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Ahmaud Arbery's accused killers were denied bond after prosecutors brought evidence of racist social media posts and text messages

Nov 14, 2020, 01:31 IST
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Gregory and Travis McMichael, accused in the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia on Feb. 2020, listen via closed circuit tv in the Glynn County Detention center in Brunswick, Ga., on Thursday.AP Photo/Lewis Levine
  • Travis and Gregory McMichael, who are charged in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, were denied bond on Friday.
  • The 25-year-old Arbery, who was Black, was killed in February in broad daylight, and the encounter was caught on a video that went viral in early May.
  • During the bond hearing, prosecutors brought evidence of racist text messages and social media posts from Travis McMichael.
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Travis and Gregory McMichael, two of the men charged with the February killing of Ahmaud Arbery, were denied bond by a county judge on Friday.

The decision from Judge Timothy Walmsley follows a nearly two-day bond hearing over the father-son duo, who have been in jail since their arrests in May. They have been charged with murder and aggravated assault alongside William "Roddie" Bryan, who filmed the encounter between the two and Arbery. Bryan was denied bond in a July court hearing. The McMichaels are pleading not guilty.

On Thursday, prosecutors brought evidence of racist social media posts and text messages that Travis McMichael had sent in the months before Arbery's killing.

The messages were brought up by Jesse Evans, a prosecutor at the Cobb County district attorney office, who said the messages were evidence of racist beliefs, and that the McMichaels should be denied bond.

Evans brought up one text message Travis McMichael sent a friend, Zachary Langford, in 2019, which used a racist slur and apparently described a Black person as a "crackhead" with "gold teeth," according to the Associated Press.

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Langford testified that McMichael was "referring to a raccoon."

Evans also cited a Facebook post from Langford where Travis McMichael responded with: "Sayonara, you slanty-eyed f---s," according to the Associated Press. Langford said he didn't recall the message.

It took months for the McMichaels to be indicted

Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, was jogging through a Georgia neighborhood on February 23. Gregory and Travis McMichael told police they believed him to be a burglary suspect, so they went after him. After a scuffle, Travis shot Arbery, who was unarmed, three times with his shotgun, killing him.

Bryan filmed the encounter and Arbery's killing. He told authorities he heard Travis McMichael using a racist slur after the shooting.

In Thursday's bond hearing, defense attorneys for the McMichaels sought to show that they weren't flight risks. They pointed out that Travis McMichael lived with his parents and his three-year-old son, and did not have a passport.

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(L-R) Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael, and William R. Bryan face criminal charges for the shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia on February 23, 2020.Glynn County Sheriffs Office/Handout via Reuters

Allison McMichael, Gregory's wife and Travis's mother, testified about Travis's work at a summer camp for kids who had lost family members, and his work at the US Coast Guard, where he's received three good conduct awards. Their defense lawyers also sought to bring Arbery's mental health considerations into the hearing, which the judge rejected.

The defense lawyers also pushed the theory that Arbery was not just a jogger, and that the McMichaels had grounds to believe he may have been responsible for crimes committed in the neighborhood.

"We have substantial evidence on that particular day Mr. Arbery was not a jogger. He was there for nefarious purposes," Bob Rubin, one of Travis McMichael's attorneys, said in court.

Wanda Cooper-Jones, Arbery's mother, told the Associated Press the McMichaels should remain in jail.

"I live right there in the community," Cooper-Jones said. "Nobody reached out to say, 'I'm sorry for your loss.' I don't think they are remorseful at all."

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Ahmaud Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones (L) and sister, Jasmine Arbery, comfort one another at Sidney Lanier Park on May 9, 2020 in Brunswick, Georgia.Sean Rayford/Getty Images

The hearing is one of the first steps in the case after months of delays. Jackie Johnson, the Glynn County prosecutor, declined to pursue charges against the McMichaels after Arbery was shot dead while jogging in the middle of the day on February 23. The case was passed over by another two district attorneys before a video of the altercation went viral in early May, leading state prosecutors to pick it up.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation arrested the McMichaels on May 7, and arrested Bryan days later. They have been jailed since.

The case was ultimately assigned to the Cobb County District Attorney Joyette Holmes and Walmsley, a Chatham County judge.

Jackie Johnson lost reelection as county prosecutor on November 3.

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