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Atlanta Mayor Says White House ‘Rhetoric’ Encourages Racism Responsible For Ahmaud Arbery’s Death

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Atlanta Mayor Says White House ‘Rhetoric’ Encourages Racism Responsible For Ahmaud Arbery’s Death

TOPLINE

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms blamed the Trump administration, in a Sunday CNN interview, for enabling racist acts like the one that killed Ahmaud Arbery, an unarmed black jogger who was killed by two white men in February in southern Georgia.

KEY FACTS

Ahmaud Arbery was jogging in Brunswick, Georgia on February 23 when two men chased him in a pickup and shot him, allegedly believing he was a neighborhood burglar; when a video of the murder was posted on social media by a local defense lawyer last week, it sparked outrage from politicians, celebrities and the NAACP—and Gregory, 64 and Travis McMichael, 34 were arrested on Thursday as murder suspects.

Bottoms, a Democrat who is reportedly being considered as a running mate for Joe Biden, said that even if local police had not arrested the individuals who killed Arbery, there historically has been the “backstop of our justice department to step in and make sure that people are properly prosecuted. We don’t have that leadership at the top right now…It’s disheartening.

“It’s part of a bigger issue we’re having in this country,” said Bottoms in the interview. “With the rhetoric we’re hearing coming out of the White House, many who are prone to being racist are given permission to do it in an overt way that you would otherwise not see in 2020.”

The mayor said that had the video of Arbery’s death not been released to the public, she believes “they would not be charged.” 

Bottoms was elected mayor in 2018 as a career public servant, serving as a city councilmember and judge before taking charge of Georgia’s most populous city. 

Critical quote

“Leadership at the top needs to care for all of our communities—not just in words, but in deeds as well,” said Bottoms. “It’s 2020 and this was a lynching of an African-American man.”

Key Background

Ahmaud Arbery was jogging on February 23 in Southern Georgia’s Glynn County when he was murdered, according to video evidence. Father and son Gregory and Travis McMichael were arrested on May 7 as suspects on charges of murder and aggravated assault and are being held in Glynn County Jail. The McMichaels said they were acting in self-defense—though the video shows that Arbery was unarmed; an attorney for the Arbery family tweeted, “it took 74 days but Ahmaud Arbery’s killers have finally been arrested!” while another lawyer for the family has called for a federal civil rights investigation

The Glynn County Police department has yet to comment on the delay in arrests on the case, but Gregoy McMichael, who retired last year, served as a Glynn County police officer starting in 1982 before becoming an investigator for the local prosecutor. According to the New York Times, cronyism and conflicts of interest between the McMichaels and the Glynn County Police Department delayed the arrests of the McMichaels. The Times could not reach local police and officials for comment. 

On Friday, the tens of thousands tweeted using the hashtag #IRunWithMaud, going for 2.23-mile runs to protest Arbery’s February 23 death (as traditional protests do not conform with social distance), while celebrating his passion for jogging.

Further Reading

Two Men Charged With Murder Of Ahmaud Arbery In Georgia (Forbes)

Georgia Killing Puts Spotlight on a Police Force’s Troubled History (New York Times)

Investigators Call Evidence in the Ahmaud Arbery Shooting ‘Extremely Upsetting’ (New York Times)

More Arrests Possible In The Killing Of Ahmaud Arbery, Georgia Investigators Say (NPR)

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