— May 5: The video surfaces online and quickly goes viral, prompting a national outcry. Durden puts out a news release saying the case should be presented to a grand jury and asks the Georgia Bureau of Investigation to take over the case.
— May 7: Gregory and Travis McMichael are arrested.
— May 8: On what would have been Arbery’s 26th birthday, several hundred people gather outside the Glynn County courthouse to protest and sing “Happy Birthday” in his honor. The McMichaels have their initial court appearances.
— May 10: Georgia attorney general asks the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the handling of the case.
— May 11: Georgia attorney general asks Cobb County District Attorney Joyette Holmes to take over the case, making her the third outside prosecutor appointed to the case. DOJ said it was assessing the case to determine whether federal hate crime charges are warranted and is considering Carr’s request to investigate how local police and prosecutors investigated the case.
— May 12: Georgia attorney general asks the GBI to investigate possible prosecutorial misconduct by Waycross DA George Barnhill and Brunswick DA Jackie Johnson.
— May 14: Defense attorneys announce that they’ve been hired to defend the McMichaels.