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The three men arrested after the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, a young black jogger in the southern United States, were formally indicted on murder charges by a grand jury on Wednesday.
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Arbery, 25, was shot dead on February 23 while running in a residential area of Brunswick, Georgia, which has a long history of segregation.
For more than two months, local police did not make any arrests. It was only when video of the killing went viral on social media at the beginning of May that the investigation began in earnest.
Retired police officer Gregory McMichael, 64, and his son Travis, 34, who were visible on the video, were arrested on May 7.
The man who filmed the killing, William Bryan, 50, was arrested two weeks later.
The indictment was formalized on Wednesday by a grand jury, a group of citizens appointed to weigh how valid a charge is ahead of a trial.
Nine counts, including murder, aggravated assault and false imprisonment were laid against the three men.
They “caused his death by unlawfully chasing him… in pickup trucks and shooting him with a shotgun,” the document said.
'A significant step'
“This confirms what Ahmauds father has been saying for months—that this was a lynching,” Ben Crump, a lawyer for Arberys family, said in a statement Wednesday.
“This is a significant step on the road to justice and while nothing will bring back Ahmaud Arberys life, it is important that a Grand jury recognized his life had value and was wrongly and ruthlessly ended,” he said, calling for a “successful prosecution” and proportionate sentences.
Arberys name has been chanted for weeks all over the Read More – Source
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