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Biden slams Arbery shooting as 'grave injustice,' demands investigation

Ahmaud Arbery, 25, was shot dead in February in Brunswick, Georgia, after two white men chased him, believing he was a burglar.
Joe Biden; Ahmaud Arbery.
Joe Biden; Ahmaud Arbery.AP; Family photo

Joe Biden, the apparent Democratic presidential nominee, on Thursday addressed the brutal attack of black man in Georgia, who was chased and gunned down by two white men, saying the incident amounted to a lynching “before our very eyes” and demanding a “transparent investigation.”

Biden, in his first public comments about the shooting of Ahmaud Arbery, called the attack a “grave injustice that claimed a life” and “that resonates in so many ways across threads of our history into the present day.”

No arrests have been made in Arbery’s shooting.

“By now many of us have seen that harrowing footage of Ahmaud Arbery out on a jog on a beautiful day in February in Florida, in Georgia, shot down in cold blood, essentially lynched before our very eyes, 2020 style,” Biden said during a virtual roundtable in Jacksonville, Fla., with local African-American lawmakers.

“This family and the country deserves justice and they deserve it now. They deserve a transparent investigation of this brutal murder. But our nation deserves it as well. We need to reckon with this, this goes on. These vicious acts call to mind the darkest chapters of our history,” Biden said.

Arbery, 25, was shot to death in Brunswick, a coastal city about midway between Savannah and Jacksonville, Florida, on Feb. 23 as he was running through the Satilla Shores neighborhood.

Police have identified the two men who chased him as Gregory McMichael, 64, and his son, Travis McMichael, 34, of Brunswick. Neither has been arrested or charged and the investigation is ongoing. The McMichaels told authorities they suspected Arbery might be a burglar after several break-ins in their neighborhood. Arbery’s family has said he was simply jogging through the neighborhood.

President Donald Trump also offered his condolences to Arbery's family on Thursday, but said he had not seen the video of the shooting.

"My heart goes out to the parents and the loved ones of the young gentleman. I will be getting a full report this evening," Trump told reporters at the White House.

Biden said the attack was part of a “rising pandemic of hate” and said he’d “work tirelessly” as president to put in place measures that would allow the U.S. be a nation in which “African American mothers and fathers should feel confident that their children are safe walking on the streets.”

Numerous lawmakers, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have called for an investigation into the shooting.

Both Republican U.S. Senate candidates in Georgia have also called for an investigation.