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Joy and relief for Black America after guilty verdict in Ahmaud Arbery killing

Joy and relief for Black America after guilty verdict in Ahmaud Arbery killing
About 100 supporters of Ahmaud Arbery's family and Black activists broke into elated cheers and whoops outside the Georgia courthouse on Wednesday as the judge read the first verdict: "Guilty."

About 100 supporters of Ahmaud Arbery's family and Black activists broke into elated cheers and whoops outside the Georgia courthouse on Wednesday as the judge read the first verdict: "Guilty."

Marcus Arbery, father of Ahmaud Arbery, attorney Ben Crump, Rev. Al Sharpton, Wanda Cooper-Jones, mother of address members of the media following guilty verdicts for the defendants in the trial of the killers of Ahmaud Arbery on November 24, 2021

Marcus Arbery, father of Ahmaud Arbery, addresses members of the media following guilty verdicts for the defendants in the trial of the killers of Ahmaud Arbery. Photo: AFP

Time after time, with each pronouncement of guilt, the crowd cried "Yes!" and "Guilty!".

Many of them had gathered outside the Brunswick, Georgia, courthouse day after day as the two-week trial of three white men charged with killing Arbery unfolded. All three were convicted on Wednesday of murdering the 25-year-old Black man, who was on a Sunday afternoon run through a mostly white neighborhood.

Listening to an audio feed of the court on a loud speaker, 53-year-old Loretta Wallace, danced and clapped on the sidewalk in response to the verdicts, smiling from ear to ear. "Thank you, Jesus. God answered all our prayers." the nurse's aide said.

Afterwards, the joyful crowd began a call and response chant: "Say his name," answered by "Ahmaud Arbery" over and over.

35-year-old Travis McMichael who shot Arbery, his 65-year-old father Greg McMichael, and their neighbor William "Roddie" Bryan claimed they thought Arbery was a neighborhood burglar. The jury rejected the argument of self defense.

Cornell Harvey, the longtime mayor of Brunswick, said he was relieved by the guilty verdicts. He had worried about the possibility of street violence if the trial ended in acquittals.

"This is now a time of jubilation, not tribulation," he said.

Sharon Blue Lee, a retired teacher and president of the local National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said the verdicts brought a measure of justice to the community.

"If anyone has any doubts that justice can be given to a Black man in America, let them look here. But this country has a lot of work to bring justice for all."

- Reuters

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