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Georgia House votes to repeal Civil War-era citizen's arrest law a year after Ahmaud Arbery killed

Bodycam footage sheds light on Ahmaud Arbery killing
Video appears to contradict suspect's account in Ahmaud Arbery shooting death 01:59

The Georgia House of Representatives voted unanimously on Monday to repeal a citizen's arrest law predating the Civil War, acting little more than a year after the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man pursued by armed White men. The House voted 173-0 for House Bill 479 after a debate weighted with Georgia's white supremacist history.

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Rep. Bert Reeves (R-Marietta), left, and Rep. Al Williams (D-Midway) embrace after the passage of HB 479, which would reform citizen arrest laws, Monday evening, March 8, 2021. Ben Gray / AP

The unanimous vote left supporters elated. Republican Gov. Brian Kemp has endorsed the bill, which now goes to the Senate for more debate.

"We have an opportunity to honor Ahmaud by shifting the narrative and making the statement that the state of Georgia is committed to the just and fair treatment of every one of its citizens," said Rep. Gloria Frazier, a Democrat.

Since 1863, Georgia's written law has allowed a private citizen to make an arrest if a crime is committed in the person's presence "or within their immediate knowledge."

Advocates say the law is steeped in racism and slavery and was used to round up suspected escaped slaves and then as a justification for the lynching of African Americans.

"There were decades of lynchings that took place in Georgia where this law was used as part of that justification," said the bill's sponsor, Republican Bert Reeves of the Atlanta suburb of Marietta.

The vote is a bookend to an effort last year that gave Georgia a new hate crimes law, more than 15 years after the state Supreme Court overturned the state's first attempt. The pressure for the hate crimes law became overwhelming last year amid a public outcry over Arbery's fatal shooting, a confrontation recorded on video.

Arbery, 25, was fatally shot while running through a mostly white neighborhood near Brunswick near the Georgia coast in February 2020.

The father and son who armed themselves and pursued Arbery - Greg and Travis McMichael - weren't arrested or charged until more than two months after the shooting. The first outside prosecutor assigned to the case cited Georgia's citizen arrest law in a letter to police in arguing the shooting was justified.

The McMichaels' lawyers have said they pursued Arbery suspecting he was a burglar, after security cameras had previously recorded him entering a home under construction. They said Travis McMichael shot Arbery while fearing for his life as they grappled over a shotgun. The McMichaels were charged with murder.

Video of the fatal encounter was taken by William "Roddie" Bryan, a neighbor who joined the chase and also was later charged with murder.

Prosecutors have said Arbery stole nothing and was merely out jogging when the McMichaels and Bryan chased him. They remain jailed without bond.

In December, a judge outlined his reasons for denying bond to the McMichaels, saying the video in the case "showed the lengths the defendants would take to track down and restrain another person."

Last month, Arbery's mother filed a lawsuit alleging an attempt by police and prosecutors to "cover up" her son's murder. 

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Ahmoud Arbery, who was shot and killed in the neighborhood of Brunswick, Georgia, in February 2020. CBS News

Under the bill, people who are mere bystanders or witnesses generally would not have the right to detain people. Deadly force couldn't be used to detain someone unless it's in self-protection, protecting a home, or preventing a forcible felony. The changes would retain Georgia's "stand your ground" law that says a person isn't required to retreat.

It would still allow store employees to detain people they believe stole something, let restaurant employees detain people who try to leave without paying for a meal, let licensed security guards and private detectives detain people, and let weight inspectors detain people.

Under the measure, if a police officer or sheriff's deputy doesn't arrive within a reasonable time, someone who is detained must be released along with their personal belongings.

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