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JACKSONVILLE, Fla — Police body camera footage released this week in the Ahmaud Arbery case shows the 25-year-old was still breathing and moving when officers arrived on the scene. Officers did not check for vital signs or render aid for nearly three minutes, though the first officer arrived within seconds of the fatal shooting.
There is no indication Arbery’s life could have been saved even if he had received immediate medical care, due to the severity of his three gunshot wounds.
Arbery was shot to death last February in Brunswick, Ga. His death gained national attention after a cell phone recording showed Arbery running through the Satilla Shores suburb, pursued by three white men in trucks before being killed. The men say they thought he was burglarizing local homes. His family maintains he was jogging.
The newly released bodycam footage shows the first officer on the scene, Glynn County Police Officer R. Minshew, activating his body-worn camera as he steps out of his squad car. Police dispatch reports show he arrived just minutes after the shooting. His first report from the scene was of a black male on the ground “bleeding out.”
His body camera captures Arbery facedown in the middle of Satilla Drive. Greg and Travis McMichael, since charged with murder, stand above him.
Thirteen seconds into the recording, Arbery’s right foot rolls over.
Seventeen seconds in, Arbery’s head moves.
53 seconds in, a large gasp is heard. His lower body appears to lift slightly.
“He had no choice man,” Greg McMichael is telling Minshew.
“Do you know where he got shot at, man?” Minshew asks. “Is he shot on the front side, too?”
Minshew then returns to his squad car, grabs his cell phone and begins taking photos of the scene.
The Glynn County Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
At 2:17, a second officer arrives. “You get a pulse or anything?” he asks.
“Nah,” Minshew replies, taking photos. “He’s about to be 10-7, man” – police code for “out of service.”
The second officer approaches Arbery. “I think he’s still breathing,” Travis McMichael says off-camera.