Ahmaud Arbery’s killers found guilty on all counts in federal hate crime trial | CNN (2024)

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By Mike Hayes, Aditi Sangal and Meg Wagner, CNN

Updated 2:42 PM EST, Tue February 22, 2022

Ahmaud Arbery’s killers found guilty on all counts in federal hate crime trial | CNN (7)

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Ahmaud Arbery's mom happy about verdict, angry at DOJ. Here's why

02:09 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • A jury has found the three White men who killed Ahmaud Arbery guilty on all counts in the federal hate crimes trial.
  • Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan were each charged in federal court with interference with rights – a hate crime – and attempted kidnapping. The McMichaels also each faced a weapons charge.
  • The defendants are already servinglife sentences in prison after being convicted of murder in state court last year.

Our live coverage has ended. You can read more about the trial and the verdict here.

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Arbery's killers were found guilty in their hate crime trial today. Here's what it was like inside the court.

From CNN's Kevin Conlon, Inside the courtroom

A jury found the three White men who killed Ahmaud Arbery guilty on all counts in the federal hate crimes trial this morning.

After the verdict was read, there was no discernible reaction from the three defendants, Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan.

Judge Lisa Godbey Wood addressed each of the defendants and their attorneys to inform them they have 14 days to file any post-trial motions and that the US probation office would conduct a pre-sentencing interview before the sentencing hearing is scheduled. When defendants went before judge all three responded by either saying, “yes” or “yes ma’am.” When Gregory McMichael returned to his seat, he let out an audible sigh.

The jury foreperson — one of the three Black jurors — was emotional during the court’s reading the verdict and while the jury was being polled, wiping away tears.

According to the pool, Wanda Cooper-Jones, the mother of Arbery, remained attentive during the reading of the verdict, looking ahead. Marcus Arbery Sr., Arbery’s father nodded his head, swayed back and forth, and at times, clasped his hands together as the clerk went through each of the counts.

Leigh McMichael, mother of Travis McMichael and wife of Gregory McMichael, remained stoic.After the verdict came down, the only person that remained sitting was Leigh McMichael. The Arbery family, supporters and the prosecuting attorneys were on their feet, embracing and congratulating each other.

Judge Wood thanked the jury and acknowledged the attorneys in the case telling prosecutors that they had a “difficult task” due to the nature of the charges. She also told defense counsel that although they were appointed by the court, they represented their clients “zealously”. She adjourned saying no one need wonder whether they got a fair trial or whether the attorneys were skillful — they did and they were.

Court adjourned at 10:55 a.m. ET. Jurors deliberated for about 3 hours and 40 mins, according to the pool.

Garland: No one should fear being killed "because of the color of their skin"

From CNN's Mike Hayes

US Attorney General Merrick Garland spoke to the press following today’s verdict.

Garland said that Arbery was “targeted, chased, shot and killed” by the three men charged in this case while he was “running on a public street.” Garland said that it was “racism that fueled them” during their pursuit and murder of Arbery.

Garland called Arbery’s death an “enduring trauma” for his family and loved ones. “My heart goes out to his parents,” the attorney general said, adding, that it is an “unimaginable loss they have endured.”

Garland said that “hate crimes have a singular impact” because of the “terror and fear that they inflict on entire communities.”

He said that nobody in this country should fear that “when they go out for a run they will be targeted and killed because of the color of their skin.”

The attorney general was asked about comments made after the verdict today by Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, in which she criticized the DOJ for originally accepting a plea deal for Arbery’s killers in this case.

“I cannot imagine the pain that a mother feels” to have their son gunned down like Arbery, Garland said in response. “My heart goes out, that’s really all I can say.”

After guilty verdict, mother of Ahmaud Arbery criticizes DOJ prosecutors' previous plea deal for son's killers

From CNN's Mike Hayes

Speaking outside the courthouse after the verdict was announced, Wanda Cooper-Jones, mother of Ahmaud Arbery, called out the US Department of Justice for originally agreeing to accept a plea deal from her son’s killers in federal court.

“I now want toaddress the members of the DOJ.I’m very thankful that you guysbrought these charges of hatecrime, but back on January 31,you guys accepted a plea dealwith these three murderers whotook my son’s life,” Cooper-Jones said.

Cooper-Jones continued: “[Arbery’s father] Marcus and two of Ahmaud’saunties stood before the courtsand begged the judge not to takea plea deal.That the DOJ, that the DOJ wentbefore the judge and asked themto take a plea deal with theseguys.”

Cooper-Jones said that she spoke to DOJ prosecutors and “begged them” to not take the plea deal in the case.

“They ignored my cry.I begged them.Even after the family stoodbefore the judge and asked them,asked the judge to not take thisplea deal, the lead prosecutor,Tara Lyons, stood up and askedthe judge to ignore the family’scry.That’s not justice for Ahmaud.”

Arbery’s mother said that today’s verdict wouldn’t have happened “if it wasn’t forthe fight that the family putup.”

Some more context: On Jan. 31, a federal judge rejected the plea deal reached by prosecutors and Travis McMichael onhate crime charges, an agreement that would have precluded his federal trial in Arbery’s killing.

McMichael had agreed to plead guilty to a single hate crime charge – interference with rights – in exchange for prosecutors recommending he serve 30 years in federal prison.

Under the agreement, McMichael, 36, would have been transferred from a state prison to federal custody.

After completing the federal sentence, he would’ve been returned to Georgia to finish his sentence of life in prison without parole. Five of those final years would have counted toward his supervised release from federal prison.

US District Judge Lisa Godbey Wood said she was not comfortable with the sentencing guidelines.

After the plea deal was rejected, McMichael and his father, Gregory McMichael, changed their pleas from guilty to not guilty.

Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, was outraged by the proposed deal and said she felt betrayed by US Justice Department lawyers. She told the court a state judge gave the McMichaels exactly what they deserve – life in prison – and urged Wood not to accept the federal plea.

“Please listen to me,” Cooper-Jones told the judge. “Granting these men their preferred conditions of confinement would defeat me. It gives them one last chance to spit in my face after murdering my son.”

S. Lee Merritt, an attorney for Arbery’s mother, previously called federal prison “a country club compared to state prison,” saying the facilities are less populated, have better funding and are “generally more accommodating” than state holding facilities, according to tweets from his account.

The Arbery family was displeased prosecutors had agreed to the deal without the family’s consent, Merritt told CNN.

The Justice Department said she respected the court’s decision not to accept the plea agreement, Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke said, but added in a statement that prosecutors “entered the plea agreement only after the victims’ attorneys informed me that the family was not opposed to it.”

Emotions were high in the courtroom as the verdict was read in the hate crimes trial for Arbery's killers

From CNN's Ryan Young and CNN's Kevin Conlon

As the verdict convicting the three White men who murdered Ahmaud Arbery of a federal hate crime, attempted kidnapping charges and firearms charges were read, the Arbery family could be seenholding each other and crying in the courtroom.

Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery Sr., could be seen swaying back and forth, and Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, was emotional, reports CNN’s Ryan Young, who was in the courtroom. Arbery’s father also held his hands clasped together, nodding as the clerk read each of the counts in the case.

Several members of the jury were also seen wiping tears away from their faces while the verdict was announced.

Young reports that there were people standing in the back of the courtroom praying.

Arbery’s parents and their attorneys emerged from the courthouse with their arms raised in victory before speaking to members of the media.

CNN’s Kevin Conlon was also inside the courtroom as the verdicts were read and noted that there was no discernible reaction from any of the three defendants.

As Judge Lisa Godbey Wood addressed each of the defendants and their attorneys on topics including the filing of post-trial motions as well as pre-sentencing interviews, each defendant responded simply with either “yes” or “yes ma’am.” As Gregory McMichael returned to his seat, he let out an audible sigh.

Meanwhile, the jury foreperson — one of the three Black jurors — was observed becoming emotional during the verdict, even crying as the jury was polled.

Judge adjourns court

From CNN's Mike Hayes

After the verdict was read and Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan were found guilty on all counts, the judge remanded the three men back to custody.

The judge informed the three men that they have 14 days to file any appeals in the case. The McMichaels were found guilty of three counts each; Bryan was found guilty of two counts.

The judge said that she would schedule sentencing in the case after pre-sentencing reports are filed.

Before adjourning the proceedings, the judge complimented the lawyers on both sides. She said that the prosecutors had the “difficult task” of proving the “racial motivation of hate crimes” and did so in a “skillful” and “professional manner.” The judge noted that the defense attorneys “did not volunteer” to take the defendants’ case — rather they were appointed. She said that the defense attorneys represented their clients “zealously.”

“No one need wonder whether they got a fair trial, they did,” she said.

Tomorrow is the second anniversary of Ahmaud Arbery's death

Wednesday, Feb. 23, 2022 marks two years since Ahmaud Arbery was killed in the Satilla Shores neighborhood outside Brunswick, Georgia.

Moments ago, a jury found Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan guilty of all counts in the federal hate crimes trial in Arbery’s killing. The defendants are already servinglife sentences in prison after being convicted of murder in state court last year.

Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, said this week that the timing of the close of the federal civil rights trial is “great” as it nears the two-year anniversary of Arbery’s death.

Ahmaud Arbery's killers found guilty on all counts in federal hate crime trial

From CNN's Mike Hayes

Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan have been found guilty of all counts in the federal trial of the three men charged with violating Ahamud Arbery’s civil rights.

All three men were convicted of interference of rights, which is a federal hate crime, and attempted kidnapping. The McMichaels were also found guilty of an additional firearms charge for using and carrying a firearm during a crime of violence.

Some more context: The men attempted to chase Arbery and attempted to unlawfully confine him using their trucks as he jogged through their neighborhood outside Brunswick, Georgia, in February 2020, the jury has found.

They could now receive sentences of up to life in prison for the federal convictions.

The men were previously convicted of murdering Arbery in a separate trial in November. They are currently serving life sentences for those convictions.

What you need to know about the federal hate crimes trial of Ahmaud Arbery's killers

The three White defendants – Travis McMichael, 36; his father, Gregory McMichael, 66; and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan, 52 – wereconvicted last Novemberof felony murder and other charges for Ahmaud Arbery’s February 2020 killing in the Satilla Shores neighborhood outside Brunswick, Georgia.

Video of the fatal shootingsparked nationwide outrageafter it was released in May 2020, weeks before the police killing ofGeorge Floydin Minneapolis that set off a summer of widespreadprotests against racial injustice.

After a state trial last November that largelyavoided discussions of race, the McMichaels and Bryan were sentenced to life in prison – with Bryaneligible for paroleonce he serves 30 years – for their conviction on a raft of charges, including felony murder.

In the federal trial in Brunswick, Georgia, the three men were each charged with interference with rights – a hate crime – and attempted kidnapping. The McMichaels also each face a weapons charge.

Federalprosecutorsand Arbery’s family have said he was out for a jog when he was killed. Defense attorneys in the state trial contended the McMichaels,suspecting Arbery of trespassing multiple times at an under-construction home, pursued him through neighborhood streets to conducta citizen’s arrest. Travis McMichael argued heshot Arbery in self-defenseas they wrestled over McMichael’s shotgun. Bryan had pursued Arbery with his own vehicle andrecorded videoof the pursuit and shooting.

The McMichaels initially agreed to plead guilty, but the judge overseeing the caserejected the plea deal because of concernsabout the agreed-upon sentence. The three men then decided to plead not guilty.

The defendants are already servinglife sentences in prison for the murder convictions, although they have said they plan to appeal the verdicts. Convictions in this trialcould bring steep fines and more life sentences.

Ahmaud Arbery's killers were already sentenced to life in prison for murder in a state criminal trial

A jury has reached a verdict in the federal hate crime trial of Travis McMichael, 35, his father, Gregory McMichael, 66, and neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan. It will soon be read in court.

But the three White men who chased and murdered 25-year-old Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery in south Georgia were sentenced to life in prison on Friday, Jan. 7 with two having no chance of parole.

The McMichaels and Bryanwere convicted in November on a raft of charges, including felony murder, for Arbery’s death.

Judge Timothy Walmsley sentenced the McMichaels to life in prison without the possibility of parole, while Bryan was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole. The 52-year-old will be eligible for parole under Georgia law only after he has served 30 years in prison because he was convicted of serious violent felonies.

Read more about the state criminal trial here.

Catch up: Here's what the prosecution said during closing arguments

From CNN’s Pamela Kirkland

While we wait for a verdict to be read in court in the federal hate crimes trial of Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael, and William “Roddie” Bryan, here’s a recap of what happened when prosecutors presented closing arguments on Monday.

Prosecutor Christopher J. Perras began his closing by going through some of the evidence presented during trial and walking the jury through each charge against the defendants.

Perras argued that the defendants’ claiming Ahmaud Arbery was trespassing doesn’t hold because there had been other instances of trespassing in the neighborhood committed by White suspects that they were not concerned about.

“This wasn’t about trespassing. It wasn’t about neighborhood crime. It was about race. Racial assumptions, racial resentment, and racial anger,” Perras said. “All three defendants saw a young black man in their neighborhood and they thought the worst of him.”

Perras did not show the video of the pursuit of Arbery on February 23, 2020. He did bring up the testimony of Matt Albenze. Albenze, a resident of Satilla Shores testified that he saw Arbery in the house of Larry English the day of the shooting and called the non-emergency police line. In closing, Perras said Albenze had a clear view of Arbery and described his running as “long, looping strides” and “like he was running in slow motion.”

Perras said Greg McMichael only knew he saw a Black man running down the street and played a portion of audio from an interview he had done with investigators saying McMichael didn’t know if Arbery had stolen anything.

Perras claimed the defendants made false statements to the police by saying Arbery had been caught breaking into houses during interviews with investigators. Perras said that the defendants knew what they had done was wrong and did what they could to try to get away with the murder.

Perras also went through some of the evidence previously presented by the prosecution that he said shows the defendants’ views on race including the Facebook posts made by Greg McMichael, texts and posts by Travis McMichael, and Roddie Bryan’s use of the word “bootlip” in messages to friends.

“The evidence establishes what was driving the defendant was pent up racial anger,” the prosecutor said.

After federal hate crimes trial, Ahmaud Arbery's father calls for "100% justice"

From CNN’s Pamela Kirkland

Marcus Arbery, Sr., father of Ahmaud Arbery spoke after Judge Lisa G. Wood handed the case over to the jury for deliberation on Monday afternoon. Arbery Sr. said he wants justice.

Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, didn’t speak after exiting the courthouse, but she was accompanied by civil rights attorney Mark Maguire. Maguire said they’re happy the jury now has the opportunity to “do the right thing.”

“I think the prosecution gave a very impassioned rebuttal where they really got to the heart of this case, which is the racial animus. We’re glad that all of that was brought to light,” Maguire said.

Cooper-Jones spoke earlier on Monday about closing arguments. She was asked about a moment when she was emotional inside the courtroom during A.J. Balbo’s closing arguments. She said the day had been “very emotional.”

“This has been very draining and I’m thankful that this is almost over,” Cooper-Jones said.

Jury has reached a verdict in the federal hate crimes trial of the McMichaels and Bryan

After deliberating for over three hours the jury has reached a verdict in thethe federal hate crimes trial of the McMichaels and Bryan announced, Judge Lisa G. Wood at 9:54 a.m. ET this morning.

Court will reconvene at 10:30 a.m. ET for the verdict to be read.

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