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📰 News3 Room: McMichael-McMichael-Bryan/Arbery Death Trial

submitted by Cynabuns to news 2.5 yearsNov 18, 2021 08:37:03 ago (+13/-0)     (www.voat.xyz)

https://www.voat.xyz:2087/talkchat?room=news3

Day 10 trial in the death of Ahmaud Arbery --- live feed begins 9a EST/8a CST


Ahmaud Arbery was shot and killed on Feb. 23, 2020. Cellphone video leaked to the public shows two armed white men in a truck approaching the 25-year-old Black man as he runs down the road. One of the men, later identified as Travis McMichael, and Arbery struggle over McMichael's shotgun before Arbery is shot and collapses.

Travis McMichael, his father Gregory McMichael and William "Roddy" Bryan, who recorded the video, are all charged with murder in Arbery's death.



On-site chat rooms require you to be logged-in to watch & chat (voat.xyz not talk.lol)



Trial footage: https://youtu.be/lfcutjfIoAk (11Alive (Atlanta) channel)


1 comments block


[ - ] Barack_Obama 0 points 2.5 yearsNov 19, 2021 09:05:58 ago (+0/-0)

They are gonna get convicted of murder, full stop. It sucks, I disagree with it, but, Ive read all the state laws and ultimately the state wont accept a self defense claim.


It ultimately boils down to this: because thhe home amhad entered was under construction, it was considered an open domicile. See, what constitutes as breaking and entering has to meet very specific conditions, so for example if someones garage door was open and you walked into their garage, you have not broken into their home. This makes sense, as you havent had to, well, break anything to get in, and the reasoning is that your domicile is considered different from your property, e.g. you couldnt argue someone walking into your back patio as "breaking and entering".


Why does this matter? Well, because Ahmad wasnt technically breaking and entering, and hadnt taken any property from the domicle on that given day (in b4 "but he stole a hammer"!, no, he didnt, if you wanna tell me he did you can show me where in the home security footage that he does. So far Ive had 0 replies to this) and as such, was therefore not in commission of a crime, and therefore the people who approached him did not have a legal right to suspect a crime or to engage in citizens arrest. Thusly, when they approached him with a weapon, they were committing assualt with a deadly weapon, in which case legally Arbery had the right to self defense.


Hopefully this explains some of the legal details for the tards here too lazy to read laws.