Trayvon Martin

This is a great article about the Trayvon Martin case.

From day one I have not been able to get this situation out of my head. My thoughts go out the family and loved ones of Trayvon. Justice must be served.

Trayvon Martin (AP Photo/HO,Martin Family Photos

The tragic story of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed Florida teen who was fatally shot last month by a neighborhood watch volunteer, is now garnering national media attention. And the release last week of calls to police during the incident are bolstering demands for the shooter, George Zimmerman—who has yet to be detained by authorities—to be charged in Martin’s death. Meanwhile, some are arguing that a permissive Florida gun law played a role in the tragedy.

Here’s what you need to know about where things stand:

What happened?
On Feb. 26, Martin, a 17-year-old African-American and Miami native, was visiting his father in Sanford, near Orlando. Martin was watching the NBA All-Star Game at a house in a gated Sanford community, and at halftime he stepped out to buy some Skittles and an iced tea at a local 7-Eleven.

Zimmerman, an armed neighborhood watch volunteer who was patrolling the area in an SUV, saw Martin returning to the house and became suspicious. A violent confrontation ensued, which ended with Martin being shot to death. Zimmerman was found bleeding from the nose and the back of the head, standing over Martin.

How did the police respond?
Zimmerman, a white Hispanic, told police he acted in self-defense, and has not been charged with a crime. “Until we can establish probable cause to dispute that, we don’t have the grounds to arrest him,” Sanford Police Chief Billy Lee said last Tuesday.

Martin’s father has said that police initially told him they didn’t charge Zimmerman because he studied criminal justice and had a squeaky clean record. (In fact, Zimmerman was charged in 2005 with battery on a law enforcement officer and resisting arrest with violence—the charges were later dropped.)

Police at the scene also didn’t test Zimmerman for alcohol or drugs, although it’s considered standard procedure in a homicide investigation to do so. And an eyewitness at the scene says she told cops that Martin had been calling for help, but that an officer “corrected” her to say that it was Zimmerman who was calling for help.

What about those tapes of calls to police?
Over the weekend, Sanford police responded to public pressure by releasing audio recordings of calls to police, as well as Zimmerman’s own call to a non-emergency dispatch number.

The recording suggests Zimmerman followed Martin despite no evidence that the teen was doing anything wrong, and that Zimmerman ignored a warning to stay away. Zimmerman can be heard telling the dispatcher that he’s seen a “real suspicious guy” who “looks like he’s up to no good, or he’s on drugs or something,” adding: “These a——- always get away.”

A few moments later, Zimmerman tells the dispatcher: “S—, he’s running.” The dispatcher asks: “Are you following him?” to which Zimmerman responds that he is. “OK, we don’t need you to do that,” the dispatcher warns.

There’s little doubt that Zimmerman was overzealous in his neighborhood watch duties. In the eight weeks before the shooting, he had called police no less than 46 times.

What role did Florida’s “stand your ground” law play?
Zimmerman was licensed to carry his gun. But Florida has some of the loosest gun laws in the country, allowing citizens like Zimmerman to patrol the streets armed, looking for crime. And in 2005, it passed what supporters refer to as a “stand your ground” law, which opponents call a “shoot first” law: It made it legal for Floridians to shoot to kill in response to a perceived threat, rather than first having to retreat before using deadly force.

Gun control advocates say the law condones the type of shooting that took Martin’s life. “The ‘shoot first’ law seems to allow that sort of vigilante shooting,” Daniel Vice, a senior attorney with the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a group that supporters stricter gun laws, told Yahoo News.

Supporters of the law say it doesn’t give you a free pass to shoot first and ask questions later. “Stand your ground’ is not a 007 license to kill,” Sean Caranna of Florida Carry, a gun-rights group, told the Orlando Sentinel, adding that you have to have a “a real fear your life is in danger.”

But Vice said that in reality, it’s tough for prosecutors to prove a shooter didn’t fear for his life, especially when he’s the only one still alive to testify.

“Normally, if you shoot someone you have to explain it,” said Vice. “This now completely shifts the burden and says, ‘OK prosecutors, you now have to prove he didn’t do it in self-defense.'”

What are the chances that Zimmerman will be charged?
It’s hard to say. Right now, the issue is in the hands of the Florida state attorney’s office. If it declines to file charges, the U.S. Justice Department could step in—indeed, a lawyer for Martin’s family has written to Attorney General Eric Holder, requesting federal intervention. And the FBI told ABC News it has been in contact with local authorities and is “monitoring the matter.”

White House Press Secretary Jay Carney called the incident “a local law-enforcement matter” on Monday, though he also said: “Our thoughts and prayers go out to Trayvon Martin’s family.”

If the Feds did get involved, they could potentially charge Zimmerman with a hate crime, if they believed that he singled Martin out because of his race.

What has been the public response?
The local state’s attorney’s office received so many emails urging it to prosecute Zimmerman that its website had to be taken down for 45 minutes, it told ABC News. And an online petition started by Martin’s parents calling for Zimmerman’s arrest has received more than 400,000 signatures. African-American leaders like Al Sharpton and hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons also have weighed in, and over the weekend New York Times columnist Charles Blow wrote that “as the father of two black teenage boys, this case hits close to home.”

RIP Trayvon Martin

Source
Zachary Roth/The Lookout/Yahoo News

Posted on March 20, 2012, in News/Politics and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.

  1. I’ve been holding my tongue on this one, waiting for all the facts to come in becaase I usually have a tendency to make wild conclusions about instances such as this but everything that keeps coming out about this case points the fact Zimmerman felt this kids was a “threat” and he felt the need to use deadly force on him when he was clearly advised not to. Sad to say I wonder if the kid would have stood a chance if the real cops had come as we all know how trigger happy certain cops get when they see a young black man who appears (wearing a hoodie, etc…) ‘suspicious’.

  2. I actually read about this case the first week of February and was moved by it immediately, but had no idea that it would come to this much attention.

    I was appalled and distraught by this case since I read it.

    There was a march here but I was I unable to go.

    I Walk And Stand In Solidarity With The Family Of Trayvon Martin #Justice

    Peace

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