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Racial motivation of Arbery’s murderers more explicit when case returns to court

Travis McMichael, Greg McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan are set to stand trial on federal hate crime charges in February after being convicted the day before Thanksgiving in the Glynn County courthouse for the shooting death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP courtroom pool photos)

(GA Recorder) — Criminal law experts predict that when the three men convicted in Georgia state court over Ahmaud Arbery’s shooting death stand trial in February on federal hate crime charges, the way prosecutors attempt to add new convictions is sure to focus more on racism as a motivation than last month’s trial.

Gregory and Travis McMichael, along with their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan, are expected to learn in the coming weeks whether the mandatory life sentences they’re about to serve for the murder of 25-year-old Arbery will come with consideration of parole at some point. But while the state’s case that played out over the course of the monthlong trial in Brunswick captured the nation’s attention, the federal case for hate crime charges will place much more emphasis on whether Arbery’s skin color helped motivate the three white defendants to chase him down in pickup trucks and kill him.

The federal hate crime trial, which includes charges of murder, kidnapping attempts and other violence, is set to begin on Feb. 7 at the Brunswick U.S. District Court Southern District of Georgia courthouse, nearly two years after Arbery was shot at close range.

Unlike the state case, where most of the debate about how much to inject race took place during motion hearings and not in front of the jury, the twelve people chosen to consider charges against the men in the federal courtroom could hear some of the more inflammatory testimony.

The federal judge will likely allow the jury to hear discussion about the images of Travis McMichael’s pickup truck featuring Confederate imagery on the front license plate as part of the old Georgia flag. A Georgia Bureau of Investigation special agent testified at a June 2020 bond hearing that Bryan claimed Travis McMichael yelled an obscenity and racial slur after shooting Arbery.


This image, captured from video, shows the Feb. 23 encounter between Ahmaud Arbery, right, and Travis McMichael in the moments before Arbery was killed.

When Cobb County Assistant District Attorney Linda Dunikoski led the state’s case, her main strategy was to unravel Travis McMichael’s legal defense that he shot Arbery in self-defense when Arbery grabbed his shotgun after being chased for five minutes in the Satilla Shores subdivision, said Mike Lawlor, an associate professor of criminal justice at the University of New Haven.

In the federal trial, the heavily resourced U.S. Department of Justice’sarguments will boil down to whether Arbery was targeted because he was Black, which wasn’t as relevant given the charges in the state’s case, Lawlor said.

“With the federal prosecution not only do they have to prove beyond the reasonable doubt that these guys did what they did, but more importantly they have to prove they were motivated by race and that’s the hardest thing to prove,” Lawlor said. “To me it’s obvious, but you need to prove it beyond reasonable doubt with actual evidence.”

“In the state’s case it really wasn’t that relevant given the charges,” Lawlor said. “And also the state prosecutor was aware that there’s also a federal prosecution that will play out and in that trial, race will be the central focus.”

The attorneys representing the McMichaels and Bryan have said they are planning to appeal the convictions in the state’s case in the coming days.

The McMichaels were convinced they were doing the right thing when they pursued Arbery Feb. 23, 2020, said Travis McMichael’s attorney Jason Sheffield soon after Superior Court Judge Timothy Walmsley announced the guilty verdict.

The day before Thanksgiving, a nearly all-white Glynn County jury found Travis McMichael, who shot Arbery, guilty of all nine counts ranging from malice murder to criminal attempt to commit a felony. His father, Greg McMichael, was convicted on eight of nine counts while Bryan who also chased Arbery in his pickup truck while recording on his phone, was convicted of five of eight charges including three felony murder charges.

“These men are sorry for what happened to Ahmaud Arbery,” Sheffield said outside the courthouse. “They are sorry he is dead. They are sorry for the tragedy that happened because of the choices they made to go out and try to stop him.”

The racial makeup of the jury could also hamper the defense attorneys’ appeals chances since they will be hard-pressed to argue the jury was racially biased, Lawlor said.

About 1,000 juror candidates were summoned to hear the trial that started Oct. 18., with the pool trimmed to one Black person and 11 white people.

The release of Bryan’s cell phone video showing Arbery’s last moments sparked an outcry for justice because it showed the killing of an unarmed Black man in a racially divided coastal Georgia community. In response to the video showing Travis McMichael firing a shotgun into Arbery, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation took over a case where initially a Brunswick district attorney agreed Georgia’s since-revamped citizen’s arrest law justified the McMichaels’ actions.

Arbery’s death later prompted state lawmakers to pass Georgia’s first hate crimes law and then overhaul the state’s citizen’s arrest law.

When the state trial came to a close, Travis McMichael’s testimony took center stage. He described how he followed his training from the U.S. Coast Guard to question Arbery about what he was doing in the neighborhood. Travis McMichael said he wanted to make a citizen’s arrest after spotting Arbery at several locations at a home under construction in a neighborhood on edge about property crime. And he claimed he feared for his life in the moments before he pulled the trigger.

Travis McMichael’s testimony also will be significant in the federal case after the self-defense claim put pressure on him to take the stand in the Superior Court courtroom, said Chad Posick, criminal justice and criminology professor at Georgia Southern University.

“Most of the time (defendants testifying) can only be bad because they can only get themselves into more trouble once they’re cross-examined,” Posick said. “So, it was interesting to see that play out with the prosecutor in the state case.”

Posick said the federal trial may provide an add-on of longer sentences if any of the defendants are eligible for parole from their state convictions.

“I think the federal judge, if they are found to have committed a hate crime, is going to increase the severity of that sentence,” Posick said. “A lot of people always ask me if that’s double jeopardy, like, are they getting tried twice for the same crime? That’s no. You can be charged at the state level and at the federal level, just like you can get charged in criminal court in civil court.”

The convictions mark the culmination of 18 months of Arbery family pressure to deliver justice after Arbery’s killers were spared arrest for weeks after police responded to the bloody street shooting.

It’s likely that the racial motivation of Arbery’s murderers will be brought up during the state’s recommendation for sentencing, where prosecutors could use that to obtain a stiffer sentence, Posick said.

All three could die in prison.

Escapee arrested in Gillsville now back in Hall County Jail

(HCSO)

A Hall County jail inmate who walked away from jail grounds on December 2 is back in custody.

The Hall County Sheriff’s Office Warrant Unit arrested Mike James Wade, 27, of Gainesville, at a residence in Gillsville around 7:15 a.m. Friday, December 3. Deputies picked up Wade in the 3000 block of Laprad Circle in Gillsville and returned him to the Hall County Jail.

Wade was initially jailed on a burglary charge, online records show.

Hall County Jail (Source: Google maps)

“He removed his ankle monitor and left on foot from his court-ordered work release,” says HCSO Lt. Greg Cochran.

Wade now faces additional charges of interference with government property and escape. Deputies also arrested his mother, Susan Wade, 54, and Ashley Huff, 30, and charged them with hindering apprehension.

The incident remains under investigation by the Hall County Sheriff’s Office.

Clarkesville and Baldwin to host Christmas events tonight

(Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

Friday evening, holiday lights will come alive and Christmas magic will fill the air in Baldwin’s Mitchell Gailey Park and Clarkesville’s Downtown Square.

Starting at 5 p.m. in Downtown Clarkesville, take part in one of the city’s favorite traditions at “A Downtown Clarkesville Christmas.” There’s something for everyone to love, from photos with Santa, joining in the downtown cookie crawl, watching the tree lighting and more holiday festivities sure to put you in the Christmas spirit.

But that isn’t the only festive event tonight, the City of Baldwin will have its annual Christmas tree lighting event, too. Beginning at 6 p.m. at Mitchell Gailey Park, there will be hot chocolate and cookies, pictures with Santa, a firepit and s’mores, a Christmas card writing station, carols and more as the city lights their Christmas tree. Make sure to bring the little ones, because Santa plans to read “The Night Before Christmas,” to make the night even more magical.

Don’t forget, tomorrow is Cornelia’s “Christmas in Cornelia” event and Cleveland’s “Christmas in the Mountains” lighted parade.

For more information on area Northeast Georgia Christmas events and parades, click here, and for a list of area Christmas light displays, click here. For area events to put you in a holiday mood, check out Now Habersham’s weekly “Happening in (and around) Habersham,” column.

Santa visits Mt. Airy children during Christmas celebration

Turner Ledford, 4, tells Santa about his Christmas list. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

A small crowd gathered in the Mt. Airy Town Hall on Thursday evening to celebrate the Christmas season with their community, light the tree, enjoy refreshments and await a visit from Santa Claus.

“We’re very pleased with the turnout we had this evening,” City Manager and Police Chief Tim Jarrell said. “We always look forward to an opportunity where we can do things for our citizens, and tonight is one of those.”

Santa’s sled caught a Northern wind and veered him off-track to Mt. Airy, but he made it to the Christmas celebration with the help of his reindeer. Even though he was late, the children were just as excited to see him.

Regan Segars of Cornelia practices taking some steps with dad Michael. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

 

 

 

While Mt. Airy’s Christmas celebration usually includes Christmas carols from a local school or church, this year, those arrangements couldn’t be made. Even without music, this year’s Christmas celebration was special as a community gathered to celebrate the most wonderful time of the year.

This was also the last Christmas season that Mayor Gary Morris would host the Christmas festivities, with his 20-year-long run as mayor coming to an end this month.

Reese Ledford, 6, listens to Mt. Airy Mayor Gary Morris tell stories about the history of the schoolhouse. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“It’s a very mixed-emotions type thing,” Morris said. “I have enjoyed being mayor, we’ve had a lot of good things happen, served a lot of good people and I’m so proud of this school.”

Over his 20 years, one of the endeavors he’s most proud of is his passion project of restoring the old Mt. Airy Schoolhouse to become the town hall. The town held their Christmas celebration there, in the upstairs gym, where the sound of children running and laughing was a welcome sound in the old school’s walls.

“I know that’s special for him [Morris],” Jarrell said. “And because it’s special for him, it makes us as employees feel more festive, [especially] to be able to give this to him.”

The Christmas celebration may be over in Mt. Airy, but there are many more events on the way, such as Baldwin and Clarkesville’s Christmas events on Friday. For a list of lots more area Christmas events, click here.

Crash the dog showed up in his holiday best for the event, meeting and greeting with excited kids. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Hall County Schools offering $25 gift cards at upcoming vaccination clinics

The Hall County School District Nursing Program plans to hold vaccination clinics for the public at two upcoming high school basketball games during the month of December. Stakeholders will be able to receive flu and COVID-19 vaccinations, as well as COVID-19 boosters at the following games:

Tuesday, December 7, 2021, at North Hall High School. 4:30-6:30 PM–North Hall vs. Cherokee Bluff. Clinic held in the “Old Gymnasium.”

Tuesday, December 14, 2021, at East Hall High School. 4:30-6:30 PM—East Hall High vs. Flowery Branch. Clinic held in the ROTC Room of the Fine Arts Building.

COVID-19 Vaccinations and COVID-19 Boosters

Individuals 5 and up may receive a COVID-19 vaccine. Anyone under the age of 18 must have a parent present to be vaccinated. Please present ID and a copy of insurance. Individuals with no insurance will be administered a COVID-19 vaccine free of charge. Those receiving a COVID-19 booster should bring a copy of the COVID-19 vaccine card.

A $25 gift card will be given (on a first-come, first-serve basis while supplies last) to people who receive the COVID-19 vaccine. These gift card incentives have been provided by a grant from the NGCF COVID-19 Relief Fund at the North Georgia Community Foundation.

Flu Vaccinations

Recipients of flu vaccinations will not be eligible to receive a gift card. Anyone under the age of 18 must have a parent present to be vaccinated. Please present ID and a copy of insurance. For those individuals without insurance, there will be a charge of 40 dollars.

For further inquiries, Hall County students and parents should contact their school nurse.

Terry Benjamin Franklin Sr.

Terry Benjamin Franklin Sr., 90, of Woodstock, GA, passed away on November 29, 2021. Formerly of Clarkesville, GA, Terry is preceded in death by his parents, Thomas and Rubye Franklin.

Terry is survived by his wife, Hazel Louise Franklin, Woodstock, GA; his children, Terry (Nina) Franklin Jr., Glendale, AZ, Sally Busch, Clarkesville, GA, Sharon (Rick) Walls, Clarkesville, GA, Melissa (Erik) Johnson, Canton, GA, Kevin (Rhonda) Franklin, Dallas, GA; unofficially adopted sons, Vic Sanders, Austell, GA and Chris “Buffalo” Benson, Port Orange, FL. He is also survived by 8 grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks for donations to Joseph’s Storehouse at Grace Life.

The family will receive visitors at Grace Life Church in Marietta, GA on January 7, 2022, from 10:00 am-11:00 am with the memorial service immediately following at 11:00 am. A private burial will take place at Georgia National Cemetery in Canton, GA.

Cleveland Council interviewing city clerk candidates

The Cleveland City Council is interviewing candidates for city clerk. Council members entered into an executive session Friday morning to conduct the interviews.

Cleveland City Administrator Tom O’Bryant said in an email to local media that current city clerk Connie Tracas will assume the job of city finance officer, following the recent death of Laura Beth Allen.

MORE: Cleveland Council honors longtime finance officer who died

The 55-year-old Allen, who passed away on August 28 from cancer, served as finance officer for 27 years. Tracas has been serving in both positions since Allen’s death. She is due to take over the finance job full-time in January.

5 semifinalists seek first finals

Five Georgia football teams will try to reach state championship games for the first time tonight when 16 semifinals will determine who advances to play next week at Center Parc Stadium.

Hughes and North Oconee are in the semifinals for the first time, and Dacula, Appling County and Metter, though experienced in a final four, have never taken that next step.

One of them is assured a place in the finals after Dacula plays at Hughes in Class 6A. Hughes opened in 2009. Dacula has been around since 1964. The game will be played in College Park at Banneker.

North Oconee, in its 18th season, is playing at No. 1-ranked Benedictine of Savannah in Class 4A.

Appling County’s football history dates to the 1930s with Baxley High, but a victory over Cedar Grove in a Class 3A semifinal at Godfrey Stadium would put the Pirates in their first final.

Metter played its first recorded game in 1925 but is 0-5 in state semifinals. The unbeaten Tigers are at home against No. 2 Brooks County in Class A Public.

Here’s more scoop on the semifinals.

  • Favorites: The teams to beat, and their percent chances of winning it all according to the computer Maxwell Ratings, are Collins Hill in 7A (87%), Buford in 6A (83%), Warner Robins in 5A (51%), Benedictine in 4A (66%), Cedar Grove in 3A (31%), Thomasville in 2A (67%), Trinity Christian in A Private (84%) and Metter (44%). Collins Hill, Trinity Christian and Metter have never football state titles. Thomasville last won in 1988.
  • Defending champs: Seven of eight are still playing. They are Grayson (Class 7A), Buford (6A), Warner Robins (5A), Pierce County (3A), Callaway (2A), Prince Avenue Christian (A Private) and Irwin County (A Public). Only Marist (4A) is out.
  • Surprises: Dacula and Grayson are the only unranked teams among the 32 semifinalists, though both were ranked in preseason. North Oconee and Swainsboro are the only ones not ranked when the season started, but both are ranked now. Swainsboro, which finished 4-7 in 2020, is in the semifinals for the first time since 2000. Cedartown is in the semis for the first time in 20 years. Blessed Trinity and Walton, third-place finishers in their regions, have won three consecutive playoff games on the road, and they’re road-bound again – Walton to Milton in Class 7A and Blessed Trinity to Calhoun in 5A.
  • Winnersvilles: Three cities have two teams in the semifinals. They are Bogart (North Oconee, Prince Avenue Christian), Fairburn (Creekside, Hughes) and Roswell (Blessed Trinity, Fellowship Christian).
  • History maker: Fellowship coach Tim McFarlin is the ninth coach in GHSA history to lead three schools to the semifinals. In his first season at Fellowship Christian, a Class A Private school, McFarlin previously led Roswell and Blessed Trinity.
  • Notable players: Only two of the AJC’s preseason Super 11 are still playing. They are quarterback Sam Horn and wide receiver/cornerback Travis Hunter of Collins Hill. Horn committed to Missouri, Hunter to Florida State. There are lots of other major Division I prospects, though. Among them are Appling County defensive end Darris Smith (committed to Georgia), Cedar Grove wide receiver Janiran Bonner (Georgia Tech), Benedictine quarterback Holden Geriner (Auburn), Walton cornerback Marcus Allen (North Carolina), Buford wide receiver/defensive back Isaiah Bond (recently decommitted from Florida), Cedartown running back/linebacker C.J. Washington (Georgia), Cedar Grove running back Rashod Dubinion (Arkansas) and Hughes running back Antonio Martin (Georgia Tech).
  • Best matchup: Defending Class 5A champion Warner Robins is on the road at No. 5 Creekside. Neither won its region, but Warner Robins eliminated No. 1 Cartersville in the second round, and Creekside has beaten three ranked teams in the playoffs.
  • Next: The 16 winners will advance to the finals Dec. 9-11 at Center Parc Stadium.

Produced by Georgia High School Football Daily. To sign up for GHSF’s free email newsletter click here.

Fulton election workers file defamation suit over continued push of debunked conspiracy theory

Rudy Giuliani talks with Georgia State Sens. Jen Jordan (D-Atlanta) and Elena Parent (D-Atlanta) during a break in a Georgia State Senate hearing Thursday, Dec. 3, 2020, during which Giuliani made numerous false claims of voting fraud in the 2020 presidential election. (Stephen Fowler / GPB News)

Two Fulton County elections workers are suing a popular far-right website that repeatedly spread false accusations that the workers committed mass voter fraud, arguing The Gateway Pundit’s claims led to racist threats and real-world harassment.

The defamation suit, filed in Missouri where the site’s publishers Jim and Joe Hoft reside, says that The Gateway Pundit wrote a series of articles falsely accusing Ruby Freeman and her daughter, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss of altering election results after former President Donald Trump narrowly lost the state in the 2020 election.

Other suits are pending against fellow pro-Trump outlets Newsmax and One America News as well as Fox News for claims made about voting machine vendors and their employees.

Debunked and disproven claims that the duo used “suitcases” of hidden ballots, counted batches of votes multiple times and illegally conducted vote counting in secret at State Farm Arena have served as a cornerstone of Trump supporters’ baseless claim that Georgia’s election was fraudulent and must be overturned and, in particular, that Fulton County’s elections board must be replaced by the state.

“With no concern for the truth or the consequences of their willful conduct, Defendants baselessly portrayed Plaintiffs as traitors who participated in a carefully planned conspiracy to steal the presidential election in Georgia,” the lawsuit reads. “Within 24 hours, the claims had been publicly and definitively refuted by Georgia elections officials through a detailed explanation of what the misinterpreted video actually showed: no suitcases; no illegal ballots; no voter fraud.”

On Dec. 3, 2020, Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani regaled Georgia lawmakers with a false and fanciful tale that Freeman and Moss were akin to drug dealers “passing out dope” and that a selectively edited surveillance video was evidence of fraud.

Elections officials and investigators said that was not the case.

“What the video shows is that they have pulled out plastic bins from underneath the desks,” Fulton elections director Rick Barron said the day after the hearing. “It was normal processing that occurred there, as Gabe Sterling from the state explained this morning.”

Fact-checking website Lead Stories posted an explainer of what the video actually showed, and included statements from officials with the secretary of state’s office calling Giuliani’s claims false.

MORE: Fact-checking Rudy Giuliani’s grandiose claims of election fraud

But other Republicans quickly jumped on the claims as evidence of fraudulent election practices, including Rep. Jody Hice, the Trump-endorsed candidate for secretary of state, who tweeted a video clip from the hearing that showed Freeman and Moss working and called it “F R A U D.”

Trump himself mentioned Freeman’s name more than a dozen times in a secretly recorded phone call where he pressured Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” enough votes to overturn his defeat.

More than two dozen articles on The Gateway Pundit’s website appear when searching Freeman’s name, with headlines like “BREAKING: CROOKED GEORGIA ELECTIONS SUPERVISOR Filmed Pulling Out Suitcases of Ballots from Beneath Table IS IDENTIFIED” that specifically targets the two women and attacks media coverage that explains why their posts are false.

The lawsuit says after elections officials knocked down the claims made by The Gateway Pundit and other pro-Trump media outlets, Jim and Joe Hoft continued to write false stories about the two election workers while knowing that they were not true.

The suit also details harassment the two Black women faced after The Gateway Pundit stories received traction, including at least 400 emails, 75 text messages and countless phone calls. Strangers showed up to their homes, including two occasions where people tried to force their way inside to make a “citizen’s arrest.”

Callers left racist messages and threats of violence, and as recently as last month Freeman says she received an email accusing her of treason with a link to The Gateway Pundit.

Elections officials and workers around the country have faced an onslaught of violence and harassment after the 2020 election, with many opting to retire or quit before the midterms.

 

This article appears on Now Habersham through a news partnership with GPB News.

Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities to host youth COVID vaccine webinar

The Georgia Council on Developmental Disabilities and the Developmental Disabilities Council partners will host a webinar for parents and caregivers with information about the new COVID-19 vaccines for children ages five to 11.

The webinar is scheduled for 6 p.m. on Wednesday, December 8.

GCDD together with its partners are working together to make sure Georgians, especially those with intellectual developmental disabilities, in all communities throughout the state of Georgia have information and access to get vaccinated.

“We’re excited that COVID-19 vaccinations have been approved and are now available for children 5 years old and older. This is another step in protecting our families and community,” says GCDD Covid-19 Vaccination Project Coordinator Naomi Williams. “We understand that while we are excited about this opportunity, there might be parents and caregivers who may have concerns or questions that they’d like addressed before having their child vaccinated.”

The webinar will be accessible through American Sign Language interpretation and closed captioning by a CART transcriptionist.

While the focus of the webinar is parents and caregivers of children living with intellectual and developmental disabilities, anyone who’s interested is welcome to participate, but registration is required.

To register for the December 8 webinar, click here.

New U.S. cases of omicron COVID variant detected in at least four states

(GA Recorder) — At least four states reported U.S. cases of the omicron variant of COVID-19 by late Thursday, with New York reporting multiple infections soon after California, Colorado and Minnesota confirmed the virus’s arrival from overseas.

Minnesota’s governor responded by asking residents to renew their efforts to slow the spread.

“This news is concerning, but it is not a surprise,” Gov. Tim Walz said in a statement. “Minnesotans know what to do to keep each other safe now — get the vaccine, get tested, wear a mask indoors, and get a booster.”

The news comes just a day after reports that the first case in the country was detected in a California resident who had recently returned from South Africa, where the variant was first identified. The California resident was tested for COVID-19 on Sunday after beginning to feel ill on Nov. 25.

Following reports of the new strain, countries across the globe moved quickly to restrict travel from southern Africa but the variant has already been confirmed in nearly two dozen countries.

The Minnesota patient is a Hennepin County resident who had returned from an anime convention in New York City two weeks ago. The man, who was vaccinated, developed mild symptoms on Nov. 22 and tested positive for COVID-19 on Nov. 24. The man’s symptoms have since resolved, according to the Minnesota Department of Health.

The Health Department attributed the quick identification of the variant in Minnesota to the state having “one of the strongest (variant) surveillance programs in the nation.”

The omicron variant, called “a variant of concern,” by the World Health Organization, is believed to be even more infectious than the delta variant.

The variant has likely reached many more states than Minnesota and California, given not every sick person seeks a COVID-19 test and not every COVD-19 test is screened for the omicron variant.

President Joe Biden announced new measures on Thursday in light of the new variant, including tightening testing protocols for inbound international travels, bolstering efforts to get Americans vaccinated and boosted and expanding federal emergency response teams to aid states suffering from outbreaks.

Minnesota has had among the highest rates of infection in the country in recent weeks, baffling experts given the state’s relatively high vaccination rate and prompting Walz to call on the U.S. Department of Defense to assist in treating patients in the state’s beleaguered hospitals.

Georgia Recorder Editor John McCosh contributed to this report.

At-home COVID tests to be covered by insurance—but details still to come

Americans who have been shelling out roughly $25 for a package containing two of the popular Abbott BinaxNOW rapid tests can’t submit receipts for tests they’ve already purchased. (Laura Olson/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (GA Recorder) — State health officials on Thursday welcomed the Biden administration’s plan to require private health insurers to reimburse Americans for the cost of rapid, at-home COVID-19 tests—though the officials also raised questions about whether the process will be burdensome.

Making those tests more accessible will allow Americans to get results quickly and in the privacy of their own homes. That change may encourage more people to swab their nose when they first notice potential symptoms, experts from the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials told reporters.

“In this next phase of the pandemic, rapid access to rapid testing will be key,” said Dr. Nirav Shah, director of Maine’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, adding that it can help to combat potential surges and to pinpoint infections quickly so antiviral treatments can be used.

But several challenges could limit the impact of the cost reduction.

That includes lingering problems with sufficient supplies, uncertainty about the details of the reimbursement process, and questions about any potential effect on the data that’s reaching state and local health departments about infections in their communities.

Official guidance in January

Under the proposal that President Joe Biden announced Thursday, three federal departments — Health and Human Services, Labor and the Treasury — will issue official guidance by Jan. 15 that will detail what exactly private insurers must cover when it comes to rapid COVID-19 tests.

Those insurers already are required to pay for the PCR tests that must be sent to a laboratory for processing and take longer for results.

The upcoming change requiring insurance coverage of rapid, at-home tests, won’t be retroactive. That means Americans who have been shelling out roughly $25 for a package containing two of the popular Abbott BinaxNOW rapid tests can’t submit receipts for tests they’ve already purchased.

Other details of that requirement were unclear Thursday, including if there will be any limitations on the number of at-home tests that must be covered.

While the Biden administration has sought to reduce supply bottlenecks in producing those tests, Shah said some states are still having difficulty acquiring large volumes of the Abbott at-home tests.

 

That brand, which has been found to be highly accurate, has been relied on heavily even as more options have come on the market. Part of that demand comes from familiarity: Those administering tests in large settings have become familiar with their use.

What if you test positive?

Another challenge with increasing the use of at-home tests will be ensuring that individuals know what to do if they test positive.

Michael Fraser, the public health association’s chief executive officer, said state officials have been discussing whether those at-home tests should include an insert to help explain who to call and other next steps, so that contact tracing can occur.

“There is some concern that with the increase in at-home testing, getting those results reported to state health departments might be difficult, because the result doesn’t automatically go to public health authorities,” Fraser said.

However, there won’t be many results to get to state and local health officials if Americans with private insurance balk at fronting the money for tests while they await reimbursement.

Shah said a more accessible model would be to have individuals show their insurance card at a pharmacy as they would when getting a flu shot or picking up a prescription, rather than being charged at the register.

Having to pay for the tests, then wait for repayment, “introduces an access challenge for a lot of folks,” he said.

The Biden administration also plans to boost the number of free at-home tests distributed at community health centers and rural clinics, though those are intended to aid those who are not covered by private insurance.