Georgia jury asks to see video of Ahmaud Arbery shooting again

A Georgia jury on Wednesday asked to have the cellphone video of Ahmaud Arbery being fatally shot played back three times during its second day of deliberations in the murder trial of three white men who pursued the 25-year-old Black man as he ran through their mostly white neighborhood.


Reuters | Updated: 24-11-2021 20:48 IST | Created: 24-11-2021 20:48 IST
Georgia jury asks to see video of Ahmaud Arbery shooting again

A Georgia jury on Wednesday asked to have the cellphone video of Ahmaud Arbery being fatally shot played back three times during its second day of deliberations in the murder trial of three white men who pursued the 25-year-old Black man as he ran through their mostly white neighborhood. Travis McMichael, 35, his father Gregory McMichael, 65, and their neighbor William "Roddie" Bryan, 52, have pleaded not guilty to charges including murder, aggravated assault and false imprisonment for the killing in the Satilla Shores neighborhood just outside the coastal city of Brunswick on Feb. 23, 2020.

The video recorded by Bryan on his cellphone of Travis McMichael firing his pump-action shotgun at close range into Arbery became the most important evidence for the prosecution in the trial. The younger McMichael, the only defendant to take the witness stand, said he fired his shotgun at Arbery in self defense. The jury also asked to hear again the 911 call made by Greg McMichael moments before the shooting in which he told the emergency operator that "there's a Black male running down the street" and can be heard yelling at Arbery repeatedly to stop.

The jury, composed of 11 white men and women and one Black man, deliberated for more than six hours on Tuesday without reaching a verdict as the panel weighed evidence from the more than two dozen witnesses called during a trial of more than two weeks. Jurors headed into the deliberations room at about 8:35 a.m. ET on Wednesday, the day before the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday. A little over an hour later they filed into the courtroom to see the video played three times in a row, as well as a high-contrast version of the video prosecutors presented during their case.

Outside the courthouse, civil rights activist the Rev. Al Sharpton joined Arbery's relatives in prayer. Defense lawyers have cited a Georgia law that allowed anyone to make a citizen's arrest of individuals they have reasonable suspicion are fleeing a serious crime they committed. The law was repealed in the wake of Arbery's killing.

The shooting happened after the defendants jumped in their pickup trucks and chased Arbery to detain him, they said, because they believed he might have been responsible for property crimes that had left the neighborhood on edge. No evidence emerged that Arbery, an avid jogger, ever stole anything on his frequent runs through Satilla Shores. He was killed with nothing in his pockets, not even a cellphone or wallet.

Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley instructed the jurors before deliberations on Tuesday that someone can make a citizen's arrest only if a crime has occurred "in his presence or within his immediate knowledge," or if there is reasonable suspicion that the person has committed a serious felony and is fleeing the crime. Gun rights and firearms violence remain contentious issues in the United States. A jury in Wisconsin last week acquitted a teenager who fatally shot two men during 2020 racial-justice protests. In the Georgia and Wisconsin trials, defendants claimed self-defense in fatal shootings.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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