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Black woman prosecutor appointed to the Ahmaud Arbery murder case

The death of Ahmaud Arbery has taken the nation by storm. Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr has named Cobb County District Attorney Joyette Holmes as the new lead prosecutor in the case of Ahmaud Arbery.

Holmes becomes the fourth prosecutor to handle the case of the young black man who was killed while jogging on Feb. 23 in Glynn County, Georgia. She is the first African American to serve as a district attorney in Cobb County.

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In a press release, Attorney General Chris Carr announced that he formally appointed District Attorney Joyette M. Holmes of the Cobb County Judicial Circuit to lead the prosecution of Gregory and Travis McMichael who have been charged with aggravated assault and the murder of Ahmaud Arbery.

“I appreciate District Attorney Tom Durden’s involvement in the Ahmaud Arbery case,” said Attorney General Chris Carr. “This case has grown in size and magnitude since he accepted the appointment on April 13, 2020, and as an experienced District Attorney, Tom has recognized that another office is better suited from a resource perspective to now handle the case. As a result, he has requested our office to appoint another District Attorney.

“Today, our office formally appointed District Attorney Joyette M. Holmes of the Cobb County Judicial Circuit to lead the prosecution. District Attorney Holmes is a respected attorney with experience, both as a lawyer and a judge, and the Cobb County District Attorney’s office has the resources, personnel and experience to lead this prosecution and ensure justice is done.”

Retired district attorney investigator Gregory McMichael, 64, and his son Travis McMichael, 34, were arrested last week for the February shooting death of 25-year-old Arbery. The father and son are facing charges of murder and aggravated assault.


Three African American men who spent more than 100 years combined in prison, were awarded $18 million from the city of Cleveland for wrongful murder convictions in 1975.

Ahmaud Arbery (Photo provided by family members)

According to the Moguldom Nation, Rickey Jackson, Wiley Bridgeman and his brother Kwame Ajamu agreed to the settlement after 12 hours of negotiations. Under the settlement, all three men will receive payments through April 2023 and federal lawsuits filed by all three men will be dropped.

According to Friedman and Gilbert, the law firm representing the two brothers, the settlement was the largest in the state’s history awarded over police misconduct.

The three men, now in their 60s, were convicted of murder in 1975 for shooting money-order collector Harold Franks. The men maintained their innocence even while imprisoned and were finally cleared in 2014.

Jackson, who served 39 years before he was released, said the money doesn’t come close to the time he lost in prison. Ajamu agreed.

“Money cannot buy freedom and money certainly does not make innocence,” Ajamu told reporters after agreeing to the settlement.

Jackson will receive $7.2 million and Bridgeman and Ajamu will split the rest, according to Jackson’s lawyer Elizabeth Wang.


Image credit Kettani Law Firm, Acquisition International

“No amount of money can compensate them for what they went through,” Wang told reporters.

A jury found Jackson, Bridgeman, and Ajamu (then known as Ronnie Bridgeman) guilty of murdering Franks and the trio was also convicted of trying to kill store owner Anna Robinson.

All three men were sentenced to death, but the sentences were reduced to life in 1978 when the state enacted a short-lived moratorium on the death penalty. At the time of the conviction, the three were just 17, 20, and 18 years old.

In 2014, almost 40 years later, Edward Vernon, the eyewitness, who was 12 years old at the time, said city detectives pressured him to lie on the witness stand. Vernon said the police threatened to jail his parents and that police manipulated him.

The men were set to begin their trials in July, suing the city of Cleveland and the detectives who investigated the case. The federal lawsuit suits named three Cleveland police detectives and a sergeant and the estates of another sergeant and three other detectives who have since died.

The same scenario occurred in Baltimore last year.

Three Baltimore men were exonerated in November 2019 after a wrongful conviction put them behind bars for 36 years in prison for a crime they didn’t commit. The men received $2.9 million in a settlement finalized in March.

Source: Black Enterprise

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