Ahmaud Arbery’s murderers played cops, too.
Last November, a jury in Georgia found three white men guilty of chasing Arbery and murdering him in a modern-day lynching captured on a video kept by one of his killers.
In their failed defense argument, the father-son duo who initiated the chase baselessly alleged that Arbery, an avid jogger, was responsible for thefts in the area and had been running through the neighborhood to escape being caught. The men — one of whom is a former police officer — claimed they were protected by law for playing the role.
Defense attorneys also claimed the men had been conducting a legal arrest on Arbery, citing a slavery-inspired citizen’s arrest law that has since been repealed. The trial made for one of the most sickening moments in modern American history … and Georgia’s GOP Senate candidate just doesn’t get it.
Herschel Walker, to catch you up, has been roundly mocked ever since he held up an honorary police badge as a real one during last week’s debate with Sen. Raphael Warnock, the Democratic incumbent.
After Sen. Raphael Warnock (D) notes Herschel Walker’s (R) past instances of falsely claiming to be in law enforcement, Walker pulls out an apparent police badge before getting into an extended argument with the moderator. pic.twitter.com/cw6dMb7hm3
— The Recount (@therecount) October 14, 2022
The moment came as Warnock was referring to accurate reports that Walker has falsely portrayed himself as having worked in law enforcement (along with his history of violence). But Walker, too petulant to cop to an obvious lie, has instead leaned in on the deceptiveness. His campaign announced that it had ordered 1,000 prop badges resembling Walker’s — which was given to him by a sheriff in Georgia — as a fundraising tool.
I want to be clear: Herschel Walker’s badge has no authority whatsoever. He can’t stop anyone. He can’t arrest anyone. It is, for all intents and purposes, a toy. Or, as NBC’s Kristen Welker said, invoking words by the National Sheriffs’ Association during an interview with Walker: The badge is an item “for the trophy case.”
As The New York Times noted, law enforcement agencies commonly give honorary badges to celebrities — especially well-known athletes like Walker.
Yet he has continued to imply the badge gives him authority everyday citizens don’t have — an assumption of power that’s particularly troubling in Georgia.
If he’s falsely touting a powerless badge as some sign of his authority, what’s stopping the 1,000 people with “I’m with Walker” badges from doing the same?








