peplaw06
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This is where we fundamentally disagree. I start the line much earlier. I've tried putting myself in both persons shoes, George's and Trayvon's.I disagree with this, and I'll explain why (although I probably have in this thread already... somewhere).
To me, this all hinges on who started the physical confrontation.
If Trayvon did - which is my belief - then I think George is innocent of 2nd degree murder.
If George started the physical confrontation, then I think he should hang.
I'm not talking about following him. I'm not talking about ignoring a 911 dispatchers recommendation (because 911 dispatchers do not and are not allowed to give out orders). I'm not talking about if GZ had the right or authority to question TM.
To me, it all hinges on who started the PHYSICAL confrontation.
If I'm George, there's a lot of things I would have done differently. But let's ignore that for a second. If I'm George, I call the police when I see someone in my neighborhood who raises my suspicion. I give them the information in a calm manner, which is what George did. When I notice he's running, I would tell the police that. I would try to keep visual contact with him, so I can tell the police when they get to the neighborhood.
Then I also think that if I'm George that I would have tried every way possible to stop Trayvon from beating me. If I absolutely could not get him off of me, and he wouldn't stop beating me, I would shoot.
I think he did all that stuff right, provided he felt like he tried every way possible to get Trayvon off of him before he resorted to the gun.
If I'm Trayvon, I think about how I would feel if I was 17 and walking in a neighborhood at night, and a strange adult begins following me. I would run. I would try to get away from the person following me. If I'm unable to get away, then my adrenaline would be up. If I confront the person following me, and the person makes a reach for something on his person, by God I'm fighting. I'm fighting until one of us is disabled, and if it's the other guy, then I get away.
There are a lot of things Trayvon did that I would like to think I would have done differently.
But when I look at which person is more at fault for the confrontation, there's no doubt in my mind it's George. Start off with their ages. George was an adult, Trayvon was not. You can talk about their sizes all day, but I'm talking about maturity level. And another thing... Sizes be damned... 99% of the time adults have a physical advantage over teenagers. The adult is just naturally going to be stronger.
George had been "trained" in the neighborhood watch stuff. Trayvon was in high school. George was also from that neighborhood. He was familiar with the area.
George had a gun. Not illegal, but the fact that he had a gun probably made him more apt to put himself and Trayvon in harms way. When you're truly defenseless, you are less likely to make decisions that would require you to defend yourself.
I think the fact that Zimmerman said he reached into his pocket... no matter what he's reaching for... provides Trayvon all the information he needs to use WHATEVER means he needed to defend himself. If that means beating George to death, then that's what it means. Reaching to your pocket, I don't know what you're about to pull out of there, it could be a gun/knife, some other weapon. It's a reasonable thought to me to believe he's reaching for a gun. If Trayvon were a police officer, he would riddle George with bullets.
THAT'S where the confrontation started. It wasn't who made the first physical contact. In my opinion.
I heard the 911 clip of the yells for help today. I think it was Zimmerman's voice. The gunshots came soon after the cry for help. That says to me the person who shot was screaming. We know that was Zimmerman. But I don't think that matters. We were way past the point where Zimmerman could claim self-defense at that point. In my opinion.Now, today the prosecutions witness - the one that made the 911 call from the upstairs bedroom - was testifying that she didn't really see anything, she heard yelling but wasn't from who, she was familiar with Zimmerman but didn't know him directly, and after seeing the photos of the beating he took, she said she couldn't recognize him it was so bad. She also said that in the few times she was around him in neighborhood organized meetings, he came accross very mild-mannered and quiet. Yes, this was a witness the prosecutors presented to strengthen their case somehow.
It's not a relevancy objection. All of this is relevant. The question is whether it's impermissible character evidence. I don't think the restraining order of Zimmerman will be admitted. i don't think the past of Trayvon will be admitted.At this point... the prosecutors introduce the fact that GZ has a restraining order filed against him from a former girlfriend. Obviously this was to indicate that GZ had a violent past.
If the prosecutors is allowed to introduce that... if that is somehow relevent to this case... then the fact that Trayvon assaulted a bus driver, had video of fight club style fights on his cell phone and his youtube channel, had pictures of marijuana and guns on his phone, was suspended from school for having drug paraphanalia and tools commonly used for breaking and entering... all of that is absolutely relevant.
It serves to illustrated Martin himself had a violent past and had an affinity for fighting.
I don't think Zimmerman was the first one to physically touch Trayvon. I think Trayvon started that. But I think he was justified in defending himself. I think Zimmerman put Trayvon in reasonable fear, and therefore, I think Zim was the instigator. And as such, I don't think he should be allowed to claim self-defense.I just can't wrap my head around the fact that Zimmerman, who was trying to coordinate efforts to meet up with the police up until just a minute or two before the incident happened, would start to assault Martin when the cops were moments away.
Especially with the testimony that Precious gave today that Zimmerman was tired and out of breath when Martin asked him why he was following him.
Doesn't pass the smell test. A tired, out of breath Zimmerman, who knows the cops will be there any second, is going to attack a guy who's 5" taller than him.
I mean... I just don't see that happening.