New conviction | Life imprisonment for two murderers of black jogger Ahmaud Arbery

(Washington) The American federal justice sentenced Monday to life imprisonment two white men, a father and his son, guilty of having chased and killed in 2020 the young black jogger Ahmaud Arbery.

Posted at 3:25 p.m.

Travis McMichael, 36, and his father Gregory McMichael, 66, had previously been sentenced to life without the possibility of early release by the state justice of Georgia, where the crime was committed.

The federal judge officiating at this second trial sentenced the two men to life for “racist crime” and refused their request to be transferred to a federal prison for the remainder of their sentence.

On February 23, 2020, Ahmaud Arbery, 25, was jogging in Brunswick, a coastal town in Georgia, when he was chased by the two men accompanied by a neighbor, armed and aboard two pick-ups. After a few minutes of chase, Travis McMichael had shot the young African-American.


PHOTO LEWIS M. LEVINE, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wanda Cooper-Jones, right, mother of Ahmaud Arbery, with the Reverend Jesse Jackson by her side, speaks to the media following the sentencing of Travis McMichael in federal court in Brunswick, Ga., Monday, August 8, 2022.

Ahmaud Arbery then became an emblem of the Black Lives Matter movement during the major anti-racist protests of 2020.

The third defendant, William Bryan, who participated in the pursuit of Ahmaud Arbery by filming it, had been sentenced at the first trial to life with the possibility of early release after 30 years in prison. His sentence at the federal trial has not yet been pronounced.


ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES

This photo shows, from left, Travis McMichael, William “Roddie” Bryan and Gregory McMichael during their first trial at the Glynn County Courthouse in Brunswick, Georgia.

This second trial, unlike the first, placed the racist dimension of the murder at the heart of the debates.

The prosecution had notably listed the particularly violent racist insults uttered by the three men in the past, in order to account for the state of mind of the defendants when they embarked on the pursuit of Ahmaud Arbery.


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