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Accused Arbery Killers Charged With Federal Hate Crimes

Caption Travis, left, and Gregory McMichael Credit: Glynn County Sheriff's Office

The men charged with killing Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery last year have been charged with a federal hate crime, the Department of Justice announced Wednesday.

A federal grand jury has charged Travis and Gregory McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan with interference with rights and one count of attempted kidnapping.

The indictment alleges that the men, who are white, used force and threats of force to interfere with Arbery’s right to use a public street because of his race.

Arbery was jogging through the white men’s neighborhood in February 2020 when they pursued him in pickup trucks. The McMichaels confronted him, and Travis McMichael shot him.

The McMichaels are also facing new federal weapons charges.

All three men have been charged with murder, assault, and false imprisonment at the state level as well.

Georgia’s hate crime law does not apply to this case because it was passed after Arbery’s death, partly in response to mass protests following the release of video of the shooting.

No trial date has been set in the state case, though hearings are scheduled next month on several motions.

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Emily Jones locally hosts Morning Edition and reports on all things coastal Georgia for GPB’s Savannah bureau. Before coming to GPB, she studied broadcast journalism at the Columbia Journalism School and urban history at Brown University. She’s worked for the Wall Street Journal Radio Network, WHYY in Philadelphia, and WBRU and RIPR in Providence. In addition to anchoring and reporting news at WBRU, Emily hosted the alt-rock station’s Retro Lunch as her DJ alter-ego, Domino.
Emily Jones
Emily Jones locally hosts Morning Edition and reports on all things coastal Georgia for GPB’s Savannah bureau. Before coming to GPB, she studied broadcast journalism at the Columbia Journalism School and urban history at Brown University. She’s worked for the Wall Street Journal Radio Network, WHYY in Philadelphia, and WBRU and RIPR in Providence.