What's in their frame of mind doesn't help their case at all based on what you're implying. It would make them more likely to use excessive force against the suspect.... I mean that helps against the racism defense but this isn't a hate crime, it doesn't help in getting off for murder. And you would need to be absolutely correct that this guy had committed a felony or was carrying a weapon and it seems they were 0-2 on both of their suspicions.ha but that is not is not what I meant by that at all, seriously. when I said "wrong" neighborhood, I meant just any neighborhood prowling around multiple times at night. But now that you point that out I guess I could see how someone could interpret that that way. I meant it more in the manner of (take pranksters for example): "One day they gone frick around and try to play a prank on the wrong man and get killed." It wouldn't mean the prankee would have had a right to kill them, you know what I am trying to say. You just don't go prowling around in somebody else's neighborhood (or your own for that matter) at night. That is just not a very safe thing to do.
LOL I didn't mean a particular ethnicity of neighborhood.
[and can we stop pretending that the McMichael's full awareness of a serial night prowler was not a factor in their attempting to detain Arbery. You simply cannot leave that out of their frame of mind]
Edit: In cases like these you don't go by the perpetrators state of mind when forming judgment, instead you go by a rational person's perceived state of mind..... And rational people don't chase suspects for minutes attempting to cut them off while being armed and suspecting that the suspect is also armed.
Rational people call the police, give a description of the suspect, and tell them the direction he was headed.

