Ahmaud Arbery's murderers used litany of racist slurs, hate-crimes trial
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[February 15, 2022]
(Note offensive language in paragraphs 10, 15.)
By Rich McKay and Brad Brooks
BRUNSWICK, Ga. (Reuters) - A federal
prosecutor in Georgia said on Monday that three white men on trial for
hate crimes in the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, had
a long history of using racial epithets and undoubtedly killed him
because of his race.
Arbery did nothing to deserve his fate, Barbara Bernstein, deputy chief
of the Department of Justice's civil rights division, told the U.S.
District Court in the coastal town of Brunswick in her opening
statement.
Gregory McMichael, 66, his son Travis McMichael, 36, and neighbor
William "Roddie" Bryan, 52, were convicted last year of shooting dead
Arbery after chasing him in pickup trucks through their mostly white
neighborhood because they wrongly suspected he may have been guilty of a
crime.
Unlike last year's state trial, the federal hate-crimes trial will focus
more squarely on the motive for the killing and whether the defendants
targeted Arbery because he was Black, as the prosecution alleges.
Arbery's killing was one of several murders of Black men and women,
often at the hands of police, that helped spark recent racial justice
protests around the world. The federal trial of Arbery's killers is one
of the first in which those who carried out a high-profile killing are
facing a jury in a hate-crime trial. "Most of this trial will be about
why the defendants did what they did," Bernstein said.
Bernstein said if Arbery, an avid runner, had been white, he would have
been able to go for an afternoon jog unmolested and "been home in time
for Sunday supper."
"Instead, he went out for a jog, and ended up running for his life.
Instead, he ended up bleeding to death, alone and scared, in the middle
of the street," she told the court.
As Bernstein talked to the jury, Arbery's parents sat in the front of
the public gallery looking somber and shaking a little. His father,
Marcus Arbery, sighed as Ahmaud Arbery's mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, put
her arm on Marcus Arbery's shoulders.
Bernstein cited several messages posted on Facebook and elsewhere in
which all three men used racial epithets.
She especially highlighted the words of Travis McMichael - who shot
Arbery - who she said had made violent and racist statements on social
media, including calling Black people "monkeys" and "subhuman savages."
He had also told a friend that he was glad to have left the Coast Guard
because he no longer had to work with or be around Black people, she
added.
She said the jury would hear from a witness how Gregory McMichael "went
on a racist rant about Black people."
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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 11, 2021. REUTERS/ Christopher Aluka Berry/File Photo
Bernstein said Bryan used a racial
epithet in an online post after learning four days before Arbery's
death that his daughter was dating a Black man.
USING THE N-WORD
Defense attorneys for the three men said in their opening statements
that they found their clients' use of racial epithets deeply
offensive, but emphasized it was no reason to convict them. They
said the men were not motivated by Arbery's race.
"I can't stand before you and say my client has never used the
'N-word'," said Amy Copeland, the attorney for Travis McMichael. "He
did. He left a digital footprint over several years."
But Copeland said Travis McMichael had chiefly been concerned with
cases of theft that had left his neighborhood on high alert when he
decided to chase down Arbery.
Trial experts told Reuters that the challenge for the prosecutors
will be to back up the evidence of racist utterances with evidence
that on the day of the shooting the three men were motivated by
racial animus.
The court is scheduled to hear from Special Agent Richard Dial of
the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, who has previously testified
that Bryan told his office that Travis McMichael uttered a racial
slur as Arbery lay dying.
Bryan's attorney, Pete Theodocion, tried to distance his client from
the McMichaels, saying that when he joined the McMichaels in chasing
Arbery he assumed "he (Arbery) did something wrong, but not because
of his race."
Travis McMichael said at a hearing last month that he was willing to
plead guilty to attacking Arbery because of his "race and color"
after reaching a plea agreement with prosecutors.
But he changed his mind after Judge Lisa Wood rejected the
agreement, saying she could not accept it because it bound her to
sentencing McMichael to 30 years in federal prison before he was
handed back to the state of Georgia to serve out the rest of his
life sentence for murder.
She said she needed more information to know whether a 30-year
sentence was just, and cited emotional testimony from Arbery's
family.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Brunswick, Georgia, and Brad Brooks in
Lubbock, Texas; Editing by Ross Colvin, Alistair Bell and Matthew
Lewis)
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