Judge denies ex-prosecutor's motion to halt her misconduct trial in
Ahmaud Arbery investigation
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[December 17, 2024]
By RUSS BYNUM
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — A Georgia judge on Monday denied a former
prosecutor's legal motion to halt her upcoming trial on charges that she
illegally interfered with police investigating the 2020 killing of
Ahmaud Arbery.
Senior Judge John R. Turner rejected former Brunswick Judicial Circuit
District Attorney Jackie Johnson's request to disqualify Georgia's
attorney general's office from prosecuting her.
Johnson's defense lawyers argued in court last week that state Attorney
General Chris Carr has a conflict of interest because members of his
staff are key witnesses in the case.
Jury selection for Johnson's trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 21 in the
coastal port city of Brunswick, about 70 miles (112 kilometers) south of
Savannah.
Arbery, who was Black, was fatally shot Feb. 23, 2020, while he was
running in a residential neighborhood. He was chased by white men in
pickup trucks, including Greg McMichael, who started the deadly pursuit
and whose son killed Arbery with a shotgun. McMichael was a retired
investigator who had worked for Johnson.
No one was arrested in Arbery's death for more than two months until
cellphone video of the killing leaked online and the Georgia Bureau of
Investigation took over the case from local police. Since then,
McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael, have been convicted of murder
and federal hate crimes in separate trials. So has William “Roddie”
Bryan, a neighbor who joined the chase and recorded the video.
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Johnson was the top prosecutor in Glynn County when Arbery was killed.
Though she recused her office because Greg McMichael had been an
employee, Johnson was indicted in September 2021 on a felony charge of
violating her oath of office as well as a misdemeanor count of hindering
a police officer. Voters had ousted her from office months earlier in
the 2020 elections.
The indictment accuses Johnson of using her elected position to show
favoritism to Greg McMichael. It also says she urged police not to
arrest Travis McMichael after the shooting.
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Former Brunswick Judicial Circuit District Attorney Jackie Johnson
speaks to people Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024, at the Glynn County
Courthouse in Brunswick, Georgia, prior to a pretrial motions
hearing in her violation of oath office case. (Michael Hall/Pool
Photo via AP)
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Johnson has denied wrongdoing. Her lead defense attorney, Brian
Steel, said during a court hearing last week that Johnson was
focused on seeking a high-profile indictment when the shooting
happened and "didn’t know what was going on with Ahmaud Arbery’s
case.”
Johnson's attorneys argued that the indictment against her describes
Carr's office as a victim, meaning his staff would be among the key
witnesses. Johnson's lawyers said that creates a conflict of
interest for Carr's prosecutors handling the case.
The judge denied Johnson's legal motion in a ruling Monday without
elaborating on his reasoning.
Prosecutor John Fowler told the judge that people in the attorney
general’s office who dealt directly with Johnson in Arbery’s case no
longer work there.
The charge that Johnson violated her oath of office stems from her
recommendation to Carr's office in 2020 that it appoint George
Barnhill, a neighboring jurisdiction’s prosecutor, to handle
Arbery’s killing.
Carr has said he appointed Barnhill without knowing that Johnson had
already called on him days earlier to advise police in Arbery's
killing. Barnhill told police he saw no grounds for arrests, as he
believed Arbery was shot in self-defense.
Johnson's court appearance last Wednesday was her first as a
criminal defendant in the three years since her indictment.
Turner has said he couldn't move forward with Johnson's case during
the nearly two years Steel spent in an Atlanta courtroom defending
Grammy-winning rapper Young Thug in a sprawling racketeering and
gang case.
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