GA - Ahmaud Arbery, 25, Brunswick, 23 Feb 2020 *MEDIA, MAPS &TIMELINE *NO DISCUSSION*

The Attorney General is concerned that the actions of these offices in possibly misrepresenting or failing to disclose information during the process of appointing a conflict prosecutor to investigate the death of Ahmaud Arbery may have constituted unprofessional conduct under O.C.G.A. § 45-11-4 or other crimes...
In this case, Mr. Arbery was shot and killed in Glynn County, in the Brunswick Judicial Circuit, on February 23, 2020. Four days later, on February 27, 2020, the Attorney General’s Office received a letter from Jackie Johnson, the District Attorney of the Brunswick Judicial Circuit, advising that she had a conflict and that she was requesting the appointment of another prosecutor. Ms. Johnson wrote that the reason for the conflict was because the investigation into Mr. Arbery’s death involved Greg McMichael, a former investigator with her office. Shortly after receipt of Ms. Johnson’s letter, this office was made aware that Ms. Johnson had contacted George Barnhill, District Attorney of the Waycross Judicial Circuit, and that he had agreed to accept the case. This office confirmed with Mr. Barnhill and, pursuant to O.C.G.A. § 15-18-5, this office appointed Mr. Barnhill to prosecute the case on the same date Ms. Johnson’s letter was received.
Not long after Mr. Barnhill’s appointment, he and Ms. Johnson learned that Mr. Barnhill’s son, an assistant district attorney in Ms. Johnson’s office, had worked with Mr. McMichael on a prosecution involving Mr. Arbery. Mr. Barnhill, however, held onto the case for several more weeks after making this discovery. On April 7, 2020, the Attorney General received correspondence from Mr. Barnhill advising of a conflict and requesting the appointment of another prosecutor. Mr. Barnhill cited his son’s involvement with Mr. McMichael and Mr. Arbery as a reason for his request.
Mr. Barnhill’s letter failed to disclose his involvement in this case prior to his appointment. In her conflict letter of February 27, 2020, Ms. Johnson had advised that the Glynn County Police Department was “currently investigating” the shooting death of Mr. Arbery, and that she was requesting new counsel to advise the police. Unknown and undisclosed to the Attorney General, however, Mr. Barnhill had already provided an opinion to the Glynn County Police Department on February 24, 2020, that he did not see grounds for the arrest of any of the individuals involved in Mr. Arbery’s death. He additionally stated his opinion to the Glynn County Police Department in writing that there was insufficient probable cause to make any arrests in the case and that he would be asking the Attorney General to appoint another prosecutor.
GBI Receives Request from AG Carr to Conduct Investigation into Handling of Ahmaud Arbery Case
 
Breaking down Georgia’s Citizen’s Arrest Law

[...]

Georgia’s Citizen’s Arrest Law allows people to arrest anyone that they’ve witnessed committing a crime in their presence or has immediate knowledge of the crime, but attorneys around the state say that wasn’t the case in Ahmaud Arbery’s death.

[...]
 
Fox54 news posted the initial court appearance:

Please note:
Travis McMichael is read the charges against him at the beginning of the video and then there is a long pause until -4:07 when Gregory McMichael appears on the Court video. The remainder of the video is unrelated to this case.

 
"As first reported by TMZ and the Associated Press Monday, the autopsy was conducted Feb. 24, the day after Arbery’s death, and found that he died from the two shotgun wounds to his chest.

One of the chest wounds was from left to right, the other appeared to have traveled upward, according to the report.

Blood tests for drugs and alcohol in Arbery’s system came back negative."
Autopsy finds Ahmaud Arbery was hit by 3 shotgun blasts
 
Sarah Gerwig-Moore, associate dean for academic affairs at Mercer University School of Law, said the video shows the men "boxing" in Arbery, which, taken with the evidence of them grabbing firearms beforehand, could help carry the murder charge.
In Georgia, Gerwig-Moore explained, there are not "degrees" in murder charges. A prosecutor would need to prove that the killing occurred with malice, "either express or implied," or while committing another felony.
The prosecution could argue the way the McMichaels "organized" and "coordinated" the shooting by trying to stop Arbery in the middle of the road could classify as implied malice, Gerwig-Moore said, as Georgia law does not require the same stringent level of premeditation required in some other states. Killing someone, regardless of intention, while committing another felony can also be grounds for a murder charge in Georgia, Gerwig-Moore said.

A struggle over the gun does not establish self defense," Gerwig-Moore said. The McMichaels brought the guns into the incident, and she said they initiated the encounter by first approaching Arbery with the firearms.
"He tried to disarm them really because that was his only hope of survival," Gerwig-Moore said. "In a fight or flight scenario, he chose to fight for his life."
Ahmaud Arbery shooting video: Legal experts explain key frames
 
News4Jax submitted a records request to the Waycross District Attorney, in response Barnhill said “It would be highly improper under Georgia Law, Rules of Court, and Bar rules for us to issue any comments. Everyone needs to let the criminal justice system work. When it’s done all the evidence will be released.”

What we know about the deadly shooting of Ahmaud Arbery
 
In a strongly worded statement over the weekend, the National District Attorneys Association took particular issue with George Barnhill’s issuing a detailed letter exonerating the McMichaels on April 3 after he had concluded that he had a conflict of interest in the case. The association has 5,500 members and represents two-thirds of state and local prosecutors’ offices.

“We must strongly disagree with District Attorney George Barnhill’s decision to share his opinion of whether Greg and Travis McMichael should be arrested after he decided to recuse himself from the case,” the association said.

US district attorneys condemn recused prosecutor in Ahmaud Arbery case
 
Father and son 'had a confrontation with Ahmaud Arbery two weeks before he was shot' | Daily Mail Online
--
Father and son accused of killing Ahmaud Arbery 'are isolated away from other prisoners' | Daily Mail Online

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Now neighbor Diego Perez says the two men had already approached their victim on February 11, after spotting him at the same construction site Arbery is thought to have looked round on the day of his death.

Perez told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution: 'Travis saw him in the yard and Travis stopped. He confronted (the man) halfway into the yard. He said (the man) reached for his waistband, and Travis got spooked and went down the road.'

Travis is said to have returned with his father, who was armed and who had called the local police.

-------------
From the Daily Mail's source article at Atlanta J-C:

Diego Perez accompanied Gregory McMichael, 64, and his son Travis McMichael, 34, on the Feb. 11 search and was at the shooting scene immediately after Arbery was shot on Feb. 23. Perez said he recognized Arbery as the man they had confronted earlier.

[SNIP]

The Feb. 11 encounter had been prompted by a motion-sensor security camera video in the construction site that had pinged the property owner who was two hours away. The owner, Larry English, texted the video to Perez, who lived near the construction site.

Perez, who has spoken to the GBI, had offered to keep watch, and told English he’d be happy to check on the property any time. English told the AJC that he did not know the McMichaels or provide them with any camera footage. Nothing was taken from his property, he said.
Suspects in Arbery shooting had earlier neighborhood confrontation
 
Laura and Frank Hogue, a husband and wife criminal defense team based in Macon, said they have been hired to represent 64-year-old Gregory McMichael.

"So often the public accepts a narrative-driven by an incomplete set of facts, one that vilifies a good person, based on a rush to judgment, which has happened in this case," Laura Hogue said in a statement Thursday.

"We agree with the attorneys for Travis McMichael that the justice system affords all citizens the presumption of innocence and that there shouldn't be a rush to judgment or stereotyping," attorneys for Arbery's parents said in an emailed statement. "We only wish that their client, Travis McMichael, had provided that same presumption of innocence to Ahmaud Arbery before chasing and killing him."

Men accused in Ahmaud Arbery shooting hire attorneys
 
In February 2019, the Georgia Peace Officer Standards and Training Council (POST) issued McMichael a suspension order for "failure to maintain training for the year 2018." At that point McMichael lost his powers of arrest.

In a "Memorandum of Understanding" signed by McMichael, his boss at the time, District Attorney Jackie Johnson, wrote that McMichael "will not engage in any activity that would be construed as being law enforcement in nature," and, "To that end, Mr. McMichael will not carry a firearm or badge, nor will he operate any vehicle in the motor pool outfitted with lights, siren or police radio equipment."
Gregory McMichael, ex-police officer charged with killing Ahmaud Arbery, had service weapon suspended in 2019
 
The 25-year-old was shot and killed while running through a Satilla Shores neighborhood south of Brunswick just after 1 p.m. on Feb. 23, 2020. His death went largely unreported for two months.
April 30 - Black man running through Glynn County neighborhood shot, killed
May 5 - Grand jury review recommended as video emerges of fatal shooting
May 6 - Calls for criminal charges mount in shooting of black jogger | 2½ months after black jogger shot and killed, GBI joins investigation | Victim's mother won't watch video
May 7 - Father, son charged with murder in shooting of Ahmaud Arbey | Why attorney released cellphone video of shooting | Prosecutor saw ‘no grounds for arrest’ before passing on investigation
May 8 - GBI finds probable cause for arrests within 36 hours | Attorney says citizen’s arrest law shouldn’t apply | Outrage over delayed arrests | Commissioner says DA blocked arrests of father, son | Memorial run for murdered jogger on what would have been his 26th birthday
May 9 - More video footage in case draws different opinions
May 10 - GBI arrests suspect for threat to demonstrations | Group pays respects to Ahmaud Arbery
May 11 - Special prosecutor appointed in murder case | Federal prosecutors weigh hate crime charges | Man who recorded Arbery shooting receiving threats, attorney says |
Not 1st time Glynn County law enforcment hesitated to arrest one of its own
May 12 - Lawmakers call for governor to suspend 2 district attorneys | ‘We must get all the facts’: Georgia AG says of prosecutor investigation | Witness: ‘No crime’ occurred at his construction site | Defendant worked as DA investigator for years without arrest powers
May 13 - Note left at Ahmaud Arbery memorial site: ‘I should have stopped them’ | 911 call, text hint at confrontation days before shooting | Arbery case puts spotlight on community's race legacy
May 14 - Glynn County men accused in killing hire attorneys | Artist painting mural of Ahmaud Arbery on Brunswick building
VIEWER DISCRETION ADVISED: Full cellphone video of the shooting and confrontation
911 CALLS: Greg McMichael reports man running | Man seen in at construction site
COURT DOCUMENTS: Glynn County police homicide report | Arbery autopsy report |
Arrest affidavits for Travis and Gregory McMichael
RECUSAL LETTERS: Brunswick DA Jackie Johnson | Waycross DA George Barnhill

Defense team says facts will exonerate former DA investigator accused of killing Ahmaud Arbery
 
The sister of the man charged with gunning down Ahmaud Arbery said she posted pictures of the unarmed black jogger’s dead body online because she is “a true-crime fan,” according to a new report.

Lindsay McMichael, 30, admitted posting an unedited image of a blood-soaked Arbery lying on the street in Brunswick, Georgia, on Snapchat, but said she meant no harm,
the Sun reported Monday.

“I had no nefarious or malicious intent when I posted that picture,” she told the outlet. “The thing is I’m a huge fan of true crime — I listen to four or five podcasts a week — I’m constantly watching that sort of thing.”

“It was more of a, ‘Holy s–t, I can’t believe this has happened,'” she added. “It was absolutely poor judgment.”

However, a lawyer for Arbery’s family called the image “deeply disturbing.”

“The picture Lindsay McMichael posted was very disturbing and very disturbing to the family,” attorney S. Lee Merritt told the Sun. “It actually fits the pattern of the McMichael family engaging in a weird, violent form of voyeurism.”

https://nypost.com/2020/05/18/siste...utm_campaign=SocialFlow&utm_medium=SocialFlow
 
Holmes is a native of Valdosta and graduated from the University of Georgia, where she earned dual bachelor's degrees in both psychology and criminal justice. She then attended law school at the Baltimore School of Law in Maryland. She is the the first African American to serve as Cobb County District Attorney.

Holmes is also a board member of both the Cobb Community Foundation and MUST Ministries.

"She’s an extremely gifted person that has excelled at every opportunity that she’s been given, and yet she just conveys this amazing humility and grace that just embodies who she is,” MUST Ministries CEO Ike Reighard told the Marietta Daily Journal earlier this year.

Who Is Joyette Holmes, The New Prosecutor In The Ahmaud Arbery Case?

About the District Attorney | Cobb County Georgia
 

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