Did the Trayvon Martin Case Expose Flaws in Stand Your Ground Laws?

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In summary: It seems that the conversation revolves around the tragic shooting of Trayvon Martin in Florida and the controversy surrounding the "stand your ground" law. The killer claims self defense, but evidence suggests otherwise. The police initially did not investigate thoroughly, citing the "stand your ground" law. However, this interpretation of the law has been deemed incorrect. Many are hoping for justice to prevail in this case. There have been discussions about the size and race of the killer, as well as the new evidence that has come to light. Some believe that the "stand your ground" law will make it harder for the prosecution to convict the killer. Overall, the conversation highlights the injustice of the situation and the need for reason and justice to prevail. In summary, the
  • #36
wuliheron said:
The state of Florida also decided Fox News could legally lie about even egregious health hazards proving they just don't care about the truth. Small wonder the cops there don't either.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Akre

WTVT in Florida is not "Fox News"
 
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  • #37
I doubt that Zimmerman will be charged with murder. Other lesser charges are certainly possible (manslaughter perhaps) since Zimmerman's handling of the situation led to the shooting, but I'm not even certain about that.

I don't know about Zimmerman being racist, either. I think "overzealousness" in performing his duties as the volunteer leader of the neighborhood's unofficial neighborhood watch program might have played a bigger part than race.

Zimmerman was a person that worked in a car wash for a while and worked at a car lot for a while, but hoped to become a policeman someday. He'd volunteered for neighborhood watches for quite a while and made 46 calls to police over the past 8 years for things ranging from actual alarms going off to kids playing in the street (actually, quite a few calls were pretty trivial). They go from all of his calls being to 911, to a one year hiatus with no calls, followed by a period of a mixture of calls to 911 and to the non-emergency phone line (in fact, his call about Martin was to the non-emergency phone number).

In the Martin shooting, I think it's pretty clear Zimmerman initiated the situation by following Martin. And, at some point, the two were definitely wrestling on the ground with http://www.theblaze.com/stories/report-witness-claims-trayvon-martin-attacked-george-zimmerman/ . You can take that report for whatever you think it's worth, but it's at least possibly corroborated by the last call below (about the 33:30 mark). If that's the same witness, he doesn't leave an impression of being overly reliable (he was going to help, but then his dog got off the leash and he went to chase his dog, instead).

More 911 calls about the incident:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHMRwmGlKs8

Zimmerman had a license for his gun and hoped to be a "real" policeman, but he had no formal training. I think the bottom line is that he was a wannabe that created the situation through his own ineptitude. But that's not the same as murder.
 
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  • #38
mheslep said:
WTVT in Florida is not "Fox News"

Freedom requires responsibility and either Fox News takes responsibility for the actions of its subsidiaries or it should have no rights and be treated like the plague on society they have proven to be.
 
  • #39
wuliheron said:
Freedom requires responsibility and either Fox News takes responsibility for the actions of its subsidiaries ...
WTVT is not a subsidiary of "Fox News"
 
  • #40
  • #41
And, at some point, the two were definitely wrestling on the ground with Martin reportedly on top of Zimmerman. You can take that report for whatever you think it's worth, but it's at least possibly corroborated by the last call below (about the 33:30 mark). If that's the same witness, he doesn't leave an impression of being overly reliable (he was going to help, but then his dog got off the leash and he went to chase his dog, instead).

I am wondering, even if Zimmerman pursued the kid, and the kid felt he was in danger so attacked Zimmerman, and was keeping up with the assault without stopping, is Zimmerman within his right to shoot him? If he felt his life was in danger enough to shoot, is he within a reasonable right to try and get the attacker off of him even if he instigated the confrontation? There is a law detailing unnecessary defense of self and from what it seems, it's plausible if what Zimmerman says is true and what that witness that goes by John has stated.

I can see how Martin was seen on his back if Zimmerman shot him from the ground and the kid was bent attacking him. But I am still reserving judgement on this case. And, Zimmerman's reaction to the shooting was also a bit surprising from what witnesses have stated. He seemed a bit ashamed or sad as he tried to cover up the wound to stop the bleeding.

It would seem as though he felt he needed to shoot the kid. He probably wasn't trying to kill him rather stop him from attacking. But that is just a possibility. He should not have followed Martin in the first place. There is also that call with Martin and his girlfriend. I would like to think if I were in Martin's shoes and seen a guy who has not identified himself, late at night following me and then approaching me in a hostile manner, I could defend myself without repercussion.
 
  • #42
From what I heard today, Zimmerman pursued and accosted Martin - with a deadly weapon. In that case, Zimmerman would forfeit the 'self-defense' argument - and 'stand your ground' wouldn't apply - especially after he was told not to do so by whomever (dispatcher) he had contacted. Apparently Zimmerman outweighs Martin by ~100 lbs.

It appears that Zimmerman was the agressor - and commited two criminal acts - 1) assault with a deadly weapon, and 2) murder.

It also appears that the police department was reluctant to provide the 911 tapes. I'd be looking into 'obstruction of justice'.
 
  • #43
Too many newscasters with agendas to suit me.

From police report
http://www.sanfordfl.gov/investigation/docs/Twin%20Lakes%20Shooting%20Initial%20Report.pdf

One guy bleeding from nose and head, grass stains on back of his shirt.
Other guy shot dead.

I'll wait and see.
 
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  • #44
jim hardy said:
Too many newscasters with agendas to suit me.

From police report
http://www.sanfordfl.gov/investigation/docs/Twin%20Lakes%20Shooting%20Initial%20Report.pdf

One guy bleeding from nose and head, grass stains on back of his shirt.
Other guy shot dead.

I'll wait and see.
I guess if was was being chased by someone shouting racial slurs and pointing a gun at me, if he caught up, I would fight tooth and nail. You can hear in one 911 call the killer huffing and puffing in pursuit of the poor kid that was trying to get away from the maniac.

A witness reported that she could hear Trayvon's calls for help.
 
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  • #45
BobG said:
I doubt that Zimmerman will be charged with murder. Other lesser charges are certainly possible (manslaughter perhaps) since Zimmerman's handling of the situation led to the shooting, but I'm not even certain about that.

I don't know about Zimmerman being racist, either. I think "overzealousness" in performing his duties as the volunteer leader of the neighborhood's unofficial neighborhood watch program might have played a bigger part than race.

Zimmerman was a person that worked in a car wash for a while and worked at a car lot for a while, but hoped to become a policeman someday. He'd volunteered for neighborhood watches for quite a while and made 46 calls to police over the past 8 years for things ranging from actual alarms going off to kids playing in the street (actually, quite a few calls were pretty trivial). They go from all of his calls being to 911, to a one year hiatus with no calls, followed by a period of a mixture of calls to 911 and to the non-emergency phone line (in fact, his call about Martin was to the non-emergency phone number).

In the Martin shooting, I think it's pretty clear Zimmerman initiated the situation by following Martin. And, at some point, the two were definitely wrestling on the ground with http://www.theblaze.com/stories/report-witness-claims-trayvon-martin-attacked-george-zimmerman/ . You can take that report for whatever you think it's worth, but it's at least possibly corroborated by the last call below (about the 33:30 mark). If that's the same witness, he doesn't leave an impression of being overly reliable (he was going to help, but then his dog got off the leash and he went to chase his dog, instead).

More 911 calls about the incident:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHMRwmGlKs8

Zimmerman had a license for his gun and hoped to be a "real" policeman, but he had no formal training. I think the bottom line is that he was a wannabe that created the situation through his own ineptitude. But that's not the same as murder.
This seems like the most reasonable assessment of the situation so far. There are a number of wannabe enforcement personel in the population who are probably not emotionally or intellectually equiped to handle that sort of responsibility. A few police officers I've known come to mind.

When the details of the situation are sorted out, and it appears that they will be because of the national attention on this, then, hopefully, justice, according to what can be ascertained, or at least reasonably inferred wrt the truth of the matter, will be done.

Until then/that, then there really isn't much that any of us can say about it ... since we weren't there and we have no way of knowing what actually happened.
 
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  • #46
ThomasT said:
This seems like the most reasonable assessment of the situation so far. There are a number of wannabe enforcement personel in the population who are probably not emotionally or intellectually equiped to handle that sort of responsibility. A few police officers I've known come to mind.

When the details of the situation are sorted out, and it appears that they will be because of the national attention on this, then, hopefully, justice, according to what can be ascertained, or at least reasonably inferred wrt the truth of the matter, will be done.

Until then/that, then there really isn't much that any of us can say about it ... since we weren't there and we have no way of knowing what actually happened.

That assessment leaves out the most salient facts that the police explicitly told him not to pursue the kid, he pursued him anyway, the kid was unarmed, the police refused to do a proper investigation, and the judge just let the guy walk out the door. Intent may be the hardest thing to prove, but the courts certainly do not demand iron clad evidence and the whole case smells like over up.
 
  • #47
wuliheron said:
That assessment leaves out the most salient facts that the police explicitly told him not to pursue the kid, he pursued him anyway, the kid was unarmed, the police refused to do a proper investigation, and the judge just let the guy walk out the door. Intent may be the hardest thing to prove, but the courts certainly do not demand iron clad evidence and the whole case smells like cover up.
I don't think any of us know the details of this thing. So it seems that it would be in the interest of justice to wait a bit till we render any judgements. Maybe the neighborhood watch guy was in the wrong. Maybe not. I don't think any of us have enough data to ascertain it one way or the other.
 
  • #48
ThomasT said:
I don't think any of us know the details of this thing. So it seems that it would be in the interest of justice to wait a bit till we render any judgements. Maybe the neighborhood watch guy was in the wrong. Maybe not. I don't think any of us have enough data to ascertain it one way or the other.

What we know is that the whole thing smells rotten and it is certainly within our power to at least protest and demand that justice be served. It certainly would not be the first time or last that the legal system failed to do its job, especially in the deep south when a black man is involved, without at least some prompting from the public.
 
  • #49
wuliheron said:
What we know is that the whole thing smells rotten ...
I don't know that, because I don't know the details. What I don't like is this upheaval because the guy who got killed was black and the guy who killed him wasn't black. It's like the OJ thing. OJ quite apparently killed those two people, but because of a predominantly black jury, he got acquitted. The point wrt that is that black's are just as, perhaps moreso, racist as whites. Blacks are racist. Whites are racist. Everybody is racist ... to a certain degree. Ethnicities are ethnocentric. This is a fact of humanity that's never, ever, going to change.

All I'm saying is to be patient and wait until you know more of the situation before you make judgements.

At this time, we don't have enough information to ascertain who was in the wrong.
 
  • #50
ThomasT said:
I don't know that, because I don't know the details. What I don't like is this upheaval because the guy who got killed was black and the guy who killed him wasn't black. It's like the OJ thing. OJ quite apparently killed those two people, but because of a predominantly black jury, he got acquitted. The point wrt that is that black's are just as, perhaps moreso, racist as whites. Blacks are racist. Whites are racist. Everybody is racist ... to a certain degree. Ethnicities are ethnocentric. This is a fact of humanity that's never, ever, going to change.

All I'm saying is to be patient and wait until you know more of the situation before you make judgements.

At this time, we don't have enough information to ascertain who was in the wrong.

Who cares about blacks possibly being more racist then whites. This is an unarmed 17 year old kid who probably weighed a hundred pounds less then the guy who shot him in the middle of a gated community. If they'd both been white I'd still be outraged that the judge just let the guy walk and the police refused to do a thorough investigation after warning the guy in advance not to pursue the kid. It smells as rotten as they come and his being black only adds to the stench.
 
  • #51
Evo said:
A witness reported that she could hear Trayvon's calls for help.

A witness reported that she could hear someone yelling for help. You can hear that person yelling for help yourself on the 911 calls.

Which person is it that's yelling? Martin or Zimmerman?
 
  • #52
wuliheron said:
That assessment leaves out the most salient facts that the police explicitly told him not to pursue the kid, he pursued him anyway, the kid was unarmed, the police refused to do a proper investigation, and the judge just let the guy walk out the door. Intent may be the hardest thing to prove, but the courts certainly do not demand iron clad evidence and the whole case smells like over up.
The police did not charge him, so there is nothing that a judge can do. There is no judge to let Zimmerman walk. Either the police charge him, or the local DA or grand jury must indict him. Otherwise federal prosecutors or DOJ officials must indict him before a judge gets involved.
 
  • #53
BobG said:
A witness reported that she could hear someone yelling for help. You can hear that person yelling for help yourself on the 911 calls.

Which person is it that's yelling? Martin or Zimmerman?
I've heard that Zimmerman claimed he was screaming, and others claim that Martin is the one screaming. It sounds to me like a young, adolescent voice.
 
  • #54
Astronuc said:
The police did not charge him, so there is nothing that a judge can do. There is no judge to let Zimmerman walk. Either the police charge him, or the local DA or grand jury must indict him. Otherwise federal prosecutors or DOJ officials must indict him before a judge gets involved.

The Black Panthers have already put a reward up for the first person to make a citizen's arrest. Anyone who thinks they have to wait for a cop to do something better be waiting at a Dunken Doughnuts or a speed trap.
 
  • #55
phoenix:\\ said:
I am wondering, even if Zimmerman pursued the kid, and the kid felt he was in danger so attacked Zimmerman, and was keeping up with the assault without stopping, is Zimmerman within his right to shoot him? If he felt his life was in danger enough to shoot, is he within a reasonable right to try and get the attacker off of him even if he instigated the confrontation? There is a law detailing unnecessary defense of self and from what it seems, it's plausible if what Zimmerman says is true and what that witness that goes by John has stated.

I think this is a good point.

First because shouldn't a person have the right to walk from a convenience store to his own home in his own neighborhood without being accosted by some stranger wearing a red jacket?

If the "stand your ground" law justifies shooting someone, surely it justifies just beating them up so they'll leave you alone. It's at least less extreme than shooting the person.

But, given the fact that Zimmerman's lawyer has mentioned the "stand your ground" law, it's possible the actual situation isn't Zimmerman shooting Martin while Martin was beating him up.

It's entirely possible Zimmerman never had his gun drawn when he accosted Martin. He may be self-educating himself in police techniques, but, given how often he called them out to investigate some minor incident over the years, he's probably at least seen how police approach "suspicious" incidents. And, given how trivial some of these incidents are, I'm pretty sure the responding police didn't show up with their guns drawn. And I'm pretty sure Zimmerman didn't respond to every "suspicious" incident with his gun drawn, either. A couple of these incidents were things such as "kids playing in the street" and a couple of 7-9 year olds acting suspiciously. I don't think he'd still be running around as the self designated neighborhood watchman if he were pulling his gun on kids.

Given how Zimmerman's lawyer has brought up the "stand your ground" law, it's possible he knows the forensic tests will show Zimmerman shot Martin from a few feet away, which wouldn't be consistent with shooting Martin in the middle of death threatening combat.

It's possible that Martin stopped beating on Zimmerman because he was a fairly rational person and realized he'd already gotten his point across. And once Martin stopped beating on Zimmerman, Zimmerman finally had a chance to get his gun out and shot Martin after the fight instead of during the fight.
 
  • #56
Wikipedia has some audio clips of 911 calls, I'm in a library so haven't played them yet but I intend to later.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Trayvon_Martin

In my opinion this whole situation is a grave tragedy and it will be made even more so if the law protects this man. Any law that can be used to allow a citizen to harass another citizen, instigate a confrontation and then kill them when you feel threatened is an unjust one regardless of if that is the intention of the law. If I was walking down the street and some stranger tried to talk to me it is very likely that I would ignore them, even more so if they seem threatening. If they tried to block my path or touch me I would warn them not to do so and if they persist then I would consider either using reasonable force or calling the police. The last thing I would want to have to do is worry that if I seem threatening at all this citizen (not an official so has no business interfering with me on the street) could shoot me dead.

What really confuses me (above how the law can be used in a situation of "my inappropriate/illegal actions resulted in someone behaving in a way I felt was threatening so I shot them") is whether or not this law would have protected Trayvon if he had a gun and the inclination to use it. Under this law surely if Zimmerman came up to Trayvon, tried to block his path or interfere in some way and perhaps mentioned/revealed his gun Trayvon would have been in his rights to shoot. Things like this baffle me as to why this law is in effect.
 
  • #57
First because shouldn't a person have the right to walk from a convenience store to his own home in his own neighborhood without being accosted by some stranger wearing a red jacket?

That's been the assumption.

This was a "Gated Community"" whatever that means.

Is it posted as "Private" ?
Does Martin live there?
Was he taking a shortcut home and someplace he didnt belong or was he on a public street?

Where i lived in Key Largo there is an exclusive gated community called "Ocean Reef" with armed guards at the gate. My social strata just doesn't get in there without an invitation. I've never been past the gate.

Zimmerman may have been within his rights to question the young man.
Or he may be an overzealous "Condo Commando" mental case.

I sure don't know.

So i repeat - i'll wait and see.
 
  • #58
wuliheron said:
...This is an unarmed 17 year old kid who probably weighed a hundred pounds less then the guy ...
This kid was 6'3" according Wiki.
 
  • #59
Ryan_m_b said:
...Any law that can be used to allow a citizen to harass another citizen, instigate a confrontation and then kill them when you feel threatened is an unjust one regardless of if that is the intention of the law. If I was walking down the street and some stranger tried to talk to me ... If they tried to block my path
So far per the tape I've heard where Z. followed Martin. That could be harassment depending on the circumstance: yes on a public thoroughfare, not so much on private property. Is it known that it was Z that instigated a confrontation, or blocked Martin's path?
 
  • #60
mheslep said:
This kid was 6'3" according Wiki.
And according to Wiki, he weighed 140# (110# less than Zimmerman). Hardly an imposing figure that a much larger, armed older man would have reason to fear.
 
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  • #61
checkitagain said:
But there shouldn't be a designation of "hate crimes" to begin with,
as if a person's supposed motivation for a crime could lessen
a penalty. It's hinged upon mind-reading.

And you're presumptuous about this Zimmerman being a racist.
You're trying to read his mind.

Here is a worn-out cliche':

The victim is just as dead.


It shouldn't matter if someone is a supposed racist when it
comes to the crimes. It should matter with the killing being
deliberate, accidental, justified, not justified, the intensity, etc.

There are American voters who have said that they would
never vote for Barack Obama to be President again. And
many of them of them have been called racists
for that very fact alone.

The boy isn't dead because the shooter is a (supposed)
racist. He's dead because the shooter is overzealous and
relatively mentally unstable.

There are numbers of self-admitted racists who would go out
of their way to not be in the vicinity of people of races they
hate.

And on a related note, why should appearing to have remorse
and/or being apologetic by a person convicted of murder, etc,
be used to try to reduce the sentence given for a penalty?

Agreed. This reminds me of the cases involving Rodney King, OJ Simpson/Nicole Brown/Ron Goldman, Bernard Goetz, etc. I see too many people over-reacting and not asking the right questions. Here is my view.

Was it pre-meditated or provoked, or was Zimmerman threatened, did he OVER-react, or was he seriously in danger? Did the victim provoke Zimmerman?

Only a jury examining all the evidence can answer. My position is just that I do not know. Right now, Zimmerman is INNOCENT until a jury finds him guilty beyond a doubt. That's the law.

I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.

I don't know.

Claude
 
  • #62
I'm totally lost at how this argument is even going on

http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/26/10868250-thousands-march-in-protest-to-florida-hearing-on-trayvon-martin-slaying

immerman's account emerged for the first time Monday in a report by The Orlando Sentinel. Quoting unidentified "law enforcement authorities," the Sentinel reported that Zimmerman told police that Trayvon Martin knocked him down with a single punch and slammed his head into the sidewalk several times before the shooting — an account that police said witnesses have corroborated.

Witnesses said they heard someone cry out in distress, some of them telling NBC News and other news organizations that it was Martin. But police sources told the Sentinel their evidence indicated it was Zimmerman.

So...
 
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  • #64
Pengwuino said:
I'm totally lost at how this argument is even going on

http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/26/10868250-thousands-march-in-protest-to-florida-hearing-on-trayvon-martin-slaying

So...


So, it still doesn't explain why he stalked the kid in the first place after the police told him to back off, why the kid attacked him, or why the police just let him go. At the very least there should be an investigation.
 
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  • #65
wuliheron said:
So, it still doesn't explain why he stalked the kid in the first place after the police told him to back off, why the kid attacked him, or why the police just let him go. At the very least there should be an investigation.

Agreed, and it sounds like there is. All this nonsense about this kid being all innocent and being shot in cold blood sounds like garbage though. Get beyond the fact that now it's likely not a 1 sided defenseless murder and you have a situation that happens daily throughout the country.
 
  • #66
Pengwuino said:
Agreed, and it sounds like there is. All this nonsense about this kid being all innocent and being shot in cold blood sounds like garbage though. Get beyond the fact that now it's likely not a 1 sided defenseless murder and you have a situation that happens daily throughout the country.

Those speculations wouldn't be happening if the cops had done their job to begin with.
 
  • #67
wuliheron said:
Those speculations wouldn't be happening if the cops had done their job to begin with.

In this political climate, I highly doubt that. This morning I saw those Black panthers basically putting out a bounty for this zimmerman guy. Speculation should not lead to in a sense, terrorism against a country's own citizens in any decent society.
 
  • #68
wuliheron said:
Those speculations wouldn't be happening if the cops had done their job to begin with.

Which part?

It sounds to me as if they did investigate the crime and their actions were based on what their preliminary investigation indicated to them.

On the other hand, immediately making the details of their investigation public could have reduced speculation.

I'm not sure that's routine policy for all the crimes they investigate, though (nor would news organizations be interested in most of the crimes they investigate).

At best, I think you could say they should have anticipated this would generate more than average interest? Questionable, but in hindsight the case definitely has generated more than average interest. I think a more legitimate complaint would be that they should have been quicker to pick up on the interest and at least have been quicker to react to it. This had already spiraled into a national cause by time the police released more details on the case.
 
  • #69
jim hardy said:
That's been the assumption.

This was a "Gated Community"" whatever that means.

Is it posted as "Private" ?
Does Martin live there?
Was he taking a shortcut home and someplace he didnt belong or was he on a public street?

Where i lived in Key Largo there is an exclusive gated community called "Ocean Reef" with armed guards at the gate. My social strata just doesn't get in there without an invitation. I've never been past the gate.

Zimmerman may have been within his rights to question the young man.
Or he may be an overzealous "Condo Commando" mental case.

I sure don't know.

So i repeat - i'll wait and see.

Martin's father lives there. Martin spends enough time there to know at least one person in the neighborhood, but maybe not enough time for Zimmerman to recognize him as one of the residents.

Zimmerman was not within his "rights". He was definitely overzealous.

Guidelines for neighborhood watch groups:

http://www.bellevuepd.com/neighborhoodwatch.pdf . Okay, that's not particularly helpful, but I used to live there. Plus, it does point out some of the problems with neighborhood watch programs. The guidance given out across different communities is uneven, and perhaps inadequate in some cases. In this case, Bellevue relies on the Police Dept giving more detailed tips in person after the group is registered with the Police Dept.

http://www.sacsheriff.com/crime_prevention/documents/neighborhood_watch_04.cfm . More typical of the type of guidance the police/sheriff dept will provide to neighborhood watch programs, either publically or in person (provided the group has actually registered with the police).

Specifically in the guidance for citizen patrols:
Make sure your citizen patrol:

Undergoes training by law enforcement and have their support;
Works in teams;
Wears identifying clothing -t-shirts, caps, vests, .jackets-or reflective clothing or patches;
Never carries weapons of any kind — e.g. guns, black jack, mace, baseball bat, or knives;
Never challenges anyone;
Always carries a pad and pencil, and a flashlight if it is dark;
Is courteous and helpful to residents of the area being patrolled: and
Keeps logs and files reports with the local law enforcement agency.

Zimmerman's neighborhood watch program was an unofficial one that was never registered and, presumably, never received the guidance that registered neighborhood watch groups received (Correction: Apparently the group was registered with the local police, but not registered with the national association of neighborhood watch groups, for whatever the national group is worth. Training to neighborhood watch groups is still very uneven).

Zimmerman violated at least four of the first five items on that list (and five unless you consider a red jacket as identifying clothing).

Neighbor watch groups have the authority to watch and to report. That's it. They have no authority to stop crimes, or to question suspicious people. They can only watch and report.
 
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  • #70
Zimmerman was not within his "rights". He was definitely overzealous.

If indeed Martin's father lives in the community not just the neighborhood, just saying so should have been the end of it.

How'd it get to fisticuffs ?
 

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