By Rich McKay
(Reuters) – Ahmaud Arbery was a 25-year-old Black man running through a mostly white neighborhood who was out for a Sunday run on Feb. 23, 2020, when he was chased by three white men in two trucks, and shot and killed about two miles (3.2 km) from his mother’s house near Brunswick, Georgia. The men told police they thought he committed a crime and were trying to make a citizen’s arrest.
WHO WAS AHMAUD ARBERY?
Ahmaud Marquez Arbery, 25, was a lifelong resident of the coastal, south Georgia city of Brunswick. He was known as “Maud” or “Quez” to his friends, and was the son of Marcus Arbery Sr. and Wanda Cooper-Jones. He had a big, easy smile and ran every day unless there was a drenching rain, his family said.
Arbery worked long hours at a truck washing company and at his father’s landscaping business. He’d frequently be seen by neighbors lifting weights in his mother’s driveway or playing basketball. He often sang freestyle rap.
FOOTBALL DREAMS
Arbery was a former linebacker for his high school football team, the Brunswick Pirates. Despite lacking the typical heft of a linebacker, his speed and agility on the field made him a local star. He once dreamed of playing for the National Football League, but at 5-foot-10 (1.8 meters) he wasn’t big enough, his family said.
His coach at Brunswick High School, where Arbery graduated in 2012, retired his football jersey, No. 21, in honor of the star player at a ceremony last year.
LEGAL TROUBLES
Arbery had a few brushes with the law, incidents that his family says he was putting behind him.
In 2013, a year after graduating from high school, he went back on campus to attend a basketball game and was found with a pistol in his waistband. He was given five years of probation.
In 2017, he was arrested for attempted shoplifting of a television from a local Walmart. A judge extended the term of his original probation, which he was still serving when he died, court records show.
Defense attorneys wanted to tell the jury about those incidents, but the judge said no, ruling that the defendants could not have known anything about Arbery’s legal troubles or probation status.
FUTURE
Apart from his football dreams, Arbery wanted to become an electrician, following in the footsteps of three of his uncles, his family said.
Right after high school, he attended South Georgia Technical College for about 1-1/2 years but dropped out when money got tight. His aunt, Thea Brooks, said that Arbery had been saving up to continue his studies.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; editing by Jonathan Oatis)