Categories
Entertainment

Olivia Newton-John, star of Grease, dies aged 73

Dame Olivia Newton-John, British-born Australian singer and star of hit musical Grease, has died following a long battle with breast cancer.

Messages posted to her official social media accounts said the 73-year-old “passed away peacefully” at her ranch in southern California surrounded by family and friends.

She won multiple Grammy awards over a five-decade-long career and was well known for her role as Sandy in the film Grease.

On her official Facebook page, husband John Easterling described Newton-John as a “symbol of triumphs and hope for over 30 years sharing her journey with breast cancer.”

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“Her healing inspiration and pioneering experience with plant medicine continues with the Olivia Newton-John Foundation Fund, dedicated to researching plant medicine and cancer,” he wrote.

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Categories
Sports

North Melbourne greats Wayne Carey and Anthony Stevens renew ugly feud at pub during premiership reunion

Two North Melbourne greats have reportedly stunned teammates with a heated bust-up and needed to be separated while at the Yarraville Railway Hotel in Melbourne for a premiership reunion on Saturday.

The feud between Wayne Carey and Anthony Stevens ripped the Kangaroos apart in 2002 after Carey’s infamous affair with Stevens’ wife, Kellie.

But the pair clashed again, despite reports their relationship had improved, at the 1996 premiership meeting after Carey allegedly accused Stevens of talking behind his back and being two-faced.

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Categories
Australia

Olivia Newton-John died at 73; Commonwealth Games 2022 continues; John Barilaro inquiry fallout continues; Matthew Guy hires Nick McGowan as chief of staff; Labor climate bill faces Senate clash over carbon emissions

To one of the first major political interviews of the day, and NSW Opposition Leader Chris Minns has fronted ABC NewsBreakfast.

The Labor leader was asked about John Barilaro’s recent appearance at a parliamentary inquiry examining his appointment to a $500,000-a-year New York trade post.

NSW Opposition Leader Chris Minns wants to abolish several trade roles if he wins the next state election.

NSW Opposition Leader Chris Minns wants to abolish several trade roles if he wins the next state election.Credit:Kate Geraghty

As regular readers of this blog will know, the former NSW deputy premier has rejected any suggestion of wrongdoing. While giving evidence yesterday, he described himself as the trade saga’s victim and not the perpetrator.

Here’s what Minns had to say about that characterisation:

Look, I mean, it’s a bit ridiculous. At this point, this is taxpayer money. We need to know how it’s been spent. Circumstances around this appointment have been completely untransparent from the very beginning. The government has worked very hard at, I guess, obscuring from the public exactly what happened in relation to the Barilaro appointment.

And in the last two weeks we’ve had a situation where the deputy leader of the Liberal Party has resigned, we’ve got someone from the panel, the Public Service Commissioner, who believes that she was misled. And most of the information has reluctantly been released from the NSW government.

So there’s serious questions to be answered and the government seems reluctant to do so … anyone would see that [the appointment] wasn’t a wise use of taxpayers’ money.

It seems as though these positions are being offered around almost like lolly bags to senior members of the NSW government.

Categories
US

US Navy recovers jet blown off aircraft carrier from bottom of ocean

The jet was aboard the USS Harry S. Truman, an aircraft carrier, when it blew overboard on July 8, the release said.

The service members who recovered the aircraft used a remotely operated vehicle to attach “specialized rigging and lift lines” to the jet while it was underwater. After attaching the rigging, the recovery team then attached a lifting hook to the rigging to “raise the aircraft to the surface” of the ocean and “hoist it” onto the multi-purpose construction vessel Everest, a separate motor vessel that can be used for a variety of purposes in the ocean, the release said.

Once the aircraft had been recovered from the depths of the ocean and put on the MPV Everest, the team transported the aircraft to a “nearby military installation,” the release said. The aircraft will then be transported from the military installation to the US, the release added.

The team that recovered the aircraft included service members from several different naval units, among them members from Task Force (CTF) 68, Naval Sea Systems Command’s Supervisor of Salvage and Diving, service members assigned to the aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman, Naval Strike Fighter Wing Atlantic and US Sixth Fleet, the release said.

“The rapid response of the combined team… allowed us to conduct safe recovery operations within 27 days of the incident,” Lieutenant Commander Miguel Lewis, US Sixth Fleet salvage officer, said in the statement. “Our task tailored team operated safely and efficiently to meet the timeline.”

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Categories
Business

Cooking oil shortages pushing up food prices and creating headaches for manufacturers

We’ve all heard about the skyrocketing price of oil at the pump, but did you know there’s another oil crisis?

At the helm of a deep fryer, Teresa Paolini is right across this issue.

A few years ago, her family-owned takeaway shop in Melbourne used to be able to buy her preferred cottonseed oil blend for less than $40 a drum.

“Now it’s up to $60,” Ms Paolini says.

The latest consumer price index (CPI) data just showed a 14 per cent rise in the price of cooking oil in the past year. The only other sector of food that’s gone up by more is fruit and vegetables.

Indirectly, analysts say, the cooking oil crunch is now likely to hit many other parts of the food chain.

That’s because it is such a fundamental staple ingredient. Edible oil is in everything from margarine through to hummus and baked goods, and there is only so much of a price hike that manufacturers through to takeaway shops can absorb.

“We’ve had to put our prices up about 50 cents on each item,” Ms Paolini says.

And it’s not just fried chips.

a woman with a vat of cooking oil
Teresa Paolini has bumped prices at her takeaway shop in Melbourne because cooking oil has gone up.(ABC News: Chris LePage)

In bad news for beauty, vegetable oils are a core ingredient in moisturizer and lipstick.

The latest CPI data shows personal care items already went up almost 5 per cent in a year. One company that develops and manufactures cosmetics is tipping that inflation will escalate by up to 15 per cent by 2023, due to vegetable oil prices.

As well as price hikes, the situation is also creating headaches for food labelling.

One of Australia’s biggest food manufacturers, Goodman Fielder, has just announced that it is having to replace some of the sunflower oil in its well-known mayonnaise Praise with canola oil.

That’s how far-reaching the issue has become.

What’s driving the cooking oil crunch?

Just like petroleum and gas, vegetable oil is a globally traded commodity that follows international pricing.

Most of this year’s headlines about the cooking oil crunch have centered around the war in Ukraine. Both it and Russia are some of the biggest producers of sunflower oil, and the war has seen their exports largely curtailed.

“[Edible oil] prices really escalated very quickly this year as a result of the invasion,” Rabobank’s senior commodities analyst Cheryl Kalisch Gordon told ABC News.

However, sunflower oil is not one of the most-consumed edible oils globally, and the price pressures go far beyond the war in Ukraine.

“Prior to that, we were already seeing prices that were double the five-year average,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

The three most-widely consumed oils globally are canola, palm and soybean.

Before the war, Ms Kalisch Gordon said, canola supply was already being hit by drought in key producers, including Canada.

a graph showing price spikes on canola oil

Meanwhile, soybeans saw extra demand from China, which bought up beans to rebuild their pig herds after an outbreak of swine fever.

“On top of that, we had a disappointing harvest of soybeans out of Brazil and more broadly across South America, including Paraguay,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

Then there were issues during the pandemic with worker shortages in Indonesia and Malaysia, which produces much of the world’s palm oil.

“They just weren’t able to get the harvest out of the plantations,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

The other oil crisis, petroleum, didn’t help.

Ms Kalisch Gordon said fossil fuels were now so expensive, that markets were turning to edible oils to make biodiesel instead.

“We’ve had production increasing at a slower rate than consumption increase. We’ve got a strong biodiesel market that is growing internationally,” she said.

As this all happened, some countries — including Turkey, Indonesia and Argentina — put export bans on their edible oils to ensure their own populations had enough of these vital ingredients.

“Really, we have found ourselves with a litany of issues feeding into this that wouldn’t be expected normally,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

“The higher prices for soybean, palm oil and canola have led to higher prices or costs across the entire complex, including for olive oil and cottonseed.”

a man in front of a truck
Peter Fitzgerald has never seen price hikes on edible oil like those he is currently dealing with at Cookers.(ABC News: Chris LePage)

Cookers is one of Australia’s biggest vegetable oil distributors.

The national company buys canola and olive oil from refineries across Australia and overseas, including recently from Ukraine until the invasion. It is subject to whatever prices its suppliers pass on.

“We’ve seen prices in the last two years virtually double,” the company’s managing director Peter Fitzgerald said.

“It’s something we’ve never seen in our industry.

“And we don’t know where that’s going to end up”

Cookers is pushing these price hikes onto its customers, which include takeaway chains and major food manufacturers that use vegetable oil in everything from hummus to margarine.

“They’re all addressing this with the supermarkets currently,” Mr Fitzgerald said.

“If you look at a lot of packaging, oil is such a large component in so many foods.

“I think that you’ll see that as this flushes through, that it’s going to continue price increases at the customer level.”

As well as food staples, vegetable oil is also a core ingredient in many of life’s little luxuries, including makeup.

Woman applying lipstick.
The price of cosmetics is also set to rise due to the vegetable oil crisis.(Getty Images: Andreas Rentz)

Rohan Widdison runs local cosmetics developer and manufacturer New Laboratories.

He’s forecasting price hikes on everything from moisturizer to lipstick, largely in part due to the extreme increases he is seeing on oils such as almond.

“We’ve held off passing pricing on to a lot of clients. But now what we’re seeing is elements where it’s just impossible to hold off,” Mr Widdison said.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if you don’t see increases [at the consumer level] that are going to range from 8 to 15 per cent in the coming year.”

Mr Widdison isn’t so sure the global price rises all come down to supply and demand, either.

“At a certain point in time, then the question really becomes: Is it the market price? Or is it really just profit-taking?” I have asked.

He said the issue was bigger than just a moisturizer.

“There’s no question that we should be looking at food security before cosmetics,” he said.

“If you use palm oil, for example, I’m fully supportive of the Indonesian government protecting that essential commodity for domestic use.”

The impact of oil prices in poorer nations is something the World Food Program and the World Bank are concerned about too.

In good news, the price spikes on soybean and palm oil do appear to have gone past their peak.

a graph showing price spikes on edible oils

Ms Kalisch Gordon said that improvement had come as growing conditions improve in the regions hit by drought.

Most of the markets such as Indonesia — that put temporary export bans on their oils — have now lifted them.

And global markets also appear to be pricing in decreases after the resumption of Black Sea exports.

However, the situation remains volatile.

For instance, just this month, there has been fresh talk of olive oil shortages after another drought in Spain.

“We don’t expect prices to drop or reduce in their volatility substantially in the near term,” Ms Kalisch Gordon said.

“So this isn’t going to play out quickly.”

“I don’t see [prices] returning to the five year-averages of pricing across this complex that we saw prior to COVID.”

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Categories
Technology

Less than 1% of Netflix’s subscribers want to play its mobile games

As Netflix struggles to keep consumers subscribed to its streaming service, its mobile games venture is looking like a flop. CNBC reported that according to app analytics company Apptopia, Netflix games have been downloaded 23.3 million times in total, and on average, there are 1.7 million daily users. This means that fewer than 1% of the streaming giant’s subscriber base — around 221 million subscribers — are interested in Netflix’s games.

Netflix told TechCrunch it doesn’t disclose the number of players. However, the Apptopia’s report can shed light on just how unpopular its gaming offering is.

In comparison, leading mobile games like Subway Surfers, Roblox and Among Us each have more than 100 million downloads, per Apptopia. Netflix has a long way to go before it can reach this level of popularity.

Netflix recently lost nearly one million subscribers, so it’s not hard to see why the company wants to invest in more games. Netflix Games launched in 2021, and currently offers more than 25 games through the Netflix mobile app. The company intends to double its catalog by the end of 2022 and release over 50 games.

While Netflix hasn’t disclosed how much it’s spending to develop its mobile game division, the company has acquired three game studios: Boss Fight Entertainment, Night School Studio and Next Games. As TechCrunch has previously reported, the Next Games acquisition cost the streamer approximately $72 million.

In July, Netflix announced three new games, including award-winning titles Into the Breach and Before Your Eyes. Its catalog also includes a variety of games connected to popular Netflix shows, like “Stranger Things,” “Queens Gambit,” “Shadow and Bone” and “Too Hot to Handle.” If Netflix continues to explore leveraging its own IP for new games, that approach could draw in more subscribers.

However, shows that have been out for a while and don’t have a solid fan base probably won’t do as well as games based on “hot” series like “Stranger Things” for example. When season four of “Stranger Things” premiered, the two Netflix games based on the show — Stranger Things: 1984 and Stranger Things 3: The Game — saw a bump in downloads, Apptopia told TechCrunch.

To play a Netflix mobile game, subscribers can find them free in the streaming app in the dedicated games row. Players are redirected to download a separate app for each game. Once downloaded, only Netflix subscribers can play the games, which are available on Android and iOS devices.

Categories
Entertainment

Perth’s Johnny Ruffo shares cancer update with fans: ‘Still fighting this son of ab**ch’

Former Home and Away star Johnny Ruffo has given a health update to his fans, as the singer continues to battle cancer.

The 34-year-old X Factor finalist was diagnosed with cancer in 2017 and has frequently updated his supporters on his road to recovery.

Ruffo shared several snaps on his Instagram to mark five years since his heartbreaking diagnosis.

The musician shared a carousel of ten photos and videos over the course of his journey, including photos with his supportive partner Tahnee Sims as well as the moment he had staples taken out of his head.

“Exactly 5 years to the day since my diagnosis. Still fighting this son of ab**ch,” he captioned the post.

“Thanks for all the support”.

The former Perth boy was met with a wave of love and support from his famous friends, including AFL legend Brendan Fevola, comedian Dave Hughesy, and one-half of The Veronicas, Jessica Origliasso.

His former H&A costars also voiced their support, including Dan Ewing, Georgie Parker, Kyle Pryor, and Emily Symons.

His partner also shared her own post to mark the milestone.

“Five years on 💜 In awe of you every single day,” she wrote alongside photos of the pair.

“Still a huge battle ahead but a major milestone reached that was at times uncertain. Grateful for you always @johnny_ruffo.”

Ruffo’s health update comes just weeks ahead of the release of his upcoming memoir, No Finish Line.

Set to be released on August 30, the book will give his fans an insight into the negative impacts fame has had on his life.

The singer was originally diagnosed with a rare brain cancer in 2017, he revealed two years later that he was all-clear of the disease. Sadly in November 2020, I shared the devastating news that his cancer had returned.

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Categories
Sports

Ricky Stuart, punishment, press conference comments, Canberra Raiders, Penrith Panthers, Jaeman Salmon, Phil Gould

Phil Gould says it’s natural for people to be inquisitive about the motivation behind Ricky Stuart’s startling “weak-gutted dog person” takedown of young Panther Jaeman Salmon.

But the rugby league icon has implored for the history behind the verbal assault to remain private, insisting “it’s not going to be healthy”.

The NRL is set to deal Stuart a punishment — likely a two-game ban, according to Nine’s Danny Weidler — after the Raiders coach attacked Salmon in an explosive post-match press conference on Saturday.

READMORE: Stuart offered time off as likely ban revealed

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READMORE: Aussies claim cricket gold despite positive COVID-19 test

When Stuart was asked about an incident involving Salmon in the Raiders’ loss to the Panthers, in which the five-eighth kicked Tom Starling in the groin, the veteran coach unloaded.

It’s since been revealed that Stuart remains incensed by an incident during a 2010 junior rugby league match, in which Salmon and Stuart’s son were playing.

Weidler believes the icy history between Stuart and Salmon extends beyond that match.

But Gould stressed on Nine’s 100% Footy that the sensitive past must remain a secret.

100% Footy is now available as a podcast! Subscribe/follow via Manzana, Spotify or Google Podcasts.

“Naturally, people will be curious now as to what motivated it and why Ricky snapped the way he did — and he did snap,” Gould said.

“He said (to me), ‘I didn’t know that was going to come out at all’. It wasn’t pre-meditated, but the sheer mention of his name brought back bad memories and all of a sudden the words they were out before he could take them back.

Raiders boss condemns Stuart comments

“I am way too close to this situation to be making comment publicly about it.

“Whatever the decision of the NRL, naturally people and the media are going to be very curious as motivated to what it, what was the history. Everyone’s going to try to delve for that story.

“And let me tell you: that’s not going to do anyone any good whatsoever.

Stream the NRL premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now.

“So, I would hope that with the NRL decision … for which Ricky is quite ready and prepared for whatever decision comes — I would like to think that is the end of it and no one else opens their mouth.”

Cameron Smith, who was coached by Stuart in the Kangaroos set-up, agreed with Gould.

Ricky apologizes for Salmon outburst

“Private matters should stay private, anyway, shouldn’t they?” the storm legend said on 100% Footy.

“Don’t you think? It’s separate to rugby league.”

Smith also said he was “shocked” by Stuart’s comments and the Canberra mentor had “crossed the line”.

“It’s not going to be healthy for anyone for that history, which was a while ago, to be coming out now and people wanting to delve into that and read into things that shouldn’t be there, and it’s not going to be good for the people that are involved,” Gould added.

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Categories
Australia

From camels to camp kitchens, TikTok is bridging the divide between the country and the city

When Queensland farmer Yasmin Brisbane rescued a young camel that’d strayed from its farm, no one else was around.

But eight million people saw the order.

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From station cooks to cane farmers, social media is bringing visibility to the often isolating work of young people in the bush.

“[It] finally gives rural people and farming kids a voice and also access they never had before,” farmer and content creator Yasmin Brisbane said.

“There’s always been this big divide between country and city and it’s helping bridge that divides.”

Since starting a Tik Tok account posting videos of life on her family’s camel dairy six months ago, she has gained 280,000 followers.

Videos with the tag #farmtok have 5.7 billion views around the world.

And young people on the land hope it could help address one of agriculture’s biggest issues: finding workers.

‘It shows a new side to agriculture’

Farming has been in Grace McDonald’s family for four generations.

“For us, finding workers is a big challenge, and finding the future of farming is a difficult process,” the 23-year-old north Queensland cane grower said.

a young woman holds the steering wheel of a quad bike on a cane farm, smiling off into the distance
Fourth generation farmer Grace McDonald says the sector needs more education and promotion to encourage young workers.(triple j Hack: Angel Parsons)

She helps run the Proserpine Young Farmers group, and said soaring input costs were making it a tough time to be in agriculture.

And labor shortages were making it even tougher.

“We’re all finding it difficult, so I can imagine how hard it is to get a foot in the door.”

She said social media had huge potential to entice future generations of workers, as well as connecting and retaining people already in the industry.

“It shows a new side to agriculture which I think hasn’t been seen before, and it almost opens the door for anyone to join the club.”

“You hear of people all the time, they’re from the city and they’re now documenting their process, like ‘come along with me for the day as someone on a cattle station.'”

“It’s interesting because if they’d never seen a TikTok or come across these videos they wouldn’t have imagined they’d be where they are today.”

Being a first generation farmer

Isaac Micallef was partly inspired by farming content on social media to move from the city and try his hand at agriculture.

“Living in the city and seeing farm stuff on a day to day basis on your social media, it inspired me to really get out and pursue the dream,” he said.

The 23-year-old spent some time growing up on a small hobby farm but moved to the North Queensland city of Mackay when he was young.

I have finished his trade as an outdoor power mechanic, but the lure of the farming life was still strong.

“We came from a small hobby farm and when we got put into a town block I wasn’t impressed, I always knew I would get back into the industry.”

a young man in a farming shirt and cap leans against the fence of a paddock, smiling at the camera
Isaac Micallef says getting into farming has its challenges, but it’s always been his dream.(triplej Hack: Angel Parsons)

After finding work on a cane and cattle property, he met his now-wife. With her family of ella, they’ve started a miniature-goat breeding operation.

“We bottle feed them. They build a personality off that and can be really funny at times,” he said.

He shares his experiences on the farm through TikTok as well, and thinks it has a big role to play in encouraging other young people to consider a career in ag.

“My whole TikTok feed is full of farming stuff. I think it really is a way to open up the eyes for people who don’t get to see it on a day to day basis.”

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Kerry Latter from the Mackay branch of industry lobby group Canegrowers said in recent years labor shortages had reached “dire straits”.

“Family members have had to jump in – husbands, wives, children who are legally able to drive, were jumping in and doing the work.”

He said social media was promoting not just jobs, but awareness about the sector.

“A picture’s worth a thousand words … A video taken by a grower in his paddock, people get it completely different and are able to visualize it.”

“You’re seeing a lot of people that are actually becoming introduced into agriculture via different media, [like] social media.”

“We’ve seen a gravitation of people coming out of the cities, and wanting to get involved in some of the more newer and innovative aspects of agriculture.”

“So I think [social media] has a strong role to play going forward.”

Building a supportive community

Social media is often a highlights reel, and can romanticize the reality of making a living out of farming.

But Yasmin Brisbane said it was helping to change perceptions about the ag industry, and creating a space for young people to raise important issues about the future of farming.

These included mental health, isolation, gender equity and discussions about who would take over the family farm.

“[Traditionally]succession in Australian farming has been interesting because it’s been a patriarchal succession passed down to the sons, which isn’t very sustainable,” she said.

“I don’t think there’s a lot of support or education out there for female farmers.”

“I think female farmers could be the future of farming and the solution for farming, it doesn’t just have to be a male-dominated industry.”

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Categories
US

Father and son sentenced to life in prison, neighbor gets 35 years for federal hate crimes in killing of Ahmaud Arbery

The father and son convicted of murdering Ahmaud Arbery were both given an additional sentence of life in prison Monday on federal hate crime charges, while their neighbor was sentenced to 35 years in prison.

A judge also required that Travis McMichael, 36, Greg McMichael, 66, and William “Roddie” Bryan, 52, serve their sentences in state prison, not federal prison as had been requested by their attorneys.

“A young man is dead. Ahmaud Arbery will be forever 25. And what happened, a jury found, happened because he’s Black,” US District Judge Lisa Godbey Wood said during Greg McMichael’s sentencing.

The McMichaels and Bryan, who are all white, were found guilty in February on federal hate crime charges in the killing of Arbery, a Black man who was running in their neighborhood when the defendants confronted him in February 2020. The three men were convicted of all of the federal charges against them, including hate crimes, attempted kidnapping and the use of a firearm to commit a crime.

Prosecutors sought life sentences for all three men.

However, Godbey Wood said she thought it was necessary to distinguish Bryan from the McMichaels, in part because unlike his neighbors, he did not bring a gun with him when the men chased Arbery.

“It is not lost on the court that two men brought guns to that situation that had their worst effect and you weren’t one of them,” she said. She added, however, that Bryan was “still deserving of an awfully long sentence.”

“By the time you serve your federal sentence, you will be close to 90 years old. But again, Mr. Arbery never got the chance to be 26,” she said. “I determined that the sentence imposed is a very long summary and it is one that has been earned.”

Prosecutor Tara Lyons called the sentencing hearings “the end of at least one chapter in an excruciatingly painful journey for Ahmaud Arbery’s family, for his community and for an entire nation that has wept for Ahmaud.”

The men were sentenced separately, in back-to-back trials on Monday.

Amy Lee Copeland, Travis McMichael’s attorney, asked during his sentencing that the judge allow her client to serve his sentence in federal prison because, she said, he had received “hundreds of threats” and would probably be killed in state custody. AJ Balbo, an attorney for Greg McMichael, told the judge he was medically “not fit” to serve his sentence in state prison.

Both Copeland and Balbo also said they were concerned about an investigation by the Department of Justice into inmate violence in the Georgia state prison system.

The prosecution and members of Arbery’s family asked that the McMichaels serve their sentences in state prison.

Travis McMichael, whose sentence is life plus 10 years, declined to speak before the judge announced her decision.

His father, whose life sentence includes an additional seven years, addressed Arbery’s family, telling them “the loss you’ve endured is beyond description. There’s no words for it.”

He added that he “never wanted any of this to happen. There was no malice in my heart, or my son’s heart, that day.”

The older McMichael also apologized to his son, saying he should have “never put him in that situation.”

Bryan also apologized to Arbery’s family.

“I’m sorry, I am, for what happened to him on that day. I never intended any harm to him,” Bryan said. “And I never would have played any role in what happened if I knew then what I know now.”

Marcus Arbery, Ahmaud Arbery’s father, said ahead of the sentencing that “these three devils have broken my heart into pieces that cannot be found or repaired” and asked the court to give the stiffest sentence possible.

“You killed him because he was a Black man and you hate Black people,” he said.

Wanda Cooper-Jones, Ahmaud Arbery’s mother, said Travis McMichael “took my baby son.”

“I feel every shot that was fired every day,” she said.

The federal case followed a state trial in November in which the men were convicted of murder and given life sentences. They have appealed their convictions in that case.

The federal hate crimes trial centered on the history of the three men and their racial bias, a motive that prosecutors in the state case largely avoided, even though Arbery’s killing gained national attention as the United States was reckoning with systemic institutional racism and bias in policing. .

The McMichaels and Bryan chased Arbery, 25, through their coastal Georgia neighborhood in trucks. The men, who spotted Arbery running by their homes, cornered him, and Travis McMichael fatally shot him with a shotgun. Bryan filmed the fatal encounter on his cellphone.

The men were arrested months after the shooting, following the release of Bryan’s phone video and growing national attention. The case was then taken over by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

Image: Ahmaud Arbery
Ahmaud Arbery.Courtesy of Family

Arbery’s family and civil rights leaders have likened his death to a modern-day lynching.

The McMichaels attempted to plead guilty to the hate crime charges before trial, but the plea agreement was rejected by the judge after Arbery’s parents protested that the men would be able to serve their time in federal prison instead of state.

Federal prosecutors worked to establish that Arbery’s murder was driven by the men’s strong prejudices against Black people. Witnesses included an FBI analyst who went through the men’s social media history and neighbors and former co-workers of the McMichaels, who all testified that the father and son made troubling racist jokes, rants and statements and were open about their negative feelings toward Black people .

The defense said the messages and social media posts were taken out of context and that even though they had said troubling things, they insisted the men were not driven by their racial bias to pursue and kill Arbery.

This month, Greg McMichael’s attorney asked the judge not to impose a life sentence, although he said his client still deserves “a substantial period of incarceration,” The Associated Press reported. McMichael’s defense team also asked the judge for a transfer to federal prison, where he could avoid serving time for the murder in Georgia’s state prison system.