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Life sentences for Georgia father, son for murder of Black jogger

Booking photos released by the Glynn County Sheriff's Office of (from L) William Bryan, Gregory McMichael and his son, Travis McMichael. ©AFP

Washington (AFP) - A Georgia man and his father convicted of federal hate crimes for the murder of a Black man who was shot dead while jogging were sentenced to life in prison on Monday.

Travis McMichael, 36, and his father, Gregory McMichael, 66, are already serving life sentences after being found guilty in a state trial for the 2020 murder of Ahmaud Arbery.

US District Judge Lisa Godbey Wood sentenced both men to life in prison on separate hate crimes charges and denied their requests that they be allowed to serve out their sentences in a federal prison instead of a state facility.

The McMichaels, who are white, chased Arbery in a pickup truck on February 23, 2020 as he jogged through their neighborhood near the town of Brunswick, Georgia.

Travis McMichael confronted the 25-year-old Arbery as he passed by their truck and shot and killed him.

The racially-charged case added fuel to nationwide protests over police killings of African Americans sparked initially by the murder in May 2020 of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

A third man who was involved in the chase, William Bryan, who had a less direct role in the murder and cooperated with investigators, was given life with the possibility of parole on the state charges.

He received a sentence of 35 years in prison on the federal charges.

During the federal hate crimes trial, prosecutors recounted the three men's alleged use of vulgar racial slurs and history of racism.

"The Justice Department's prosecution of this case and the court's sentences today make clear that hate crimes have no place in our country," Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement.

"Protecting civil rights and combatting white supremacist violence was a founding purpose of the Justice Department, and one that we will continue to pursue with the urgency it demands."

FBI director Christopher Wray said that hate crimes strike "at the very heart of our society."

"This is why combatting hate crimes and protecting civil rights are top priorities for the FBI," he said in the statement.

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