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Ahmaud Arbery: Victim of a Racist Lynching or an Unfortunate Incident?
Townhall ^ | 05/18/2020 | Rachel Alexander

Posted on 05/18/2020 8:32:01 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

It’s all over the news, two white guys shot a black man in Georgia while he was jogging because they thought he was a burglar. The racial aspect touched a nerve, which was compounded because Gregory McMichael and his son Travis McMichael took the law into their own hands. It looked like the Trayvon Martin fatal shooting all over again. And things got worse when more details started coming out.

So is this a modern day racist lynching, as some like Al Sharpton are claiming, or is it merely an unfortunate situation? Now it’s too early to pass judgment, since the men are entitled to a jury trial in a court of law. We don’t know all of the facts yet. But we do know quite a few, and the main controversy seems to come down to the men’s decision to follow Armery.

People were outraged that the men were not arrested right away. It took the release of a video of the shooting a couple months later, invoking loud protests, to arrest them.

The prosecutor for the Brunswick Judicial Circuit, Jackie Johnson, recused herself because the elder McMichael had worked in her office. The next prosecutor assigned to the case, Waycross Judicial Circuit District Attorney George Barnhill, also recused himself because his son worked for Johnson’s office.

Shortly before the shooting occurred, a neighbor of the McMichaels called 911 and said a black man had entered a house that was under construction nearby. The McMichaels say they saw Arbery jogging and got into their truck to follow him. Now anyone in law enforcement will tell you it’s not a good idea as a citizen to accost someone who is not in the process of committing a crime. If Arbery had burglarized homes, he wasn’t burglarizing one when they saw him jogging down the road.

But the law is vague about timing. In Georgia, the private citizen’s arrest statute says, “A private person may arrest an offender if the offense is committed in his presence or within his immediate knowledge.” The McMichaels apparently thought Arbery had just come from robbing a home.

Prosecutors initially told the police not to arrest the two men, saying they were acting within Georgia’s citizen’s arrest and self-defense statutes. However, Arbery family attorney S. Lee Merritt says the most Arbery was doing was trespassing, which doesn’t justify a citizen’s arrest. Those who know Arbery say he was known for jogging in that area.

The McMichaels said they yelled, “Stop, stop, we want to talk to you.” The elder McMichael said his son got out of the car with a shotgun. He said Arbery started to violently attack Travis and the two started fighting over the shotgun. Travis then shot Arbery three times. Arbery did not appear to be armed.

Barnhill said in his letter recusing himself that the older McMichael had previously investigated Arbery. CNN obtained a text message that was sent to a homeowner by a Glynn County police officer instructing him to contact Gregory McMichael if he saw a burglar on his security cameras.

Barnhill also said that Arbery had a criminal history. Arbery was indicted for bringing a gun to a high school basketball game when he was 19. He was arrested in 2018 for shoplifting. Barnhill said he believed the shooting was justified as a citizen’s arrest. He questioned whether maybe Arbery had caused the shotgun to be fired.

The McMichaels claim Arbery looked like a suspect in a string of burglaries. Travis McMichael called 911 several days before the shooting to report a man going into a house. One homeowner said he has previous video of a man entering his property and stealing fishing tackle. But Glynn County Police Lt. Cheri Bashlor said just one burglary in the neighborhood had been reported, theft of a firearm in an unlocked car outside the McMichael’s home. And Larry English, who owned the home under construction, said nothing had ever been stolen from the home.

George Zimmerman, who fatally shot Trayvon Martin in Florida in 2012, was acquitted of charges by a jury that found he was acting in self-defense. Zimmerman got out of his car and followed Martin because he thought he was a burglary suspect and was behaving suspiciously. There was evidence there had been a scuffle, since Zimmerman had a bloody nose along with lumps and two cuts on his head.

The two shootings are so similar there is a very good chance a jury will acquit the McMichaels. So should people be outraged? The problem likely lies in the law. Perhaps citizen’s arrest laws need to be narrowed to make it clear that citizens can only arrest suspects at the time of the crime, not 20 minutes later. It’s the concept of private citizens chasing after a suspect who isn’t in the process of committing a crime that bothers people. It makes it look like the people in pursuit are escalating the chances of violence.

Lindsay McMichael, the sister and daughter of the suspects, has come forward saying that the two are not racist, that they have always approved of her nonwhite boyfriends.

This doesn’t appear to be a racist hate crime. It’s most likely a situation where the law failed and needs to be revised. As a former police officer, the senior McMichael no doubt knew the citizen’s arrest law well, having encountered people using it while on the beat. He thought he was within his rights to follow Arbery. But it doesn’t mean it was a good judgment call.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ahmaudarbery; lynching; racism
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To: SeekAndFind

Exactly. And there was no case for self defense because these yahoos pursued an unarmed man who posed no threat to them. Also, Arbery’s past history has no bearing on the actions of the two men who killed him.


61 posted on 05/18/2020 10:22:29 AM PDT by MeganC (There is nothing feminine about feminism.)
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To: DoodleDawg
They initiated the incident and McMichael shot Arbery three times. I'm sure the prosecution will be able to prove a felony in that.

If I understand the charge correctly, that's not the way it works. It's a death ancillary/subordinate to the commission of a crime.

62 posted on 05/18/2020 10:22:40 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: Just mythoughts

It really sucks when you have to prove thatyou are a jogger. Jogging shoes, shorts and a T-shirt are not evidence of being a jogger? Jogging is not evidence of being a jogger? Where was he carrying all the things he stole from his burglary? Why did they need guns to question him? Why did they need to shoot him 3 times if he was unarmed and never actually took a weapon from them? Why should he have to prove he was a jogger? Why is he a thug disguised as a jogger casing houses under construction as a rash of burglaries is terrorizing the neighborhood? Innocent until proven guilty.

Equal protection under the law. Pointing a gun at someone is assault. Pointing a gun at someone should be interpreted by that person as an assault. Everyone has a right to self-defense. Why is it that the white guys with guns get to claim self defense when they are assaulting an unarmed black man? Why does he have to prove he is a jogger when cars and trucks roll up and armed people jump out while a camera is filming? I would be shitting myself if that happened.


63 posted on 05/18/2020 10:23:00 AM PDT by webheart (Coronavirus, I give up. Come get me.)
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To: DoodleDawg
McMichael would have had to work the pump twice and pull the trigger twice. Nothing accidental in that.

The shotgun was an auto-loader. Just keep pulling the trigger until the magazine is empty. Fires every time. With a bad grip on the stock you can accidentally bump-fire the weapon too.

Aubery was grappling for the shotgun right up to the moment where he turned to run away. McMichaels had his fingers on the trigger. Of course the weapon fired multiple times during the grappling. Not much deliberation required.

Disarming an antagonist who holds a weapon a low ready is a stupid move. That only works in the movies.

64 posted on 05/18/2020 10:23:13 AM PDT by flamberge (The wheels keep turning)
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To: RoosterRedux
As said, the police are counting of this activity because they know they it takes time for them to respond to the commission of a crime.

I have no doubt that police departments greatly appreciate neighborhood watch associations. Having an alert populace reporting crimes and suspicious activities helps them to do their jobs. But I don't know of a single police department that would want neighborhood watch associations do their job for them.

would add that most of my neighbors are armed when they patrol the neighborhood. And, frankly, I think they are quite nervous and, perhaps, a little scared about what they are doing.

Armed, nervous, and scared are a bad combination, and it is likely the reason why this incident went so badly wrong.

65 posted on 05/18/2020 10:24:52 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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To: RoosterRedux
It's a death ancillary/subordinate to the commission of a crime.

The crime being committed was assault with a deadly weapon. Pointing a gun at someone is assault. They pointed guns at him before he tried to wrestle a gun from them. Just because the men thought they were performing a citizens arrest doesn't give them the right to confront someone with firearms.

66 posted on 05/18/2020 10:26:16 AM PDT by webheart (Coronavirus, I give up. Come get me.)
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To: webheart
Why are people so ready to take the side opposite of Al Sharpton?

I'm surprised people are taking ANY sides this early, either siding with Al or taking the opposite.

It's just too early to know.

BTW, my neighborhood watch is suspicious of anyone regardless of his skin color. Joggers in my neighborhood who look suspicious (of all colors) are watched carefully.

67 posted on 05/18/2020 10:27:02 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: DoodleDawg
But I don't know of a single police department that would want neighborhood watch associations do their job for them.

I have talked to them and a deputy sheriff is a close friend. They are stretched to the limit and need all the help they can get.

Armed, nervous, and scared are a bad combination, and it is likely the reason why this incident went so badly wrong.

Completely agree.

68 posted on 05/18/2020 10:29:17 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: RoosterRedux
If I understand the charge correctly, that's not the way it works. It's a death ancillary/subordinate to the commission of a crime.

I think you may be mistaken in that - Georgia Code. Under Georgia law murder requires malice, expressed or implied. Murder committed in the commission of another felony doesn't require malice.

69 posted on 05/18/2020 10:32:09 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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To: caww
That’s how I see it......because there was no way the jogger could know ‘who’ they were or ‘why’ they had a gun on him.

Yes, it is not like he had just held up a 7-11 or committed a violent crime. All he seems to have done was snoop around a house under construction and maybe steal a hammer (I'm not sure if he actually stole the hammer). If the father/son team had actually managed to "citizen's arrest" him, I doubt he would even be charged with anything. I would not want it on my conscience that I had escalated a nothing-burger offense to a point where someone had to die.

70 posted on 05/18/2020 10:34:32 AM PDT by Sans-Culotte (With every passing day, I am a little bit gladder that Romney lost in 2012.)
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To: flamberge
The shotgun was an auto-loader.

I had not heard that. Did they identify make and model?

Disarming an antagonist who holds a weapon a low ready is a stupid move.

It's a desperate act, no doubt about that. One that I would think only someone in fear of their life would try to do.

71 posted on 05/18/2020 10:35:13 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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To: DoodleDawg
Thx for that. What I was trying to say was that the murder (even without malice) was committed as a subordinate event to (i.e., during) another felony.

I think (and this is a stretch) that the prosecutor has to prove that Travis McMichael was committing another felony during which Arbery was then killed.

This is something that we'll learn probably as the trial gets closer.

72 posted on 05/18/2020 10:39:33 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: SeekAndFind

Why are there so many people on this thread repeating lies again and again? This is unusual for FR, and makes me think we have a lot of false flag posters here.

Your lies, in particular, are especially egregious.

The lives of the McMichaels were, in fact, in danger, as the career criminal Arbery was trying to wrest away a weapon so that he could shoot and kill them.

The McMichaels did call the police, despite lies told here.

The career criminal Arbery attacked them, not the other way around.

The career criminal Arbery turned this from an arrest and police investigation into a fatality by attacking the McMichaels with murder in his tiny little mind.

The career criminal Arbery could have proceeded past the McMichaels and gone about his business. They weren’t stopping him. Instead, he feloniously attacked.

People who are trying to misrepresent this as wrongdoing by the McMichaels are enemies of the Constitution, the American people, and all humanity, all of which are better off for the death of the career criminal Arbery.

We need more of this, not less. Instead of good Americans afraid to leave their homes lest they be attacked by criminals, criminals should be afraid to prowl the streets in search of victims.

It’s hard to say how many there might be, but I’d bet there are hundreds of thousands of career criminals who very dearly need to be shot and killed in the commission of crimes.


73 posted on 05/18/2020 10:54:40 AM PDT by dsc (As for the foundations of the Catholic faith, this pontificate is an outrage to reason.)
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To: dsc

RE: The lives of the McMichaels were, in fact, in danger, as the career criminal Arbery was trying to wrest away a weapon so that he could shoot and kill them.

They were in a VEHICLE, how could Arbery have been wrestling their weapon if they were in a vehicle? Unless the son came down to confront Arbery? Was that confrontation necessary?

Why did they not call the police while tailing Arbery?

Please answer those.

Arbery being a career criminal? OK, did the McMichaels have access to his files?


74 posted on 05/18/2020 10:57:48 AM PDT by SeekAndFind (look at Michigan, it will)
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To: SeekAndFind

They were not in a vehicle they were outside of it. They had called the police, in fact were on the phone with them while in pursuit. Police were very near at the time of the shooting, you can hear sirens fairly loudly. If you’re going to offer heartfelt opinions it might be wise to inform yourself of the known facts. There is video of all this, even with links posted to FR. Go find it.


75 posted on 05/18/2020 11:04:40 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: RoosterRedux
It's just too early to know.

It is always "too early to know" - until it is too late.

We are constantly faced with incomplete and inaccurate information, with which we must make critical and time-limited decisions.

Play the odds, place your bet, and put your money down. Waiting too long is a sure-fire loss.

Here is my call: "Aubery was a burglar who was casing a neighborhood for opportunities. He was confronted by angry neighbors and he ran. When blocked, he attacked one of the neighbors. who was armed with a shotgun. He died from weapons fire during the grappling. The death was a justified homicide.

Make of it what you will.

76 posted on 05/18/2020 11:07:26 AM PDT by flamberge (The wheels keep turning)
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To: DoodleDawg
McMichael shot Arbery three times. Even if the first shot was caused by Arbrey pulling on the shotgun, McMichael would have had to work the pump twice and pull the trigger twice. Nothing accidental in that.

I think you are making assumptions that are different from my assumptions from what I saw in the video and from news reports I heard. News reports said that Arbery had three gunshot wounds, one to the hand and two to the chest, not that he was shot three times. The shotgun seemed to go off once during the struggle without hitting anyone. When the struggle began for the shotgun, the person taking the video turned away to get a picture of the hammer that Arbery dropped just before getting to the truck. As the camera view came back up you can see the smoke from the shotgun blast when the background was just the sky. When the video was back on the struggle, the barrel was pointed between the two men and they were still fighting for the shotgun. I assume that the shotgun was a semi auto, but will have to look at the video again. The elder McMichael (a retired police officer and investigator for the DA after retirement from PD) also had a gun that was concealed carry until he pulled it out to go help his son. It was a 357 magnum revolver. What I assume happened: The elder McMichael shoots Arbery and hits him in the chest. The shotgun goes off (several possible reasons that this could happen) hitting Arbery in one of the hands he is holding onto the barrel with and then hitting him in the chest. The video shows Arbery falling, but no more shots being fired. The elder McMichael saw Arbery enter the house under construction (burglarized so often cameras were installed inside) and called 911 before Arbery took off running. That is all the probable cause you would need in Georgia to make a citizens arrest and hold him for the police. If I was trying to stop someone I believed was a criminal, I would be armed too, if it was possible.

77 posted on 05/18/2020 11:09:56 AM PDT by MtnClimber (For photos of Colorado scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: flamberge

I’ve been very wary of wading into this but your assessment sounds about right to me.


78 posted on 05/18/2020 11:10:35 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: SeekAndFind
OK, did the McMichaels have access to his files?

The senior McMichaels was a former cop, who had previous encounters with Aubery. They probably recognized each other during that last encounter. So, yes in a manner of speaking, the McMichaels did have access to his files.

79 posted on 05/18/2020 11:12:45 AM PDT by flamberge (The wheels keep turning)
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To: flamberge

That’s probably as good a summary as any at this point.


80 posted on 05/18/2020 11:17:50 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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