Current:Home > MarketsAhmaud Arbery's killers ask appeals court to overturn their hate crime convictions -WealthSync Hub
Ahmaud Arbery's killers ask appeals court to overturn their hate crime convictions
View
Date:2025-04-15 07:31:04
Attorneys are asking a U.S. appeals court to throw out the hate crime convictions of three White men who used pickup trucks to chase Ahmaud Arbery through the streets of a Georgia subdivision before one of them killed the running Black man with a shotgun.
A panel of judges from the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta was scheduled to hear oral arguments Wednesday in a case that followed a national outcry over Arbery's death. The men's lawyers argue that evidence of past racist comments they made didn't prove a racist intent to harm.
On Feb. 23, 2020, father and son Greg and Travis McMichael armed themselves with guns and drove in pursuit of Arbery after spotting the 25-year-old man running in their neighborhood outside the port city of Brunswick. A neighbor, William "Roddie" Bryan, joined the chase in his own truck and recorded cellphone video of Travis McMichael shooting Arbery in the street.
More than two months passed without arrests, until Bryan's graphic video of the killing leaked online and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation took over the case from local police. Charges soon followed.
All three men were convicted of murder in a Georgia state court in late 2021. After a second trial in early 2022 in federal court, a jury found the trio guilty of hate crimes and attempted kidnapping, concluding the men targeted Arbery because he was Black.
In legal briefs filed ahead of their appeals court arguments, lawyers for Greg McMichael and Bryan cited prosecutors' use of more than two dozen social media posts and text messages, as well as witness testimony, that showed all three men using racist slurs or otherwise disparaging Black people. The slurs often included the use of the N-word and other derogatory terms for Black people, according to an FBI witness who examined the men's social media pages. The men had also advocated for violence against Black people, the witness said.
Bryan's attorney, Pete Theodocion, said Bryan's past racist statements inflamed the trial jury while failing to prove that Arbery was pursued because of his race. Instead, Arbery was chased because the three men mistakenly suspected he was a fleeing criminal, according to A.J. Balbo, Greg McMichael's lawyer.
Greg McMichael initiated the chase when Arbery ran past his home, saying he recognized the young Black man from security camera videos that in prior months showed him entering a neighboring home under construction. None of the videos showed him stealing, and Arbery was unarmed and had no stolen property when he was killed.
Prosecutors said in written briefs that the trial evidence showed "longstanding hate and prejudice toward Black people" influenced the defendants' assumptions that Arbery was committing crimes.
"All three of these defendants did everything they did based on assumptions — not on fact, not on evidence, on assumptions. They make decisions in their driveways based on those assumptions that took a young man's life," prosecutor Linda Dunikoski said in court in November 2021.
In Travis McMichael's appeal, attorney Amy Lee Copeland didn't dispute the jury's finding that he was motivated by racism. The social media evidence included a 2018 Facebook comment Travis McMichael made on a video of Black man playing a prank on a white person. He used an expletive and a racial slur after he wrote wrote: "I'd kill that .... ."
Instead, Copeland based her appeal on legal technicalities. She said that prosecutors failed to prove the streets of the Satilla Shores subdivision where Arbery was killed were public roads, as stated in the indictment used to charge the men.
Copeland cited records of a 1958 meeting of Glynn County commissioners in which they rejected taking ownership of the streets from the subdivision's developer. At the trial, prosecutors relied on service request records and testimony from a county official to show the streets have been maintained by the county government.
Attorneys for the trio also made technical arguments for overturning their attempted kidnapping convictions. Prosecutors said the charge fit because the men used pickup trucks to cut off Arbery's escape from the neighborhood.
Defense attorneys said the charge was improper because their clients weren't trying to capture Arbery for ransom or some other benefit, and the trucks weren't used as an "instrumentality of interstate commerce." Both are required elements for attempted kidnapping to be a federal crime.
Prosecutors said other federal appellate circuits have ruled that any automobile used in a kidnapping qualifies as an instrument of interstate commerce. And they said the benefit the men sought was "to fulfill their personal desires to carry out vigilante justice."
The trial judge sentenced both McMichaels to life in prison for their hate crime convictions, plus additional time — 10 years for Travis McMichael and seven years for his father — for brandishing guns while committing violent crimes. Bryan received a lighter hate crime sentence of 35 years in prison, in part because he wasn't armed and preserved the cellphone video that became crucial evidence.
All three also got 20 years in prison for attempted kidnapping, but the judge ordered that time to overlap with their hate crime sentences.
If the U.S. appeals court overturns any of their federal convictions, both McMichaels and Bryan would remain in prison. All three are serving life sentences in Georgia state prisons for murder, and have motions for new state trials pending before a judge.
- In:
- Ahmaud Arbery
- Georgia
- Homicide
- Politics
- Atlanta
- Hate Crime
- Crime
- Shootings
veryGood! (4)
Related
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- US nuclear regulators to issue construction permit for a reactor that uses molten salt
- The 'physics' behind potential interest rate cuts
- Man shot to death at large Minneapolis homeless encampment that has been slated for closure
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Oprah Winfrey Defends Drew Barrymore From Criticism Over Interview Behavior
- Biden considers new border and asylum restrictions as he tries to reach Senate deal for Ukraine aid
- Biden to meet in person Wednesday with families of Americans taken hostage by Hamas
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Congressional group demands probe into Beijing’s role in violence against protesters on US soil
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Attacks on referees could kill soccer, top FIFA official Pierluigi Collina says
- From chess to baseball, technology fuels 'never-ending arms race' in sports cheating
- Texas judge finds officer not guilty in fatal shooting of pickup driver
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Wisconsin Supreme Court refuses to hear lawsuit challenging voucher school program
- Hundreds of eggs, 53 primates, 660 pounds of ivory among items seized in global wildlife trafficking operation
- Heard at UN climate talks: Quotes that tell the story
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Tennessee audit says state prisons mishandled sexual assault cases. Here's why the problem could worsen
Hackers had access to patient information for months in New York hospital cyberattack, officials say
Editor says Myanmar authorities have arrested 2 local journalists for an online news service
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Geminids meteor shower peaks this week under dark skies
The Supreme Court rejects an appeal over bans on conversion therapy for LGBTQ+ children
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore says Baltimore Orioles lease deal is ‘imminent’