8 potential jurors advance in trial in Ahmaud Arbery's death - Los Angeles Times
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8 potential jurors advance in selection for trial in killing of Ahmaud Arbery

People walk up courthouse steps.
Ahmaud Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery Sr., center, heads into the Glynn County Courthouse in Brunswick, Ga., with his attorney Benjamin Crump on Monday.
(Lewis M. Levine / Associated Press)
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A judge found eight potential jurors qualified to advance Tuesday following intense questioning aimed at finding an impartial jury for the trial of three white men charged with chasing and killing Ahmaud Arbery, whose slaying last year sparked a national outcry.

Father and son Greg and Travis McMichael and a neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, are charged with murder and other crimes in the killing of Arbery, a 25-year-old Black man, after a cellphone video of the Feb. 23, 2020, shooting was posted online two months later.

“We can’t do this without you,” Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley told the eight jury pool members, the first to advance after being questioned individually by attorneys on what they know about Arbery’s death, how many times they watched the video and whether they think the shooting was motivated by racism.

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Dozens more in the jury pool will need to be cleared before a final panel of 12 jurors and four alternates can be seated. Tuesday marked the second day of jury selection, which court officials say could take more than two weeks before the trial can begin.

Jury duty notices were mailed to 1,000 people in coastal Glynn County, with 600 ordered to report Monday and the remainder on deck for next week if needed. The huge jury pool underscores how Arbery’s slaying dominated the news, social media feeds and workplace chatter in the coastal community of roughly 85,000 residents.

The eight people deemed qualified to serve won’t necessarily be seated on the jury. They just weren’t among those considered to have hardened opinions on the case, or with hardships that made jury service an unfair burden. Prosecutors and the defense will take turns striking qualified pool members in order to arrive at the final jury.

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Two of those qualified Tuesday said they know some of the defendants. One said his father is a longtime prosecutor who worked with Greg McMichael before the defendant retired as an investigator for the local district attorney shortly before Arbery was killed.

“He’s a friend of my father’s and he’s been over to our house multiple times,” the man said.

The other said her husband and father-in-law know Bryan.

A woman who said she knows Arbery’s father, Marcus Arbery Sr., was dismissed.

Before he was fatally shot, Ahmaud Arbery’s life was at a crossroads, with his troubles largely behind him.

May 26, 2020

The judge expressed frustration over the slow pace. His initial schedule had called for attorneys to question two groups of potential jurors of 20 people each. But he sent the second group home Tuesday afternoon, with more than half of the morning panel still waiting to be questioned.

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“I do not have the ability to just store people or keep them longer than planned,” the judge said, adding later: “At the rate we’re going, all these plans we have to move these panels through are not going to work.”

The court has not identified the race of any of the prospective jurors.

Prosecutors say Arbery was jogging on the street two miles from his home when the McMichaels grabbed guns and chased him in a pickup truck. Bryan joined the pursuit in his truck and recorded the cellphone video of Travis McMichael shooting Arbery three times at close range with a shotgun.

Defense attorneys contend that the three men committed no crime. Greg McMichael told police they believed Arbery was a burglar after security cameras previously recorded him entering a nearby home under construction. He said Travis McMichael fired in self-defense after Arbery punched him and tried to grab his weapon.

Prosecutors say there is no evidence that Arbery, who was unarmed, committed any crime.

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