Atlanta mayor: Ahmaud Arbery’s death is a result of Trump’s rhetoric giving ‘permission’ to racists

Atlanta mayor claims Ahmaud Arbery’s death is a result of Donald Trump’s rhetoric giving ‘permission’ to those ‘prone to being racist’

  • Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms put partial blame on Donald Trump for his rhetoric leading to Ahmaud Arbery’s death
  • ‘The rhetoric that we hear coming out of the White House in many ways, I think many who are prone to being racist are given permission to do it,’ she said 
  • Arbery was shot and killed in Georgia in February by two white men who say they believed he was a burglary suspect 
  • A video of the incident was widely circulated on social media this week 

The mayor of Atlanta said Sunday that Donald Trump’s comments have emboldened those ‘prone to being racist,’ leading to an unarmed black man’s death in February.

‘The rhetoric that we hear coming out of the White House in many ways, I think many who are prone to being racist are given permission to do it in an overt way in a way we wouldn’t [otherwise] see in 2020,’ Keisha Lance Bottoms, a Democrat, told CNN’s State of the Union Sunday morning.

Despite Bottoms assertion, President Donald Trump called the fatal shooting a ‘very disturbing situation’ while speaking with Fox News Friday morning.

‘My heart goes out to the parents and the family and friends,’ Trump said during a call-in interview with his favorite network.

A video of Arbery being shot and killed circulated social media last week and garnered massive media attention as the Georgia District attorney called for the case to be heard by a grand jury – and outrage ensued over a lack of arrest. 

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms put partial blame on Donald Trump for his rhetoric leading to Ahmaud Arbery’s death. ‘The rhetoric that we hear coming out of the White House in many ways, I think many who are prone to being racist are given permission to do it,’ she told CNN

But the father-son duo Gregory, 64, and Travis, 34, McMichael, who are white, were arrested last week, more than three months after Arbery’s death. 

‘I think had we not seen that video I don’t think they would be charged,’ Bottoms told CNN’s Jake Tapper. ‘It’s heartbreaking. It’s 2020 and this was a lynching of an African American man.’

Several celebrities and politicians have called the incident a ‘lynching.’ 

Bottoms asserted that it is up to the Department of Justice to step in if the local legal system fails and ‘make sure people are appropriately prosecuted.’

‘But we don’t have that leadership at the top right now,’ she said of the Trump administration with William Barr at the helm of the DOJ. ‘It’s disheartening. I have four kids, three of whom are African-American boys. They are afraid, they are angry.’ 

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany was asked Friday during her press briefing whether the DOJ would get involved in the case.

She didn’t rule out the possibility, but suggested it was a state matter.

A Justice Department spokesperson, however, told the BBC that the FBI is already assisting with the investigation.

‘As is standard protocol we look forward to working with them should information come to light of a potential federal violation,’ said the statement.



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