“We don’t want any more Black pastors” at Arbery murder trial, lawyer says

“We don’t want any more Black pastors” at Arbery murder trial, lawyer says

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Jurors in the trial of three white men charged in Ahmaud Arbery’s killing watched security camera videos Thursday that show other people entering a home under construction in the months before the 25-year-old Black man was chased and gunned down after running from the site.  Meanwhile, one of the defendant’s attorneys told the judge that he doesn’t want “any more Black pastors” in the courtroom after the Rev. Al Sharpton sat with the slain man’s family on Wednesday.

Attorney Kevin Gough, who represents William “Roddie” Bryan, brought up the presence of Sharpton in the courtroom to the judge.

“If their pastor’s Al Sharpton right now, that’s fine. But then that’s it. We don’t want any more Black pastors coming in here … sitting with the victim’s family, trying to influence a jury in this case,” Gough said.

Sharpton, who held the hands of Arbery’s parents while leading a prayer for justice on Wednesday, has criticized the disproportionately white makeup of the jury.

The comment by Gough drew sharp criticism from Sharpton, who said  his attendance was “not disruptive in any way” and was “at the invitation of the family.”

 “The arrogant insensitivity of attorney Kevin Gough in asking a judge to bar me or any minister of the family’s choice underscores the disregard for the value of the human life lost and the grieving of a family in need (of) spiritual and community support,” Sharpton said.

The judge indicated he was “not going to blanketly exclude members of the public from this courtroom.”

Family attorney Benjamin Crump, right, speaks as Marcus Arbery, second from right, his former wife Wanda Cooper, left, and the Rev. Al Sharpton listen outside the Glynn County courthouse, Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. Sharpton led a prayer and spoke out against injustice.

Lewis M. Levine / AP

Also on Thursday, the jury saw two white boys with bicycles walk into the open garage to drag away plywood. They watched a clip of a white man and woman strolling into the home at night, the man carrying a small bag in one hand.

And jurors saw Arbery himself wandering between the home’s exposed beams and along its backyard boat dock on five different occasions between Oct. 25, 2019, and Feb. 23, 2020 – the last time mere minutes before he was shot dead in the street on a Sunday afternoon.

Greg McMichael, 65, and his son Travis McMichael, 35, armed themselves and pursued Arbery in a pickup truck after he ran past their yard, five doors down from the unfinished house with no doors or windows. Bryan, who was a neighbor, joined the chase and recorded cellphone video of Travis McMichael shooting Arbery three times at close range.

The three men are standing trial on murder and other charges at the Glynn County courthouse in coastal Georgia, where Arbery’s killing broadened a national outcry over racial injustice. The McMichaels told police they suspected Arbery was a burglar, and Travis McMichael shot him in self-defense after Arbery attacked with his fists.

Prosecutors say there’s no evidence of Arbery committing crimes in the men’s neighborhood to justify a pursuit by armed men.

On Thursday, the jury heard prerecorded testimony from Larry English, who had installed security cameras inside the home he was building on the McMichaels’ street. English said he put cameras behind the house after learning children had been playing on his dock. He added more out front and inside when he discovered fishing gear and a cooler missing from a boat in the home’s large garage.

“Was it common in your experience as a general contractor to have people coming in and out of construction sites?” prosecutor Paul Camarillo asked English, who agreed to be questioned under oath by attorneys on Sept. 24.

“Frequently during the daytime,” said English, noting neighbors and even other contractors often are curious to see inside homes in progress.

He said two boys had taken plywood from the site, but he didn’t mind because they took scraps and used them to build a bike ramp.

Jurors watched video of English’s testimony after his attorney objected to him taking the witness stand in person, saying he has an illness that would put him at serious risk if he contracted COVID-19.

The trial began Nov. 5 following more than two weeks of jury selection. Proceedings are expected to continue at least through next week.

English was building his retirement home just outside the port city of Brunswick, about 90 miles from his current home in rural Coffee County. The security system he installed would alert his cellphone and show him video whenever motion triggered the cameras.

Arbery first shows up on Oct. 25, 2019, walking along the boat dock. He’s got nothing in his hands and seems to ignore a toolbox and English’s boat. Still, English called 911.

“I’ve got a trespasser there,” English said in the 911 audio played in court. He said the trespasser was a Black man with curly hair. “He’s tattooed down both arms. He’s plundering around.”

English told Camarillo the man was gone by the time police arrived. He said he’d hoped that “maybe they would find him and talk to him, tell him not to be there anymore.”

Arbery showed up again on English’s property Nov. 18, 2019 – the night after a White man and woman were recorded entering the garage. English called 911 both nights.

On the night of Dec. 17, 2019, Arbery can be seen in a T-shirt and shorts walking out of the structure and then jogging down the road. He appeared on camera two more times, the night of Feb. 11, 2020, and then a final time 12 days later on the afternoon he was killed.

The deadly chase began after Arbery ran from the home while a different neighbor across the street was on the phone with police.

“Was anything ever taken from the structure itself, from the construction site itself?” Camarillo asked.

“Not that I know of,” English replied.

English also told the prosecutor he barely knew the McMichaels and had never met Bryan. He testified he’d never asked any of them to keep an eye on his property.

Robert Rubin, an attorney for Travis McMichael, pressed English on his concerns that Arbery kept coming into his unfinished house at night.

“You don’t know what this guy’s doing in the neighborhood, right? You don’t recognize him. You don’t know why he’s in a dark house at night,” Rubin said. He added: “It doesn’t feel good to have this guy lurking around.”

English agreed he wanted Arbery to stop entering his house but insisted that was all.

“Did you wish any harm on him?” asked Camarillo, the prosecutor.

English replied: “No.”

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