Ahmaud Arbery's mother hopes guilty verdict will send message of accountability

Ahmaud Arbery’s mother speaks out

Ahmaud Arbery’s mother says she hopes the guilty verdict in the trial for her late son’s murder ‘sends out a message of accountability.’

EXCLUSIVE: It’s the second Thanksgiving she’s spent without her son, but Wanda Cooper-Jones says she is still thankful.

She says her son, 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery, is “smiling, looking down he continues to rest in peace.”

In an exclusive one-on-one interview with Fox News, Cooper-Jones is relieved to finally have justice for Arbery’s death after he was shot and killed nearly 2 years ago on Feb. 23, 2020. “I made it this far through prayer,” she says.

Cooper-Jones made a trip on Thanksgiving Day to a mural that honors Arbery’s life in Brunswick, Georgia. She says family members were visiting from out of town and they wanted to see the colorful mural that sits on the side of a building that will soon open as the new African-American Cultural Center in the city.

Cooper-Jones says her son’s legacy is already bringing change to the world and hopes it will continue to do so. She says, “Ahmaud has already brought about the hate crime law here in Georgia, and also the citizen’s arrest law being repealed.”

Now that three White men have been convicted of felony murder in the death of her son, Cooper-Jones says, “I think that Ahmaud deserves the last word. Ahmaud was actually hunted down like an animal and I think the last word is very much deserving to him. I mean, he deserves that. That’s the least we can do for him.”

Under Georgia law, Travis McMichael and father Greg McMichael, as well as William “Roddie” Bryan, all face a minimum life sentence in prison with Wednesday’s conviction. The judge will decide at a sentencing hearing whether that will be with or without the possibility of parole.

Defense attorneys plan to file an appeal after the sentencing, but Cooper-Jones says she is ready. But she tells Fox News she is also ready for the same 3 men to face federal hate crime charges when jury selection begins in February.

“I’m hoping that the verdict of guilty on all 3 defendants sends out a message of accountability,” explains Cooper-Jones.

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