Adrienne37
Former Member
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Not by his choice I'm sure.
We have no way of knowing that. Perhaps he was invited there by the Zimmerman's or their attorneys?
~jmo~
Not by his choice I'm sure.
BEM: But by the same token, what was Trayvon doing for the three minutes GZ had lost sight of him - stalking George? This is not just one of my sticking points, this is one of the reasons, according to Lee, credibility was lent to GZ's story. If Trayvon was scared, he'd have gone home. Where was he during that time??
eta: looking for a link if anyone is not familiar with Lee's comments.
""If Trayvon has made it that far, and Zimmerman is getting out of his truck, why doesn't Trayvon keep walking?" Lee said. "He's 70 yards from his house. I think based on the timing of the call and Zimmerman losing sight of him that he had made it to that 'T' (at the end of the path) and was starting to walk toward his house.
"My wish is that he would have kept walking."
http://www.tampabay.com/news/public...appened-the-night-trayvon-martin-died/1223083
Those 2 things are not odd IMO.
They back up the story that GZ chased or continued to follow Trayvon. Like you said GZ had no way of knowing when the girlfriend called, so if Trayvon said someone was following him, why wouldn't we believe it? The girlfriend had no clue about timing either.
Secondly, she may have hung up on her own thinking that the line went dead. She could have been saying "helloo, helllooooo, helllooooo" and getting no answer so she hung up and tried to call right back. Getting voicemail...
JMO IMO MOO
He was on the phone with his gf that whole time. We will have to wait and see what they were talking about. jmo
Plus now RZ is saying GZ first saw TM cutting between the houses and that could only be in the section where GZ lives down off of Oregon Ave. So GZ would have seen him before he got to the clubhouse if this accounting is true. jmo
I read it as though GZ and family feel like the black community owes GZ something, and they do not.
JMO MOO IMO
If you read the other cases the state has taken to trial that used the SYG defense, the state lost everyone of them because of the wording of the statute. And many of the cases had highly questionable circumstances, questions of who sought who out, etc....
So I can see where the SA was hesitant to file charges. GZ was on his back according to the police. Two independent witnesses place GZ on his back in the tussle. The statute only requires the reasonable belief that you or someone else in jeopardy of serious bodily harm. No requirement to retreat.
The state will get an indictment, the SA can hide a loss of the case behind saying he declined charges and the grand jury said to put him in front of a jury. The case is high profile, highly charged between race and gun rights, which equals big time money defense team.
The state expert says T was screaming, the defense gets one to say the opposite, or that you can't tell or put the whole science in question. And the biggest problem will be the crime scene was handled as a defensive shooting not a homicide scene. That evidence is gone forever and plays totally to GZs defense.
I think the indictment will calm the crowds for awhile and in a highly defendable case you either have an acquittal or a ridiculous plea deal.
With the weight difference and fact that GZ had bouncer and copwannabe syndrome I think he ended up on the bottom of the struggle because he pulled the gun, probably not intending to fire it but intimidate and contain T, and they went down in a struggle for the gun which would throw all of GZs training out the window. Real cops don't pull their weapons if they aren't planning to fire. GZ couldn't mandhandle and use his bouncing skills because he was hanging onto his gun.
But the current statute only has to convince a jury that GZ had the reasonable belief he was in danger of bodily harm. No duty to retreat. If the police and witnesses say GZ was on his back with T on top of him I think you can build a good case to a jury that " believed " was in danger of
anger of bodily harm, even if he put himself in harms way.
Given an aquittal could lead to riots like we have seen in other racially charged cases, I think a plea deal is even more likely.
Read some of the other cases the state has lost in the SYG rule, one of them was a man in a car who ran over the man he believed put him in physical danger. He was in a vehicle and could have easily retreated but instead ran over the man in question. Aquitted. Jury felt it met the standard of belief and absolved him of his duty to retreat.
There have been ten to fifteen similar trials, all losses, expensive and embarrassing losses to the state. So SA not taking this one willingly does not surprise me at all.
Question- 911 operators are not police officers in the state of Florida? Is that correct? I don't believe he had any obligation to obey the operators who actually said we don't need you to do that rather than stop following him, be where I have the officers coming to meet you.
If you read the other cases the state has taken to trial that used the SYG defense, the state lost everyone of them because of the wording of the statute. And many of the cases had highly questionable circumstances, questions of who sought who out, etc....
So I can see where the SA was hesitant to file charges. GZ was on his back according to the police. Two independent witnesses place GZ on his back in the tussle. The statute only requires the reasonable belief that you or someone else in jeopardy of serious bodily harm. No requirement to retreat.
The state will get an indictment, the SA can hide a loss of the case behind saying he declined charges and the grand jury said to put him in front of a jury. The case is high profile, highly charged between race and gun rights, which equals big time money defense team.
The state expert says T was screaming, the defense gets one to say the opposite, or that you can't tell or put the whole science in question. And the biggest problem will be the crime scene was handled as a defensive shooting not a homicide scene. That evidence is gone forever and plays totally to GZs defense.
I think the indictment will calm the crowds for awhile and in a highly defendable case you either have an acquittal or a ridiculous plea deal.
With the weight difference and fact that GZ had bouncer and copwannabe syndrome I think he ended up on the bottom of the struggle because he pulled the gun, probably not intending to fire it but intimidate and contain T, and they went down in a struggle for the gun which would throw all of GZs training out the window. Real cops don't pull their weapons if they aren't planning to fire. GZ couldn't mandhandle and use his bouncing skills because he was hanging onto his gun.
But the current statute only has to convince a jury that GZ had the reasonable belief he was in danger of bodily harm. No duty to retreat. If the police and witnesses say GZ was on his back with T on top of him I think you can build a good case to a jury that " believed " was in danger of
anger of bodily harm, even if he put himself in harms way.
Given an aquittal could lead to riots like we have seen in other racially charged cases, I think a plea deal is even more likely.
Read some of the other cases the state has lost in the SYG rule, one of them was a man in a car who ran over the man he believed put him in physical danger. He was in a vehicle and could have easily retreated but instead ran over the man in question. Aquitted. Jury felt it met the standard of belief and absolved him of his duty to retreat.
There have been ten to fifteen similar trials, all losses, expensive and embarrassing losses to the state. So SA not taking this one willingly does not surprise me at all.
Question- 911 operators are not police officers in the state of Florida? Is that correct? I don't believe he had any obligation to obey the operators who actually said we don't need you to do that rather than stop following him, be where I have the officers coming to meet you.
He was on the phone with his gf that whole time. We will have to wait and see what they were talking about. jmo
Plus now RZ is saying GZ first saw TM cutting between the houses and that could only be in the section where GZ lives down off of Oregon Ave. So GZ would have seen him before he got to the clubhouse if this accounting is true. jmo
I have thought it is a person that knows english as a second language.
Just a note:
From the street number he gave in the call to SPD, GZ lives at nearly the opposite corner of the development from where the death occured. From the Seminole County Property Appraiser web site, FT lives near the corner where Trayvon may have cut through. Both live on the western side of Retreat View Circle, just at opposite ends.
IMO, JMO, etc.
(snipped)
"If something happens to George as a result of the race furor stirred up by this mischaracterization of George there will be blood on your hands as well as the rest of the racist that have rushed to judgement."
"I will not be providing my name because all our family is in hiding and frankly scared by the threats from the black community. If you feel a need to respond I will see this in the media (IF you do the right thing) And I will be happy to provide more details showing how wrong you really are. I will not remain anonymous after the outcome of this case is determined. There are going to be lots of people that need to be held accountable for their rush to judgement."
http://media.cmgdigital.com/shared/news/documents/2012/04/04/DOC040412.pdf
I'm really not sure what to say a/b this letter, I think Papa summed it up pretty good. But there's something a/b the wording that bothers me, I just can't put it into words. :moo:
It's a simple pronoun reference error: using "him" to refer to two different people without specifying which is which. Native speakers make this error all the time.
One of my favorite little tidbits from the Sean Hannity interview with the father, Robert Zimmerman, Sr., is:
ZIMMERMAN: Well, it's customary on Sunday night for George to go and do grocery shopping. He had been texting his sister and told her that he was going to go and do grocery shopping. He got in his vehicle to leave the community.
BEM: But by the same token, what was Trayvon doing for the three minutes GZ had lost sight of him - stalking George? This is not just one of my sticking points, this is one of the reasons, according to Lee, credibility was lent to GZ's story. If Trayvon was scared, he'd have gone home. Where was he during that time??
eta: looking for a link if anyone is not familiar with Lee's comments.
""If Trayvon has made it that far, and Zimmerman is getting out of his truck, why doesn't Trayvon keep walking?" Lee said. "He's 70 yards from his house. I think based on the timing of the call and Zimmerman losing sight of him that he had made it to that 'T' (at the end of the path) and was starting to walk toward his house.
"My wish is that he would have kept walking."
http://www.tampabay.com/news/public...appened-the-night-trayvon-martin-died/1223083
Do you have a map that shows where GZ lives by any chance? I've only see maps with BG's home and the club houses. The entrance by the club house comes off Oregon, right?
Does anyone have a full map that shows where GZ lives/lived?
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