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Jury starts deliberations in trial of three men charged in Ahmaud Arbery’s killing

Defendant Travis McMichael looks on during his trial with William "Roddie" Bryan, and Gregory McMichael, all charged with the February 2020 death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery, at the Glynn County Courthouse in Brunswick, Ga., Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2021. (Octavio Jones/Pool Photo via AP)

BRUNSWICK, Ga. — The fates of three men charged with the death of Ahmaud Arbery are in the hands of a Glynn County jury after the prosecution made its closing arguments Tuesday.

According to pool reports, deliberation will continue Friday and Saturday if necessary. Members of the jury will decide how long they will deliberate on any given day, including whether they recess early on Wednesday before Thanksgiving.

Greg McMichael, his son Travis McMichael and their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan confronted 25-year-old Arbery as he jogged through the streets of a Brunswick-area neighborhood in February 2020. The three men, who are white, chased Arbery, who was Black, in two pickup trucks for several minutes before shooting him. All three face multiple felony charges including murder, aggravated assault, and false imprisonment, and could receive life sentences if found guilty.

Arbery’s death gained national attention after Bryan released a video of the killing, which he believed would be exculpatory. Others drew a vastly different conclusion from the footage, and Arbery became one of the faces of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020, with supporters arguing the three defendants targeted him because of his race. Protesters gathered outside the courthouse throughout the trial bearing signs and chanting slogans like “No justice, no peace.”

Defendant Gregory McMichael looks on during his trial and of William “Roddie” Bryan and Travis McMichael, charged with the February 2020 death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery, at the Glynn County Courthouse in Brunswick, Ga., Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2021. (Octavio Jones/Pool Photo via AP)

Well-known Black pastors including Rev. Al Sharpton were present at the trial, spurring one of the defense lawyers to complain that the clergy could intimidate jurors. Judge Timothy Walmsley said Tuesday he was confident the jurors could not hear the protesters from inside the courthouse.

The defense team previously argued that Travis McMichael was afraid for his life before he pulled the trigger on his shotgun and that the trio was reacting to reports of Arbery earlier walking through the construction site of a house in the neighborhood. They said they were attempting a citizen’s arrest, which they say was allowed under state law at the time.

Gregory McMichael previously worked in law enforcement, including as an investigator for the district attorney’s office in Brunswick. Former district attorney Jackie Johnson initially cited the state’s citizen’s arrest law as justification for not arresting the McMichaels. She was later indicted for her handling of the case, which is now being prosecuted by the Cobb County District Attorney’s Office.

Lawmakers overhauled Georgia’s citizen’s arrest law, which had ties to the practice of rounding up runaway slaves during the antebellum period, earlier this year following the negative publicity surrounding Arbery’s case. The state Legislature also passed a hate crimes bill following Arbery’s death, and whichever way the Glynn County jury’s verdict falls, the men will face additional federal hate crimes charges.

In her final statement to the jury, Cobb County Assistant District Attorney Linda Dunikoski dismissed claims that the men were justified in attempting to perform a citizen’s arrest on Arbery under the old law, arguing that they would only be entitled to do so if he had committed a crime in their presence or if they had immediate knowledge of a crime he committed.

She read from what she said was a statement Gregory McMichael made to police:

“(Officer:) ‘Did this guy break into a house today?’ (McMichael:) ‘That’s just it, I don’t know. That’s what I told what’s-her-name out there. I said, Listen, you might want to go knock on doors down there because this guy just done something because he was fleeing from — I don’t know, he might have gone in somebody’s house,’” she read. “You can’t make a citizen’s arrest because someone’s running down the street and you have no idea what crime they have committed that day. You can’t hold somebody so the police do show up and go, ‘Well, he must have done something. Why don’t you police officers go figure out what it was that he went and did today.’ But that’s what Greg McMichael told the police.”

William “Roddie” Bryan’s defense attorney Kevin Gough presents a closing statements to the jury during the trial of he and Travis McMichael, and his father, Gregory McMichael, at the Glynn County Courthouse, Monday, Nov. 22, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. The three men are charged with the February 2020 slaying of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool)

Dunikoski also sought to dismantle the defendant’s claims they were acting in self-defense, feeling threatened by the unarmed Arbery.

Such a claim is not valid if the defendants were the ones who instigated the confrontation, Dunikoski said.

“In this case, they committed four different felonies, including aggravated assault with a shotgun,” she said. “They started it. They do not get to claim self defense. And then of course, provocation. You can’t force someone to defend themselves against you so you get to claim self defense. This isn’t the Wild West.”

Dunikoski urged the jurors to find all three men guilty of Arbery’s murder even though Travis McMichael fired the fatal shots, comparing them to a team of bank robbers that includes a lookout and a getaway driver. Under Georgia law, all of them would be party to the crime even if they never entered the bank, she said.

“Of course, you’re saying, but Linda, only one person had their finger on the trigger in this case, and that was Travis McMichael, so how do we find Greg McMichael and William “Roddie” Bryan guilty of malice murder?” she said. “Under the law in Georgia, it’s as if they were all holding the gun together. And in this example, the guy who never got out of the car, who was the getaway driver, is just as guilty. In this example, the guy who got out of the car and stood at the front of the bank is just as guilty. Party to a crime.”

Walmsley told jurors they could find Bryan guilty of reckless driving rather than aggravated assault in connection with using his truck to try to stop Arbery, a misdemeanor rather than a felony.

Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski presents a closing argument to the jury during the trial of Travis McMichael, his father, Gregory McMichael, and William “Roddie” Bryan, at the Glynn County Courthouse, Monday, Nov. 22, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. The three men charged with the February 2020 slaying of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool)

Dunikoski showed jurors gruesome photos from the scene, which spurred Arbery’s father to leave the courtroom and his mother to cry out, according to pool reports.

She ended her presentation with a photo of a smiling Arbery juxtaposed with a close-up of his face after his death.

“They know exactly what they did, and they know why they did it,” she said. “It’s not a mystery to them. When you come back with your guilty verdict, all you’re doing is telling them we know what you did too, and we’re going to hold you responsible for it. Because guess what you did? You turned this young man into that young man. That’s what you did, for absolutely no good reason at all.”

GEFA provides solar energy funding for Habersham aquatic center

(NowHabersham.com)

The Georgia Environmental Finance Authority (GEFA) has awarded Habersham County $175,815 to install solar panels at the Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center. If the Habersham County Commission accepts the award, solar energy could become the power source for the aquatic center.

Interim County Manager Alicia Vaughn applied for the GEFA award at the end of September, and the authority announced on Nov. 16 that they would cover 75 percent of the costs of solar panels and battery storage at the aquatic center. The estimated total of the project is $234,420.

“The county is excited to receive this opportunity to install a green energy source at our aquatic center,” Vaughn says. The award comes from GEFA’s Solar Resiliency Technical Assistance Program, which helps government entities afford solar power technology for critical infrastructure.

Aside from being a location for swimming and recreation, the Habersham County Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center serves as a Red Cross Shelter Facility, voting precinct, public safety training location, heath department vaccination site and overflow courthouse jury trial location.

Solar power technology at the aquatic center will help the facility stay operational during inclement weather. The facility has lost power during bad weather before, but with solar power infrastructure, losing power will be far less likely. Batteries would hold power reserves from collected solar power and would keep the facility running.

The technology could also save taxpayers money— the Habersham County Parks and Recreation Department spends about $140,000 on power annually according to Habersham County Public Information Officer Carolyn Gibson. That power bill includes the power for the aquatic center as well as lighting for county parks.

“This GEFA program will allow the county to significantly lower the utility bills generated by our Ruby Fulbright Aquatic Center,” Vaughn says. “Our staff continues to seek grant opportunities which lower the burden on the county’s general fund, and in turn allows the county to maintain a low property tax rate for our citizens.”

The Habersham County Board of Commissioners will vote on whether or not they will move forward with the GEFA award and solar panels at their next meeting, which is scheduled for Dec. 20, 2021.

Vacant gas station in Clarkesville demolished

The old building at 159 Grant Street, next to the Copper Pot in Clarkesville, has been demolished. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The old gas station on Grant Street in Clarkesville next to the Copper Pot has been demolished.

Friday, Nov. 19, the property owner had the building torn down. Located at 159 Grant Street, the building has sat vacant for years. Now, the lot where it used to be is empty.

The 1,162 square foot structure sold back in March for $268,500, according to the online real estate marketplace company Zillow.

According to Clarkesville Zoning Administrator Caleb Gaines, the property owner, Marcus Stonecipher, had the 1961 structure demolished.

The old gas station sat at the corner of Historic US 441 and GA 197 North for 60 years. (Google Street View)

Now Habersham has reached out to Stonecipher about his plans for the property but he has not responded to our request for comment.

“The owner hasn’t submitted any official plans yet, but the lot will be cleaned up and that corner will look a whole lot better,” Gaines says.

This article has been updated with additional information

Area fire professionals share Thanksgiving safety tips

(NowHabersham.com)

As Thanksgiving Day approaches and people head to their kitchens to whip up the biggest meal of the year, area fire professionals are encouraging Georgians to make sure they’re cooking in a safe environment and limiting the risk of residential fires this Thanksgiving.

Habersham County Emergency Services Director Chad Black says he’s responded to many Thanksgiving Day fires, all of which were related to cooking. He says two Thanksgiving Day fires he’s responded to ended with homes being “almost completely destroyed.”

Black says to make sure you prepare ahead of time for cooking— have a working fire extinguisher, smoke detector and carbon monoxide detector at home. He says to also be sure your oven and stove are clean before cooking; remove grease and food buildup from surfaces that will get hot to reduce the risk of a kitchen fire.

While cooking, Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner John F. King tells Georgians to wear clothes with tight-fitting sleeves to avoid clothing fires and keep towels and rags away from cooking areas.

Black says you should never leave anything cooking unattended. Even if something is in a smoker, or in the oven on low heat, you should not leave home and it should be checked on regularly. If you have something cooking on the stovetop, don’t leave the kitchen, and make sure handles on pots and pans are turned inward to prevent accidents and keep children from grabbing them.

One of the most dangerous Thanksgiving practices involves deep-frying turkey. King and Black both warn Georgians to follow deep-frying instructions closely, and to never deep-fry a frozen turkey.

 

“Keep [deep-frying] at a minimum of 10 feet away from the house and on flat ground, not the deck or front/back porch,” Black says. “Never leave [the turkey] unattended, and wear eye protection for oil splatter. Completely thaw the turkey and don’t overfill fryer oil, [and] follow manufacturers guidelines to a ‘T!'”

Fire safety during the holidays doesn’t end in the kitchen, though. Black says that if you’re lighting candles at home, make sure there’s a 1-foot diameter around the candle free of other flammable items.

“I am immensely thankful for our firefighters and first responders,” Commissioner King says in a Thanksgiving safety press release. “However, we’d prefer if Georgians didn’t have to call on these emergency officials this Thanksgiving, so please follow these simple fire safety tips as you prepare your family feast.”

Habersham’s academic bowl racks up wins, builds community

The HCHS Varsity Academic Bowl team faces off against Banks County. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The Habersham County Academic Bowl teams are racking up wins with an impressive season, competing in-person for the first time in over a year. They may not be the Raiders that initially come to mind when you think about the Habersham Schools competitive teams, but the academic bowl has been taking names since their comeback two years ago.

While academic bowl has long existed at Habersham Central High School, over the past two years, faculty sponsors Hannah Blalock, Preston Kitchings, Caroline McFarlin and Kathy Miller have helped the academic bowl grow to a new level long-time teachers haven’t seen before.

The academic bowl is divided into two teams, the Habersham County Junior Varsity Academic Bowl, comprised of students from the Habersham County Ninth Grade Academy and HCHS sophomores, and the Habersham County Varsity Academic Bowl, made up of HCHS juniors and seniors.

So far in the season, the JV team remains undefeated, and varsity holds two wins and one loss. Last year, the JV team scored enough wins to compete at the national level.

HCHS Sophomore Elijah King, who serves as captain of the Habersham Junior Varsity Academic Bowl, catches up on current events with the rest of his team. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

“Knowing that every one of these students [is] intelligent— it’s nice to have all our strengths come together, almost like a machine,” JV Academic Bowl Captain Elijah King says. “. . . Where there’s some weakness, other people have the strengths in order to make up for those.”

While competing against area schools and developing a game plan is part of the fun, it isn’t the only part the students love. The academic bowl students call themselves “nerds,” and while some of the students haven’t always felt like they belonged at HCHS, the academic bowl has given them a place to thrive.

“I always felt like I was an outsider,” Varisty Academic Bowl Secretary Jose Macias says. He says that while HCHS cares about academics, before joining academic bowl, he felt like the school didn’t appreciate their achievements like they did athletics. “Us nerds, as we call [ourselves,] we would never have an official team to come together and show our academics and face other schools in a way that athletics always [have].”

He says with the academic bowl, the team is able to show off their skills and the knowledge they’ve gained in the classroom, and also feel the school pride and friendly competition their athletic counterparts get to experience.

“We have a good football team here, but we also have good minds that work together to compete against other schools,” Macias says. “We can also be supported in a way that athletics has been perceived to be supported by the general [Habersham] population.”

Jose Macias (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

The sense of pride and engaging in competition brings these students together as teammates, and the relationships they’ve built along the way have given them a greater sense of belonging.

“It’s [academic bowl] really supportive,” King says. “It just works with us all being in this group and in an environment where we all can do something well. It almost forges a stronger bond between the students.”

As they make friends in the club that support them in their academics and in their lives, members of both the JV and varsity teams share that the academic bowl community has been a valuable part of their high school experience.

“Overall academic bowl is an experience,” Macias says. “And for us nerds, it’s a way that we can bond and change our lives for the better.”

Boil water advisory lifted for Mt. Airy residents

The Town of Mt. Airy’s boil water advisory has been lifted. The town’s test of their water came back free of contaminates on the afternoon of Nov. 23, 2021.

The boil water advisory was put in place Friday, Nov. 19 for anyone who lost water that morning due to a water main break on Dicks Hill Parkway.

The water main break on Dicks Hill Parkway resulted in approximately 200,000 to 250,000 gallons of water loss, according to Mt. Airy Town Manager and Police Chief Tim Jarrell.

The leak has since been repaired.

Habersham County volunteers to put on free Thanksgiving meal

Community members gathered at the Cornelia Community House to go over a game plan for Thursday's free meal event. (Hadley Cottingham/Now Habersham)

Habersham County citizens are putting on a free Thanksgiving dinner at Cornelia Community House on Thursday, where anyone who would like a hot meal is welcome to come by and get a meal for themselves and their family members.

The free dinner isn’t put together by an organization, it’s a group of Habersham County citizens who come together to donate their time, skills and resources to make sure everyone in their area has a hot meal for Thanksgiving. Cornelia Fire Cheif Billy Joe Jenkins helps organize the volunteers and raise funds, but it’s a group of more than 20 that run the show along with him on Thanksgiving day.

Cornelia Fire Chief Billy Jenkins, alongside a group of volunteers, is organizing a free Thanksgiving day meal for anyone who would like one.This is Jenkins’ fourth time organizing the event.

“I would like for this event to be a really uplifting [event] for people in the community,” Jenkins says. “Whether they don’t have means of getting to have a decent meal, or whether they have a decent meal and they still want to be part of something bigger, my wish is for folks to be able to know that we just want to give food away, and show them that we care.”

Not only will they serve everyone that comes by for a free meal, they plan to cook dinner for 150 women at the Lee Arrendale Transitional Center and deliver to people in White County who would like a Thanksgiving meal.

The event costs about $1,200 to $1,500 to put on, but community members and businesses help offset those costs and help the organizers get everything they need to put the event on.

Wolf Creek Barbeque has offered to smoke all 35 turkeys for the event, which Walmart put aside to make sure the organizers would have enough turkeys to feed everyone who came by for a meal. A community member offered to make tea for the meals at the restaurant she works at. Local chicken distributor Fieldale made a donation to make sure meals would include desserts. Some community members are even cooking for the 500 meals they plan to serve.

“I’ve always had a saying, ‘we don’t look down on anyone, we help them up,’ and that has really been stuck on my heart, not to put anyone down,” Jenkins says. “We have a population of homeless [people] here. […] They are still human, they still mean a lot to us, we just want to be able to reach out and serve them.”

If you would like to reserve a plate ahead of time, would like one delivered to you or have any questions, call or text Cheif Jenkins at (706) 499-0120.

Lawton Galloway

Lawton Galloway, 90, resident of Clayton Georgia, passed away on November 20th, 2021.

He was born in Rabun County Ga and was the son of Fred Ray Galloway Sr. and Annie Mae Speed Galloway.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife Shirley Kilby Galloway; Four brothers, Floyd Galloway, Carl Galloway, William Maynard Galloway, Fred Ray Galloway; and two sisters, Lucy Cannon, Dorothy Ezell.

Lawton is survived by three daughters, Shirl Gabrels, Reneta “Skeet” Hollifield (Ed Hollifield) both of Clayton, Georgia, and Valerie Loudermilk (Carl Loudermilk) of Demorest, Georgia. One sister Verena Burnette and a brother Burnell Galloway. He is also survived by five grandchildren, nineteen great-grandchildren, and seven great-great-grandchildren.

Lawton was a retired foreman from Rabun County Metal Products. He was a member of Battle Branch Baptist Church for many years. He loved gardening and spending lots of time with his family.

The family will receive friends at Battle Branch Baptist Church on Saturday, November 27th at 2:00 pm with a memorial service to follow at 3:00 pm with Pastor Madison McCrackin Officiating.

In lieu of flowers memorials can be made to Battle Branch Baptist Church P.O. Box 483 Clayton, Ga., 30525.Hunter Funeral in Charge of arrangements.

Announcement courtesy of Hillside Memorial Chapel, Clarkesville, Georgia. (706) 754-6256

Redistricting special session ends with approval of congressional map

ATLANTA — The Georgia House passed the new congressional map along party lines 96-68. It now joins the state’s legislative map awaiting Gov. Brian Kemp’s signature.

While the Senate approved the map on Friday, the House Legislative and Congressional Reapportionment Committee held its final hearing on Saturday, setting the stage for today’s debate before the vote.

Democratic lawmakers slammed Republicans for rushing the process and weakening minority voting power by dividing Cobb County into four districts. Republican U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene’s 14th District now dips down from the Georgia-Tennessee line to include Austell and Powder Springs in south Cobb County.

U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath, a Democrat, is now in a district that goes from northeast Cobb County and stretches north into Dawson County and other Republican strongholds.

Rep. Matt Wilson (D- Brookhaven)

“What you did was intentionally target incumbent women and women of color to dilute their power and silence their voices, “ said Rep. Matt Wilson (D- Brookhaven).

Republicans defended the map as part of a large, complicated puzzle with shifts in population growth.

The 2020 census showed Georgia’s growth came in urban areas, while rural parts lost residents.

Rep. Jan Jones (R-Milton), Speaker Pro-Tempore, told fellow lawmakers the 6th District was connected to areas with decreased population.

“The districts touching it (6th District) could not escape, and those not touching it required changes that it and all other districts could not escape,” Jones said on the House floor.

Democrats expect to challenge the maps in court based on issues such as the speed of the process and the state’s changing demographics.

“Georgia has changed; a million people moved into Georgia in the last 10 years,” Rep. James Beverly, House Minority Leader. “Large people of color moved into certain regions.”

House Speaker David Ralston believes the map will withstand legal challenges.

 

Georgia House Speaker David Ralston (R-Blue Ridge)

“I’m assuming that there will be lawsuits galore, quickly,” Ralston told reporters after the vote. “That’s fine. There were (lawsuits) the last time, and they were all dismissed.”

Shortly after the map passed, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported McBath will run in the 7th District against fellow Democrat Rep. Carolyn Bordeaux. Also announcing she’ll seek the 7th District seat was Democratic state Rep. Donna McLeod of Lawrenceville.

The General Assembly swings back into action for the 2022 session on Jan. 10.

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

Prosecutor says Arbery targeted for being ‘Black man running down the street’

Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski presents a closing argument to the jury during the trial of Travis McMichael, his father, Gregory McMichael, and William "Roddie" Bryan, at the Glynn County Courthouse, Monday, Nov. 22, 2021, in Brunswick, Ga. The three men charged with the February 2020 slaying of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool)

BRUNSWICK, Ga. (GA Recorder) – The lead prosecutor in Monday’s closing arguments accused the three white defendants of chasing Ahmaud Arbery because he was Black, a decision that led to his shooting death on a Brunswick-area street Sunday afternoon in 2020.

The Glynn County murder trial is set to resume Tuesday with the state’s prosecutors expected to present a two-hour rebuttal following a day where the attorneys for father and son Greg and Travis McMichaels repeated claims of self-defense while making a lawful citizen’s arrest. Meanwhile, their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan’s attorney, distanced Bryan from the McMichaels’ decisions to bring their guns with them as they chased Arbery in their pickup trucks.

In her closing statement, Cobb County senior assistant district attorney Linda Dunikoski pressed that Arbery’s race as a factor for the defendants after spotting a “Black man running down the street” of the Brunswick neighborhood on Feb. 23, 2020.

Until Monday, references to the racial tensions that pervade the case were largely kept out of the courtroom save for requests by Bryan’s attorney to bar Black pastors from comforting the Arbery family in the courtroom.

Travis McMichael testified last week that a neighbor tipped his father off about seeing Arbery in the Satilla Shores neighborhood after Arbery had previously been on a home construction site several times. The McMichaels say the neighborhood had been on edge about property crimes going back to 2019.

Dunikoski countered that after five minutes of being chased and cornered by the McMichaels and Bryan, Arbery’s only offenses that caused his pursuit were being a “looky-loo” several times at the home that was under construction and being Black.

McMichaels and Bryan reacted based on speculation instead of immediate knowledge that Arbery committed a crime that might have justified an attempted citizen’s arrest.

“They shot and killed him, not because he was a threat to them, but because he wouldn’t stop and talk to them,” she said.

Jason Sheffield, Travis McMichaels’ attorney, denied that Arbery was targeted due to his race. He also referred to the McMichaels questioning a homeless white man about whether he was involved in burglaries within the subdivision.

Defense attorneys argued Monday that enough evidence existed to suggest that Arbery was not just trespassing at the construction site on neighbor Larry English’s property, but could reasonably be suspected of burglary.

Arbery was not linked to any property crime in the neighborhood.

“We can all sit here right now and say what the state has said from the very beginning and what Travis himself recognizes: If he had only stayed home that day. If he just sat on the couch and fallen asleep with his kid that day,” Sheffield said. “Travis told you there’s not a day that goes by that he doesn’t think that exact same thing. But the law allows a citizen to make a citizens’ arrest.”

Russell Covey, a Georgia State University criminal law professor, said it’s been obvious that race is front and center leading up to and throughout the trial.

Bryan’s cell phone video showing the last moments of Arbery’s life ratcheted up national calls for justice after it depicted the shooting of an unarmed Black man in a racially divided coastal Georgia community. In response to the outrage, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation took over a case where initial prosecutors agreed a citizen’s arrest was justification.

The jury makeup has been criticized for only having one Black member in a case where race permeates the proceedings, even as Gough declared during selection he didn’t believe the case was about race.

Even after the state trial is over, the McMichaels and Bryan are due to stand trial in federal court on Feb. 7 on charges of murder and attempted kidnapping as well as a federal hate crime statute.

“It’s the ghost that’s been haunting this trial,” Covey said. “I can’t imagine that anybody could spend five minutes in this courtroom and not be aware that race is not an issue here.”

Greg McMichael’s attorney Laura Hogue said Arbery is not a victim, but rather a 25-year-old who made bad decisions that led to him showing up to Satilla Shores wearing shorts and “no socks to cover his long, dirty toenails.”

Hogue drew those gritty details from a medical examiner’s testimony earlier in the trial.

There can be little doubt that Arbery knew why the McMichaels were trying to detain him after being spotted by a neighbor near the open unsecured construction site, she said.

“A beautiful teenager with a broad smile and a crooked baseball cap can go astray,” Hogue said. “He can deteriorate and lose his way and years later he can begin creeping into a home that is not his own and running away instead of facing the consequences.”

Dunikoski denied that Arbery posed a threat. According to the McMichaels attorneys, Arbery would not have been shot if he had gone a different direction at the end of the chase.

A central question for the jury is whether the McMichael’s claims of self-defense during their confrontation with Arbery are justified.

“Three on one, two pickup trucks, two guns,” Dunikoski said. “Mr. Arbery, nothing in his pockets, not a cell phone, not a gun, not even an ID. They want you to believe that he was a danger to them.”

If you are the initial unjustified aggressor, you don’t get to claim self defense, she said.

“If you’re committing a felony against somebody you don’t get to claim self defense,” Dunikoski said.

Meanwhile, Bryan’s attorney also sought to distance his client from the McMichaels by saying Bryan did not know the McMichaels were carrying guns until the chase was ending.

William “Roddie” Bryan, right, sits with his attorneys before the start of closing arguments to the jury. (AP Photo/Stephen B. Morton, Pool) 

It was mere seconds before the shooting that Bryan realized McMichaels were armed, and he cooperated with police, including letting them know he recorded the pursuit, attorney Kevin Gough said during his closing Monday.

The prosecution has painted Bryan as a willing participant in trying to corner and run Arbery off the road during the chase, saying he repeatedly bumped him with his pickup truck during the chase.

“Had Roddie Bryan stayed in bed today, if Roddie Bryan had stayed on his front porch, would Ahmaud Arbery be alive today?” Gough asked. “And the state’s theory, and I’m not saying it’s the case, but if the theory is these men, vigilantes harbouring some ill-will, what difference does it make if Mr. Bryan is there? Mr. Arbery can’t outrun bullets.”

The closing arguments come after the state called about two dozen witnesses to the stand, including multiple police officers and investigators who interacted with the McMichaels and Bryan.

Indians, Lady Indians cruise to wins in Thanksgiving tournament

With TFS out for the Thanksgiving break, the Indians and Lady Indians were in action Monday evening at the Andy Landers Basketball Tournament. Facing off with the Purple Hurricanes, the girls blew past Monroe Area. Meanwhile, the boys earned an easy win over Monsignor Donovan Catholic school.

GIRLS

Charlie Cody (photo by Austin Poffenberger)

The Lady Indians rebounded with a 72-44 win over Monroe Area. TFS went up 20-9 in the first, and led 39-20 at the half. The lead grew to 26 points going into the final quarter.

The scoring distribution was as good as its been this season. Denika Lightbourne and Veronaye Charlton both had 17 points apiece, and Kailyn Neal followed with 13. Haygen James had 8 points, Molly Mitchell had 7, and Macy Murdock and Breelyn Wood both had 4 points. Allie Phasavang rounded out the scoring with 2 points.

The girls are now 2-2 on the season.

BOYS

The Indians also ran away in a blowout win, taking their fourth straight win to open the season. The boys won 63-39 over Monsignor Donovan. Anfernee Hanna continued his impressive season with a team-high 16 points. Charlie Cody followed with 13 points in the win.

The boys are 4-0 to open the 2021-22 season.

Habersham Senior Center needs Meals on Wheels volunteers

(Habersham County Senior Center/Facebook)

The Habersham County Senior Center is strapped for volunteers for their Meals on Wheels program, which provides food to senior citizens who cannot go out and get the food they need on their own.

According to Habersham County Meals on Wheels Program Specialist Teri Lewis, the program lost around 20 volunteers last year due to fear of contracting COVID-19, but Lewis assures potential volunteers that Meals on Wheels has COVID-19 safety precautions in place to protect volunteers and senior citizens.

Habersham County’s Meals on Wheels program currently delivers to 160 people and distributes more than 3,500 meals monthly, with six daily delivery routes plus two additional frozen meal delivery routes on Mondays and Tuesdays.

Lewis says that without Meals on Wheels, the seniors they serve would “very much suffer from lack of nutrition and contact with people.”

“Many of our clients have no family in the area, so we are often the only people they see,” Lewis says. “We are helping folks to be able to stay in their home, versus going to a nursing home that is very expensive.”

People who volunteer with Meals on Wheels can volunteer as little or as much as they’d like, and Lewis says a usual route only takes about one hour to an hour and a half to complete.

Meals on Wheels isn’t just providing food and friendship to seniors, volunteers with the program can also help seniors get access to the resources they need.

“In addition to the nutrition we are providing, we are doing a wellness check and resource referral for those that might need it,” Lewis says. Those resources range from heating assistance to legal help.

The program needs more helping hands; volunteers are essential to keep the program running. During the holiday season, where many citizens are looking at joining volunteer organizations and donating their time to help others, Habersham County’s Meals on Wheels program could use that help.

“People like to give back to their community and feel that they help make a difference locally,” Lewis says. “As our population ages with boomers retiring we expect to see more need in the future.”

Anyone over 18 years old who wants to get involved with Meals on Wheels should contact the Habersham County Senior Center at (706) 839-0260 and ask to speak with the volunteer coordinator. Volunteers will be required to undergo a background check and fingerprinting, which costs $47.50— the fee is optional for volunteers to pay.

Volunteers will use their own vehicle and gasoline to complete deliveries and can partake in orientation and a practice run for their route.

“Without them [volunteers], there would be no Meals on Wheels program,” Lewis says. “They are vital to our service and we are grateful to those willing to serve.”

If you are 65 or older, live in Habersham County and are in need of assistance, you are eligible for Meals on Wheels.