World

Ahmaud Arbery murderers sentenced to life in prison

10:45 am on 8 January 2022

A white father and son convicted of killing a black jogger have been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Racial justice demonstrations were held around the US after word of Ahmaud Arbery's death spread. A woman holds a portrait of Arbery and George Floyd at a remembrance event in May 2021 in Minneapolis. Photo: AFP

In November, a jury found Travis and Gregory McMichael and their neighbour, William Bryan, guilty of murdering Ahmaud Arbery in February 2020.

Bryan also received the maximum penalty of life, but was offered the possibility of parole in 30 years.

The judge held a minute of silence to commemorate Arbery's "callous" killing.

Ahead of his verdict, the Arbery family called for the harshest possible punishments for the three men as a means of bringing "closure to a difficult chapter" in their lives.

The case has raised questions about racial justice in the US South.

Arbery, 25, a resident of Brunswick, Georgia, was out jogging in an adjacent, predominantly white neighbourhood when the trio chased and cornered him in pick-up trucks before the younger McMichael shot him during a struggle.

The defendants argued they acted in self-defence while attempting to make a citizen's arrest of a suspected burglar, but prosecutors argued race was a factor.

Glynn County Sheriff's booking photos of (from left) William Roderick Bryan, Gregory McMichael, and his son Travis McMichael, who have been found guilty of murdering jogger Ahmaud Arbery. Photo: AFP/ Glynn County Sheriff’s Office

Gregory McMichael, 66, his son Travis, 35, and Bryan, 52, who filmed the incident, were found guilty of murder, aggravated assault, false imprisonment and criminal intent to commit a felony.

On Friday, Judge Timothy Walmsley said: "Taking the law into your own hands is a dangerous endeavour."

In his remarks, he held a minute of silence to mark "a fraction of the time Ahmaud Arbery was running in Satilla Shores".

In court, members of the Arbery family delivered powerful victim impact statements as they called for the three men to be "fully committed for the consequences" of their actions.

Wanda Cooper Jones, who sat in the courtroom throughout the trial, spoke directly to her late son.

"This verdict doesn't bring you back, but it does help bring closure to this very difficult chapter of my life," she said.

"I made a promise to you the day I laid you to rest: I told you I love you and someday, somehow, I would get you justice."

Jasmine Arbery recalled her younger brother's love of the outdoors, his athletic build and "dark skin that glistened in the sunlight like gold".

"These are the qualities that made these men assume Ahmaud was a dangerous criminal and chase him with guns drawn," she said.

"To me those qualities reflected a young man with life and energy who looked like me and the people I love."

Arbery's father Marcus lamented how he would never spend another day with a child who changed his life.

Defence attorneys had argued for some leniency for the men, with attorneys Bob Rubin and Laura Hogue saying their clients were good men devoted to family, community and country who committed "one bad act".

"As thoughtless or reckless as these actions may have been, they are not evidence of a soul so blackened as to deserve life with no parole," said Rubin.

But lead prosecutor Linda Dunikoski rebuffed the argument: "Travis McMichael said this was the worst day of his life. Well how did that work out for Ahmaud Arbery?"

Attorney Kevin Gough however argued that declining to provide his client, William Bryan, no possibility of parole would be "unconstitutionally cruel and disproportionate".

All three defence lawyers have said they plan to appeal the verdicts.

The defendants also face a federal hate crimes trial next month, alleging that they targeted Arbery because he was black.

Arbery's mother told US media on Friday she has rejected the offer of a plea deal that would see them spend 30 years in federal prison on top of the prison time handed down in state court.

-BBC