I have never worked in law enforcement and have never been to the scene of a murder investigation. In all honesty, pretty much the sum of what I thought I knew came from television and the movies. Somewhere along the way I've apparently been fed a ton of bs regarding how a murder is investigated.
I'm not meaning to go after the Sanford Police Dept., but I've been spending some time with the police report trying to comprehend how this all went down. This Officer Smith who did the report says he's the one who first approached GZ, disarmed him, put him in cuffs, and marched him back to his squad car. He says he never asked him ANYTHING!
How does that work? There's a dead body laying there, this dude tells you he shot him and you don't even have a brief conversation with him as to how he says it all happened?
I thought Investigators of a murder did their work at the scene. I know they do on Law and Order, but this guy was skipping along in the police station 36 minutes after he killed the victim! The report says an Investigator investigated him there! How in the heck do you check a guy's story out from the other side of town?
The part that's so obviously contrived about this report deals with an officer telling us he didn't question the suspect but the report is laced with "I overheard him say blah, blah, blah" or "While I was doing ____I noticed grass yada, yada, yada, and blood coming out his_____." You've flat out got to wonder about someone whose powers of observation allegedy compells him to specifically note grass on the back of a coat AND it being wet.....while it's RAINING! What about the rest of the coat? IT DIDN'T GET WET?
Then you got the real gem of this deal. How in the hell can a Chief of Police get up in front of more cameras and mics than the Super Bowl has and tell the world what a squeaky clean record a dude has with assaulting an LE Officer on his record, in this day and age of computers, cross agency ties, NCIC, etc?
Oh well, in the meantime we'll all just sit around arguing the points of this case, the Feds will hopefully straighten it all out, but a mother's son will still be no more.