'We all talk about it': Georgia community on edge ahead of verdict in
Arbery killing
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[November 23, 2021]
By Rich McKay
BRUNSWICK, Georgia (Reuters) - Henry
Johnson, 60, can often be found weightlifting in the garage of his home
near Brunswick, Georgia. When people walk by his house and ask, "Did you
see today? Do you know what happened?" he knows immediately what they
are talking about.
At church services, at neighborhood cookouts and on morning walks,
conversation is dominated by one topic: the murder trial of three white
men who saw a Black man, Ahmaud Arbery, running through their
neighborhood in February 2020, chased him in their trucks and shot him
dead after a brief struggle.
In the mostly white community of Satilla Shores on the outskirts of
Brunswick where the three men lived and Arbery was shot, many people
support their neighbors going free, arguing that the shooting was tragic
but not criminal.
Arbery was shot three times after grappling with one of the defendants
for his shotgun. The defendants have pleaded not guilty and said the
shooting was self defense.
In the mostly Black neighborhood of Boykin Ridge that Arbery called
home, Johnson, a former neighbor, said most of the people he speaks to
keep their opinions about the men to themselves. But in interviews other
residents were more blunt: The three defendants should go to jail, they
said.
The Boykin Ridge neighborhood is on edge ahead of the verdict, which
could come this week. Residents know the world is closely watching the
case and judging the outcome.
"People are nervous," said Johnson, an aviation technician who was
benchpressing close to 300 pounds (136 kg) on Monday. Arbery would often
support him when he was lifting heavier weights, he said.
"He was a good kid," Johnson said. "We jokingly called him the 'running
man' because was always running by, doing sprints."
Prosecutors say Arbery, 25, was on a Sunday afternoon jog when Gregory
McMichael, 65 and his son Travis McMichael, 35, saw him pass their
driveway and assumed the worst - that he was a criminal. Their neighbor
William "Roddie" Bryan, 52, joined them in chasing Arbery in an attempt
to carry out a citizen's arrest.
Deborah Ray, 72, a retired florist who lives in a cul-de-sac on Boykin
Ridge Road, said Arbery would start his sprint training in the street
next to her driveway.
"It's a shame about what happened to that young man," she told Reuters.
"He'd call me Ms. Ray and wave as he went by. He loved everybody.
"Of course we all talk about it," Ray, who is white,
said of the trial. "When I'm on my walks I stop and chat and what-not
with everyone. It's friendly here. Everyone wants to know what you think
will happen. I can't judge anyone, but it was a terrible thing," she
said.
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General view of the Satilla Shores subdivision where Ahmaud Arbery
was shot to death while going for a run last year February 2020 in
Brunswick, Georgia, U.S. October 21, 2021. REUTERS/Octavio
Jones/File Photo
Camisha Bowers, 24, a close friend of Arbery's who grew up down the
street from him on Boykin Ridge Drive, said the whole neighborhood
is anxious about the verdict, which will be rendered by a jury of 11
white people and one Black person.
"All the attention of the world is on this. I just hope they do the
right thing, you know," she said, adding that she wanted justice for
her friend.
'NO TRESPASSING'
In the Satilla Shores neighborhood, there is a sense of a community
under siege. "No trespassing" signs have proliferated on trees and
doors in recent weeks. "Go home," a number of residents said when
approached for interviews. People said they were exhausted by the
media attention.
"The jury should send them home," one resident said of the three
defendants before telling a Reuters reporter to leave.
Jay Wells, 61, who lives just around the corner from the shooting,
said like most of his neighbors he feels bad about what happened but
doesn't believe "three men should have their lives ruined."
"It's a tragedy any which way you look at it," Wells said. "I know a
man is dead, but there are three men who might be locked up forever.
And I can't say that is right for the way this happened."
Audra Favre, 53, a mortgage underwriter who moved to Satilla Shores
just after the shooting, said that at neighborhood cookouts or when
people are talking around their shared boat docks, the trial is "the
topic."
At the gatherings, she said almost everyone is in favor of not
guilty verdicts for all of the men. "That's not how I feel. I think
they took the law into their own hands," she said.
But she added, "You have to understand, so many people around here
know them, are friends with them."
(Reporting By Rich Mckay; writing by Ross Colvin; editing by Paul
Thomasch and Cynthia Osterman)
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