever seen
Arbery nosing around. "He hasn't seen him actually take anything,"
Rash says.
"It's criminal trespassing," Gregory McMichael replies. Criminal
trespass is a misdemeanor in Georgia law.
"Yeah, yeah, at the very least," Rash agrees.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen and Rich Mckay, editing by Ross Colvin,
Howard Goller and Grant McCool)
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