On the night of February 26, 2012, in
Sanford,
Florida, United States,
George Zimmerman fatally shot
Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old
African American high school student. Zimmerman, a 28-year-old mixed-race
Hispanic man,
[Note 1] was the
neighborhood watch coordinator for the
gated community where Martin was temporarily living and where the shooting took place.
[4][5][6]
Zimmerman shot Martin, who was unarmed, during an altercation between
the two. Responding to an earlier call from Zimmerman, police arrived
on the scene within two minutes of the shooting. Zimmerman was taken
into custody, treated for head injuries, then questioned for five hours.
The police chief said that Zimmerman was released because there was no
evidence to refute Zimmerman's claim of having acted in self-defense,
and that under Florida's
Stand Your Ground statute, the police were prohibited by law from making an arrest.
[7] The police chief also said that Zimmerman had had a right to defend himself with lethal force.
[8]
As news of the case spread, thousands of protesters across the country called for Zimmerman's arrest and a full investigation.
[9] Six weeks after the shooting, amid widespread, intense, and in some cases
misleading media coverage,
[10][11] Zimmerman was
charged with murder by a
special prosecutor appointed by Governor
Rick Scott.
[12][13]
Zimmerman's trial began on June 10, 2013, in Sanford. On July 13, 2013, a jury acquitted him of second-degree murder and of manslaughter charges.
[14]
Parties involved
Trayvon Benjamin Martin was the son of Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin, who were divorced in 1999. He was a
junior at
Dr. Michael M. Krop High School and lived with his mother and older brother in
Miami Gardens, Florida.
[22][23][24]
On the day he was fatally shot, he and his father were visiting his
father's fiancée and her son at her town home in Sanford, Florida. She
lived in
The Retreat at Twin Lakes, a multi-ethnic gated community where Martin had visited several times before.
[25][26]
According to his autopsy, Martin was 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) tall and weighed 158 pounds (72 kg) at the time of his death.
[19]
(February 5, 1995 – February 26, 2012)
George Zimmerman
George Michael Zimmerman (born October 5, 1983) was born in
Manassas, Virginia,
[29] and is the son of Gladys (née Mesa) Zimmerman, born in
Peru,
[3] and Robert Zimmerman Sr., a retired Virginia
magistrate.
[30][31] At the time of the shooting, Zimmerman was employed as an insurance fraud investigator.
[3] He had been working toward an
associate degree in criminal justice at
Seminole State College.
[32] In one of his interviews with the police, he said his goal was to become a judge.
[33]
At the time of his arrest on April 11, 2012, Zimmerman's height was reportedly 5 feet 7 inches
(1.70 m) and his weight
185 lb(84 kg), according to the Seminole County Sheriff's Office Inmate Booking record.
[28] Zimmerman's height was shown as 5 feet 8 inches
(1.73 m) and his weight at
200 lb(91 kg) on the Sanford Police Department Offense Report for February 26, 2012, the night of the shooting.
[34]
Zimmerman and his wife moved to The Retreat at Twin Lakes in 2009.
[25][35]
Sanford Police Department
Bill Lee had been chief of the
Sanford Police Department for ten months when the shooting occurred.
[36]
Prior to Lee becoming chief, the department had been accused of
protecting relatives of police officers involved in violent incidents
with blacks, and the Martin case increased distrust between the police
and Sanford's black community.
[37]
On March 22, Chief Lee
temporarily stepped down from his position because of public criticism over his handling of the Trayvon Martin shooting.
[36]
In April, the Sanford City Commission refused to accept Lee's
resignation and stated that "Lee's spotless record showed there needed
to be further review to determine if he failed in his duties." Lee was
fired on June 20, 2012 by Sanford City Manager Norton Bonaparte.
[38]
Lee responded by saying "I continue to stand by the work performed by
the Sanford Police Department in this tragic shooting, which has been
plagued by misrepresentations and false statements for interests other
than justice."
[39]
On June 26, 2012, the lead investigator of the case, Christopher
Serino, was transferred out of the Sanford Police Department's
investigative unit and reassigned to the patrol division at his own
request.
[40]
Serino said he felt pressured by several of his fellow police officers
to press charges on Zimmerman when he believed there was not enough
evidence to do so, and that one of the officers pressuring him was a
friend of Martin's father.
[41]
In September 2012, Orlando TV station
WFTV
released a leaked memo in which interim police chief Richard Myers
blamed the police department spokesperson, Sgt. David Morgenstern, for
having mishandled the Travyon Martin case and removed him from his
spokesperson position.
[42]
Martin family attorneys
Benjamin Crump, the lawyer representing the interests of the Martin family, operates a law firm in
Tallahassee, Florida, with his partner Daryl Parks.
[43] The firm has eight lawyers who focus on
wrongful death,
malpractice,
personal injury and
civil rights.
[44][45]
The Martin family is also represented by Natalie Jackson, an Orlando civil rights attorney.
[46][47]
Background of the shooting
The Retreat at Twin Lakes is a 260-unit gated townhome community in Sanford, Florida.
[48][49]
The population in the development, at the time of the shooting, was
about 49% non-Hispanic white, 23% Hispanic (of any race), 20% black, and
5% Asian, according to Census figures.
[37] Both George Zimmerman and Tracy Martin's fiancée were renting homes in the development when the shooting occurred. At the time of the shooting, Martin had been staying with his father's fiancee at The Retreat.
[26]
From January 1, 2011 through February 26, 2012, police were called to The Retreat at Twin Lakes 402 times.
[37]
Crimes committed at The Retreat in the year prior to Martin's death had
included eight burglaries, nine thefts, and one shooting.
[50]
Twin Lakes residents said there were dozens of reports of attempted
break-ins, which had created an atmosphere of fear in their
neighborhood.
[3]
In September 2011, the Twin Lakes residents held an organizational
meeting to create a neighborhood watch program. Zimmerman was selected
by neighbors as the program's coordinator, according to Wendy Dorival,
Neighborhood Watch organizer for the Sanford Police Department.
[6][51]
Zimmerman had made nearly 50 calls to police between 2004 and 2012 to
report various local disturbances, such as loud parties, open garage
doors, potholes, and children playing in the street.
[37][50][52]
Following break-ins in the neighborhood in 2011, Zimmerman's calls to
police increasingly focused on reporting people he suspected of criminal
activity.
[25][50]
During the months leading up to the February 26, 2012 shooting,
Zimmerman called the police several times to report people he believed
to be suspicious. On each of the calls, Zimmerman only offered
information about their race when specifically asked by the dispatcher
to do so, reporting that the people were black males.
[53][54][55][Note 4]
According to friends and neighbors of Zimmerman, three weeks prior to
the shooting, on February 2 Zimmerman called police to report a young
man peering into the windows of an empty Twin Lakes home.
[3]
By the time police arrived, the suspect had fled. On February 6,
workers witnessed two young black men lingering in the yard of a Twin
Lakes resident around the same time a new laptop and some gold jewelry
were stolen from her home. The next day police discovered the stolen
laptop in the backpack of a young black man whom Zimmerman identified as
the same person he had spotted peering into windows on February 2.
[3]
Zimmerman had been licensed to carry a firearm since November 2009.
In response to Zimmerman's multiple reports regarding a loose
pit bull
in the Twin Lakes neighborhood, a Seminole County Animal Services
officer advised Zimmerman to "get a gun", according to a friend, rather
than rely on pepper spray to fend off the pit bull, which on one
occasion had cornered his wife.
[3] Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee acknowledged that Zimmerman had a legal right to carry his firearm on the night of the shooting.
[37]
Shooting and investigations
On the evening of February 26, 2012, Zimmerman observed Martin as he
returned to the Twin Lakes housing community after having walked to a
nearby convenience store.
[56] At the time, Zimmerman was driving through the neighborhood on a personal errand.
[57]
|
7:09:34 PM, February 26, 2012
|
Problems playing this file? See media help. |
At approximately 7:09 PM,
[Note 5] Zimmerman called the Sanford police non-emergency number to report a suspicious person in the Twin Lakes community.
[59] Zimmerman stated, "We've had some break-ins in my neighborhood, and there's a real suspicious guy."
[3]
He described an unknown male "just walking around looking about" in the
rain and said, "This guy looks like he is up to no good or he is on
drugs or something."
[60] Zimmerman reported that the person had his hand in his waistband and was walking around looking at homes.
[61] On the recording, Zimmerman is heard saying, "these assholes, they always get away."
[62][63]
About two minutes into the call, Zimmerman said, "he's running".
[17] The dispatcher asked, "He's running? Which way is he running?"
[64]
Noises on the tape at this point have been interpreted by some media
outlets as the sound of a car door chime, possibly indicating Zimmerman
opened his car door.
[65] Zimmerman followed Martin, eventually losing sight of him.
[17]
The dispatcher asked Zimmerman if he was following him. When Zimmerman
answered, "yeah", the dispatcher said, "We don't need you to do that."
Zimmerman responded, "Okay."
[66] Zimmerman asked that police call him upon their arrival so he could provide his location.
[17] Zimmerman ended the call at 7:15 p.m.
[17]
After Zimmerman ended his call with police, a violent encounter took
place between Martin and Zimmerman, which ended when Zimmerman fatally
shot Martin 70 yards (64 m) from the rear door of the townhouse where
Martin was staying.
[67][Note 6]
[show]Full transcript of Zimmerman's call to SPD non-emergency number[64][69] |
Sanford Police investigation
Police Officer Timothy Smith arrived at the scene at approximately
7:17 PM. He reported finding Zimmerman standing near Martin, who was
lying face down in the grass and unresponsive.
[16][70]
At that time, Zimmerman stated to Smith that he had shot Martin and was
still armed. Smith handcuffed Zimmerman and removed his weapon from
him. Smith observed that Zimmerman's back was wet and covered with grass
and he was bleeding from the nose and the back of his head.
[16][71]
Ricardo Ayala, the second officer to arrive that night, noticed
Officer Smith had Zimmerman in custody, then observed Martin lying face
down in the grass and attempted to get a response from him. At this
time, Sgt. Anthony Raimondo arrived and together with Ayala began
CPR.
Paramedics from Sanford Fire and Rescue arrived and continued CPR, finally declaring Martin dead at 7:30 PM.
[16]
Other officers who had arrived by this time secured the area and made
contact with neighbors in the area and obtained statements from
witnesses at the scene. The officers, who believed Zimmerman proceeded
solely on foot before the attack, did not seize Zimmerman's vehicle
until after his wife had moved it.
[72] Zimmerman was treated and released by paramedics while still at the scene of the incident.
[16][71]
After placing Zimmerman in his police vehicle, Officer Smith heard
Zimmerman say, "I was yelling for someone to help me, but no one would
help me."
[16][73] Zimmerman was then transported to the
Sanford Police Department where he was questioned by investigators for approximately five hours.
[16][74] The police determined that Zimmerman yelled for help at least 14 times in a 38 second span.
[75] The question of who was calling for help has been disputed since then by others and remains inconclusive.
(See Background yells for help in 9-1-1 calls)
Martin's body was taken to the
morgue, where he was tagged as a
John Doe, as he was not carrying any identification.
[76] The mobile phone found at the shooting scene was malfunctioning to the point that the police
Cellebrite data recovery device could not access it.
[77]
Martin's father, Tracy Martin, called to file a Missing Persons report
early on February 28 and police officers arrived at his fiancée's condo
with photographs of his dead son about 9:20 am.
[76][78]
Zimmerman was handcuffed at the scene of the shooting and taken to
the Sanford police station for questioning, arriving there at 7:52 p.m.
according to a police video.
[17] His gun, a black
Kel-Tec PF-9 9mm semi-automatic pistol, taken from him by Officer Smith at the scene, was placed into evidence.
[16][82]
Zimmerman was interviewed by Investigator D. Singleton and by Detective Chris Serino on the night of the shooting.
[16][83] He also underwent a
voice stress analysis test in an attempt to see if he was lying, and he passed.
[72]
Crime Scene Tech D. Smith photographed his injuries and hands and
collected gunshot residue. Zimmerman's clothes were taken as evidence
after his wife arrived with a change of clothes.
[77] The day after the shooting, Zimmerman performed a videotaped reenactment of the incident for police.
[72]
Some observers, such as University of Florida law professor and defense attorney Michelle Jacobs
[84] and Columbia University law professor Patricia Williams,
[85]
said that the police failed to fully investigate the shooting when they
did not test Zimmerman for drugs or alcohol intoxication. However,
Miami, Florida police experts told the
Miami Herald that homicide
suspects are not typically tested for drugs or alcohol unless the
suspect has been accused of having been driving while intoxicated.
[86]
The Martin family alleged that Seminole County Attorney Wolfinger met
personally with Sanford Chief Lee on the night of the shooting and
instructed Lee not to make an arrest. Based on their accusation, the
Martin family requested that the Justice Department investigate the
State prosecutor's office. Wolfinger responded that the family's
accusations were "outright lies" and denied that any such meeting or
communication took place. Wolfinger's office reported that the Sanford
police consulted with Kelly Jo Hines, the prosecutor on call the night
of the shooting, but it has not been disclosed what was talked about.
[87]
On March 12, 2012, Police Chief Lee turned the investigation over to the State Attorney's office for review.
[88]
Lee said there was not enough evidence to arrest Zimmerman. "In this
case Mr. Zimmerman has made the statement of self-defense," Lee said.
"Until we can establish probable cause to dispute that, we don't have
the grounds to arrest him." In response to criticisms of the
investigation, Lee responded that "We are taking a beating over this"
and defended the investigation.
[89]
"This is all very unsettling. I'm sure if George Zimmerman had the
opportunity to relive Sunday, February 26, he'd probably do things
differently. I'm sure Trayvon would, too."
[37]
On March 13, 2012, Chris Serino sent a
capias request to the state's attorney recommending charges of
negligent manslaughter
against Zimmerman, though Serino maintains he did not believe they had
the evidence to support those charges and that manslaughter was only
included in the
capias in order for the prosecutor's office to continue with their own investigation.
[26][90][91][92] The
capias
states, "the encounter between George Zimmerman and Trayvon Martin was
ultimately avoidable by Zimmerman, if Zimmerman had remained in his
vehicle and waited the arrival of law enforcement or conversely if he
had identified himself to Martin as a concerned citizen and initiated
dialog in an effort to dispel each party's concern". "There is no
indication that Trayvon Martin was involved in any criminal activity at
the time of the encounter."
[93]
The State Attorney's office initially determined there was insufficient
evidence to charge Zimmerman and did not file charges based on the
capias request.
[92][94][95]
On March 16, Serino told the
Orlando Sentinel
that his investigation had turned up no reliable evidence that cast
doubt on Zimmerman's account, that he had acted in self-defense. "The
best evidence we have is the testimony of George Zimmerman, and he says
the
decedent was the primary aggressor in the whole event, everything I have is adding up to what he says."
[96]
FDLE and FBI investigations
On March 20, 2012, State attorney Norm Wolfinger announced that a
Seminole County grand jury would be convened on April 10 to investigate the death of Martin.
[97][98][99] However, after State Attorney Angela Corey was assigned to the case by
Florida Governor Rick Scott
on March 22, she decided that her office would decide whether to press
charges. "I always lean towards moving forward without needing the grand
jury in a case like this, I foresee us being able to make a decision,
and move on it on our own."
[13]
Governor Scott asked the
Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) to investigate the shooting
[100][101] and Florida Attorney General
Pam Bondi confirmed that the FDLE was involved and stated "no stone will be left unturned in this investigation."
[98]
On March 20, 2012, the
Justice Department announced that it was opening investigations into the incident.
[102] The FBI opened a parallel investigation into whether Martin's
civil rights were violated, interviewed witnesses, and looked into Zimmerman's background.
[103]
On July 12, reports of some of the more than 30 interviews conducted
by the FBI were released by Special Prosecutor Angela Corey to
Zimmerman's attorney, who released them to the public. The released
reports do not draw any conclusions in the DOJ investigation.
[104]
The Sanford Police Department's lead investigator, Chris Serino, told
FBI agents that he believed Zimmerman's actions were not based on
Martin's race, but instead on Martin's attire, the circumstances of the
encounter, and previous burglaries in the neighborhood. Zimmerman's
neighbors and co-workers were interviewed as well. Neighbors who knew
Zimmerman had nothing derogatory to say about him and his co-workers
were complimentary of him.
[104]
Serino also told the FBI that he had felt pressure from three
officers within the department to charge Zimmerman although he "did not
believe he had enough evidence at the time to file charges", and accused
one of these officers of being friendly with Martin's father. He also
expressed concern to the FBI about possible leaks of evidence to the
media from within the department.
[105]
On July 13, 2013, shortly after the trial verdict, the U.S. Justice
Department issued a statement saying its investigation into the civil
rights aspects of the case was continuing.
[106]
County medical examiner's autopsy report
The Volusia County medical examiner found that Martin was killed by
an injury resulting from a single gunshot to the chest, fired at
"intermediate range", between 1 and 18 inches according to a forensic
expert.
[15][Note 7] An FDLE analysis of Martin's body and clothes described the distance as "a contact shot".
[107]
The autopsy also found that Martin had one small abrasion on his left
ring finger below the knuckle. No other injuries were found on Martin's
body at the time of his death.
[15] Physicians who reviewed the official autopsy report for the
Orlando Sentinel,
stated in their opinion that Martin lived from 20 seconds to several
minutes after he was shot, and that Martin likely remained conscious
"for a little time, anyway".
[108]
The
autopsy report stated that Martin had trace levels of THC, the active ingredient in
marijuana, in his blood and urine. The
toxicology report found the levels to be 1.5
nanograms/ml of
THC and 7.3 nanograms/ml of
THC-COOH, a
metabolite of THC that can stay in the system for weeks after
cannabis has been smoked.
[109][110] Larry Kobilinsky, a professor of
forensic science, stated that the THC amount was so low that it may have been ingested days earlier and played no role in Martin's behavior.
[111]
While under oath, the medical examiner who performed the autopsy
testified that "marijuana could have no effect or some effect" on
Martin's behavior.
[112]
Witness accounts
Recordings of eight calls to the police made on the night of the shooting were released by the Sanford police on March 17, 2012.
[61][114]
The only eyewitness to the end of the confrontation stated that
Martin was on top of Zimmerman and punching him, while Zimmerman was
yelling for help. This witness, who identified himself as "John", stated
that "the guy on the bottom, who had a red sweater on, was yelling to
me, 'Help! Help!' and I told him to stop, and I was calling 911".
[115]
He went on to say that when he got upstairs and looked down, "the guy
who was on the top beating up the other guy, was the one laying in the
grass, and I believe he was dead at that point."
[115][116][117]
A 13-year-old boy walking his dog saw a man on the ground shortly before the shooting and identified him as wearing red.
[118][119][120]
His mother later disputed the testimony and claimed that the police
pressured him into choosing the color that the man was wearing and that
her son could not see any details in the dark. She also stated that the
police waited five days before requesting to even question her son and
said that the lead homicide investigator told her that he did not
believe the shooting was self-defense.
[121][122]
Mary Cutcher and her roommate, Selma Mora Lamilla, appeared on
AC 360,
and Cutcher stated that she believes that "there was no punching, no
hitting going on at the time, no wrestling" just prior to the shooting
but admitted that she neither saw the shooting nor the preceding
altercation.
[123][124][125]
Cutcher and her roommate heard the pair in their backyard and a "very
young voice" whining, with no sounds of a fight. They heard a gunshot;
the crying stopped immediately, and they saw Zimmerman on his knees
straddling Martin on the ground.
[123][125]
Mary Cutcher phoned police after the fatal shooting and said the black
man was standing over another man, although Trayvon Martin was already
dead.
[17] According to the
Orlando Sentinel
article, "Police spokesman Sgt. Dave Morgenstern [on March 15] issued a
statement disputing Cutcher's version of events, calling her statements
to WFTV "inconsistent with her sworn testimony to police."
[126]
However, Cutcher and her roommate maintain that their account of the
incident to the police did not agree with Zimmerman's, and they demanded
the police issue a retraction.
[124]
On March 29, 2012, an eyewitness referred to as a male said that he
saw two men on the ground scuffling, then heard the shooting, and saw
Zimmerman walk away with no blood on him.
[127][128]
The witness later appeared on CNN AC360 referred to as a female, giving
more details on her account. She pointed out that she heard an argument
between a younger and an older voice. During the time that she
witnessed the incident, the scuffling happened on the grass. She said
that the larger man, who walked away after the gunshot, was on top and
that it was too dark to see blood on his face.
[129]
A witness who arrived shortly after the shooting revealed photos that
he took that night that showed "blood trickling down the back of
Zimmerman's head from two cuts. It also shows a possible contusion
forming on the crown of his head". In revealing the photo to
ABC News
in mid-April, he noted that he had heard but had not seen the scuffle,
had been the first to arrive, and had been the first to talk to
Zimmerman after the shooting.
[130]
One eyewitness statement given the night of the shooting describes "a
black male, wearing a dark colored 'hoodie' on top of a white or
Hispanic male who was yelling for help." The witness said that the black
male was throwing punches "MMA [mixed martial arts] style." After
hearing a "pop," he saw the black male "laid out on the grass."
[131][132]
When the witness was subsequently interviewed weeks later by a
different agency, the witness said he thought that the black male was
either punching or pinning the lighter skinned male underneath him. He
was no longer certain who was calling for help, having not seen their
mouths in the dark. He was still certain that the black male had been on
top of the lighter-skinned male.
[133]
On March 20, 2012, Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump revealed
that Martin had been on the phone with a friend moments before he was
shot.
[134][135][136] This friend later identified Zimmerman as the aggressor in the deadly confrontation.
[137] At Zimmerman's trial, this friend testified that she did not know whether Zimmerman or Martin started the fight.
[138]
During an ABC News exclusive report, Crump allowed portions of his
recorded interview with Martin's friend to be aired. She said that
Martin told her that a man was watching him from his vehicle while
talking on the phone before the man started following Martin. Martin
told his friend at one point that he had lost the man but the man
suddenly appeared again.
[135][136][139]
The friend, originally known only as "Witness 8" (now known as Rachel
Jeantel), said that she told Martin to run to the townhouse where he was
staying with his father and the father's fiancée.
[136]
She then heard Martin say, "What are you following me for?" followed by
a man's voice responding, "What are you doing around here?" She
testified that she then heard what sounded like Martin's phone earpiece
dropping into wet grass, and she heard the sound of Martin's voice
saying "Get off! Get off!" The phone then went dead, she said: "I was
trying to say Trayvon, Trayvon, what's going on," Jeantel testified. "I
started hearing a little of Trayvon saying 'Get off, get off,'" when the
phone went silent.
[140][141][142][143] She immediately attempted to call him back, but was unable to reach him.
[144]
Crump stated that he would turn the information over to the Justice
Department because "the family does not trust the Sanford Police
Department to have anything to do with the investigation."
[135]
Martin's friend was subsequently interviewed by state prosecutors on
April 2, 2012. During her interview with the prosecutor, Martin's friend
recounted her last phone call with Martin and added that Martin had
described the man as "crazy and creepy", watching him from a vehicle
while the man was talking on the phone.
[136] She also testified that Martin referred to Zimmerman as a "creepy ass
cracker" and "
nigga" during their telephone conversation.
[145][146]
On March 6, 2013, prosecutors admitted that she had lied under oath,
when she falsely testified that she had been in the hospital on the day
of Martin's funeral. She later admitted being embarrassed about lying
and that she felt guilty about Martin's death and not doing more to
help.
[147][148][149]
Crump had refused to disclose the identity of Witness 8, stating that
she was only 16, a minor at the time of the shooting, and asked the
media to respect her privacy.
[150] It was subsequently revealed that she was actually 18 at the time when she said she was on the phone with Martin.
[151] According to the defense, her actual age had been edited out of previously released disclosures.
[152] Crump has denied intentionally giving any misleading statements about her age.
[153]
Witness 8 was subsequently identified as Rachel Jeantel, a friend with
whom Martin had attended elementary school and high school.
[154]
George Zimmerman's account of events
On the advice of his legal counsel, Zimmerman did not speak to the media after the shooting.
[155]
The statements he gave to police investigators were publicly released
on June 21, 2012, when Zimmerman's attorney, Mark O'Mara, published his
written and recorded statements on Zimmerman's legal defense web site.
[156][157][158]
Prior to the release of the statements, the only publicly available
information about Zimmerman's version of the incident came from
interviews with some of his family members and friends and from leaks to
the news media by sources inside the investigation, and his recorded
phone call to 9-1-1. Zimmerman maintained his public silence until he
was interviewed by
Sean Hannity of
Fox News on July 18, 2012.
[159][160]
According to early news reports on the incident, on the night of the
shooting, and afterwards, Zimmerman described in detail for
investigators what took place.
[161][162][163][164]
Zimmerman said he was driving to the grocery store when he spotted
Trayvon Martin walking through the neighborhood. Zimmerman's father said
that, while his son was not on duty that night as Neighborhood Watch
captain, there had been many break-ins and he thought it suspicious that
someone he did not recognize was walking behind the town homes instead
of on the street or the sidewalk. Zimmerman therefore called a
non-emergency police line to report Martin's behavior and summon police.
[165][166] During the call, Zimmerman told the dispatcher that Martin was "coming to check me out."
[64] A source to the
Orlando Sentinel said in May that Zimmerman told investigators that at one point Martin circled his vehicle,
[Note 8] and he rolled up his window to avoid a confrontation.
[162][167]
After telling the police dispatcher that Martin "ran",
[168] Zimmerman left his vehicle to determine his location and ascertain in which direction Martin had fled.
[162][169]
The dispatcher asked if Zimmerman was following Martin, and Zimmerman
replied "Yeah." Then the dispatcher said, "OK, we don't need you to do
that." Zimmerman replied with "OK" and stated that Martin got away.
[168]
After a discussion about where Zimmerman would meet police, the call
ended, and Zimmerman told investigators he was returning to his vehicle
when Martin approached him from his left rear and confronted him.
[162][163]
According to Zimmerman, Martin then punched him in the face, knocking
him down, and began beating his head against the sidewalk.
[162][163] Zimmerman said he called out for help while being beaten, and at one point Martin covered his mouth to muffle the screams.
[162][163]
According to Zimmerman's father, during the struggle while Martin was
on top of Zimmerman, Martin saw the gun Zimmerman was carrying and said
something to the effect of "You're gonna die now" or "You're gonna die
tonight" and continued to beat Zimmerman.
[161]
Zimmerman and Martin struggled over the gun, and Zimmerman shot Martin
once in the chest at close range. Zimmerman told police he shot Martin
in
self-defense.
[162][163][164][Note 9]
On June 21, 2012, Zimmerman's attorneys released audiotapes of
several interviews he had with police shortly after the shooting. Also
included were Zimmerman's written statement of February 26, 2012, and
video recordings of his reenactment of the incident and a voice stress
test that he passed.
[156][158][170][171][172]
In the interviews, Zimmerman says he took note of Martin because he
was near a home that he had previously called police about. He also said
"he was just walking casually, not like he was trying to get out of the
rain," and he felt "something was off" about Martin.
[167]
In a reconstruction video-recorded by police the next day, Zimmerman
said that after he initially saw Martin on Retreat View Circle he parked
his vehicle in front of the club house at the corner of Retreat View
Circle and Twin Trees Lane and observed Martin go past him and onto Twin
Trees Lane where he lost sight of Martin. He stated the dispatcher
asked "can you get to somewhere where you can see him?" and that he then
left the club house parking lot and drove onto Twin Trees Lane where he
parked. He further stated that at one point Martin circled his truck
while he was parked on Twin Trees Lane.
[173]
Shooting of Trayvon Martin map
Zimmerman eventually left his truck and walked down the sidewalk
between Twin Trees Lane to Retreat View Circle and gave police an
address on Retreat View Circle.
[173]
He told investigators that he was not following Martin but was "just
going in the same direction he was" to find an address, but admitted
that he had also left his truck to try to see in which direction Martin
had gone.
[169]
The altercation began, he said, when Martin suddenly appeared while
Zimmerman was walking back to his vehicle. He described Martin at
different points in the interviews as appearing "out of nowhere", "from
the darkness", and as "jump[ing] out of the bushes".
[169][170]
Zimmerman said that Martin asked, "You got a fucking problem, homie?"
Zimmerman replied no, then Martin said "You got a problem now" and
punched Zimmerman.
[174]
As they struggled on the ground, Zimmerman on his back with Martin on
top of him, Zimmerman yelled for help "probably 50 times".
(See Background yells for help in 9-1-1 calls) Martin told him to "Shut the fuck up," as he hit him in the face and pounded his head on a concrete sidewalk.
[170]
When Zimmerman tried to move off the concrete, Martin saw his gun and
said "You're going to die tonight motherfucker!" Martin grabbed for the
gun, but Zimmerman grabbed it first. He said after firing his weapon at
Martin, he was not sure at first that he had hit him, so he got on top
of him in order to subdue him.
[169][169][170] Bystanders and police arrived shortly after Martin was shot.
[175][176]
Police reports state Zimmerman "appeared to have a broken and a
bloody nose and swelling of his face". Zimmerman was offered three
chances to be taken to the hospital, but declined each time, according
to police reports released by the prosecution.
[175]
ABC News reported that a medical report compiled by Zimmerman's family
physician showed that, following the altercation with Martin, Zimmerman
was diagnosed with a
closed fracture of his nose, two
black eyes,
lacerations to the back of his head, a minor back injury, and bruising in his upper lip and cheek.
[177]
In the course of Zimmerman's recorded interviews, Detective Chris
Serino questioned aspects of Zimmerman's account, such as Zimmerman's
statement that he didn't know the name of a street in the Twin Lakes
community where he had lived for three years. Zimmerman said in response
that he had a bad memory and takes medication for
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
[167]
Investigators also questioned the extent of his injuries and why he
didn't identify himself to Martin as a Neighborhood Watch coordinator.
Zimmerman said he didn't want to confront Martin.
[167][170]
On June 26, 2012, the prosecution released the results of a voice
stress test performed on George Zimmerman the day after the shooting.
[178][179]
Zimmerman was asked, "Did you confront the guy you shot?", to which
Zimmerman answered, "No." Zimmerman was asked, "Were you in fear for
your life, when you shot the guy?", to which Zimmerman answered, "Yes."
[178]
The examiner concluded that Zimmerman "told substantially the complete
truth" in the examination, and Zimmerman was classified as "No Deception
Indicated (NDI)" according to the report.
[178]
During a bond hearing on April 20, 2012, Investigator Dale Gilbreath
testified under oath that he did not know whether Zimmerman or Martin
started the fight and that there is no evidence to contradict
Zimmerman's claim that he was walking back to his vehicle when Martin
confronted him. Gilbreath, however, questioned Zimmerman's statement
that Martin was slamming his head against the sidewalk just before he
shot the teenager, saying it was "not consistent with the evidence we
found."
[180][181][182] Gilbreath was one of two investigators who attested to the facts stated in the
probable cause affidavit.
[183]
Zimmerman's first media interview
On July 18, 2012, Zimmerman, accompanied by his attorney
Mark O'Mara, gave his first long media interview to
Sean Hannity, and part of the interview appeared on
Hannity
that evening. During the interview Zimmerman said that he did not
regret his actions on the night of the shooting and that he felt that
what had happened "was all God's plan".
[160]
He also said, "I do wish there was something, anything I could have
done that wouldn't have put me in the position where I had to take his
life. I want to tell everyone, my wife, my family, my parents,
grandmother, the Martins, the city of Sanford and America: I'm sorry
that this happened. I'm truly sorry."
[159][160]
When Hannity asked Zimmerman why his suspicions were aroused when he noticed Martin, Zimmerman replied in part:
I felt he was suspicious because it was raining. He was in-between
houses, cutting in-between houses, and he was walking very leisurely for
the weather. ... It didn't look like he was a resident that went to
check their mail and got caught in the rain and was hurrying back home.
He didn't look like a fitness fanatic that would train in the rain.[184][185]
Following the interview with Hannity, Special Prosecutor Angela Corey
filed formal notice that she intended to use the interview as evidence
against Zimmerman.
[186] According to an article in the
Orlando Sentinel,
Zimmerman's story differed in at least two details from previous
versions of what he said happened the night he shot Martin—specifically,
that he told Hannity he had walked toward Martin because he was trying
to find a street address to provide the police, but during the police's
investigation he had said that the reason he approached Martin was that
he was looking for the name of the street, which he had forgotten; and
that he told Hannity that Martin had been "skipping, going away
quickly", not running away out of fear, but he had previously told
Sanford police that Martin had run away as Zimmerman was reporting him.
[186]
Florida defense lawyers said it was a mistake for Zimmerman to do a
television interview and discuss what happened that night. One of them
said, "It's really baffling what he thought he'd gain from it. I
question who's in charge of the defense strategy, Zimmerman or O'Mara".
[186]
O'Mara told reporters that the interview was intended to help increase
the number of donations to Zimmerman's nearly exhausted legal defense
fund, which would pay the costs for Zimmerman's legal defense as well as
for shelter and security.
[186][187] O'Mara said that Zimmerman had promised Hannity three months earlier that he would give his first interview to Hannity,
[186] and that Hannity had agreed to promote Zimmerman's website during the interview, although he said Hannity did not.
[187] ABC News'
Barbara Walters also said that Zimmerman was in desperate need of money and was worried about the safety of his family.
[188]
She had flown from New York to Florida to record a television interview
with Zimmerman that was to be shown following the Hannity interview,
but the television network refused to meet Zimmerman's request that they
pay for a month's hotel stay and security for his wife.
[188]
Martin's parents said they did not accept Zimmerman's apology for killing their son.
[189]
Martin's mother, Sybrina Fulton, said she doubted that Zimmerman's
apology was sincere. "I have a hard time accepting it because he also
said that he doesn't regret anything that he did that night..." Fulton
stated.
[190]
Affidavit of probable cause
On April 11, 2012, an affidavit of probable cause was filed in
support of second-degree murder charges against Zimmerman. The affidavit
described what investigators alleged took place between Zimmerman and
Martin on the night of the shooting.
[183][191][192][193][194]
Prosecutors alleged that Zimmerman profiled Martin as he was walking
back from a nearby 7-Eleven store to the townhouse where he was
temporarily living.
[183][192]
Prosecutors said Zimmerman was driving in his vehicle when he saw
Martin and assumed he was a criminal and perceived that Martin was
acting suspicious and felt that he did not belong in the gated
community. Zimmerman called the police, and prosecutors said the
dispatcher told Zimmerman an officer was on the way and to wait for him.
In the call, Zimmerman made reference to people he felt had gotten away
with break-ins in the neighborhood.
[Note 10][183][192][194]
Investigators alleged that while Zimmerman was talking to the
dispatcher, Martin was on the phone with a friend and she said that
Martin was scared because he was being followed by an unknown man.
[192][194]
Investigators said that Martin attempted to run home, but Zimmerman
followed him because he didn't want Martin to get away. When the police
dispatcher realized Zimmerman was following Martin, he told Zimmerman
that was unnecessary and that police would meet him there. Prosecutors
alleged that Zimmerman ignored the dispatcher and continued following
Martin and confronted him and a struggle ensued. When police arrived at
the scene, Zimmerman admitted to shooting Martin in the chest.
[183][191][192][193]
Analysis of charges
Legal analysts criticized the prosecution for over-charging
Zimmerman, claiming that the probable cause affidavit did not support a
charge of second-degree murder.
[195][196] Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz claimed the affidavit may have been perjurious if Special Prosecutor
Angela Corey knowingly omitted facts favorable to Zimmerman's self-defense claim.
[195]
Richard Kuritz, a former prosecutor who worked with Angela Corey,
said the state attorney had no obligation to include exculpatory
evidence in the affidavit. He stated that Dershowitz could face
civil action
for making accusations that Corey committed a crime. "To suggest that
she's committing any crime, Dershowitz is way off on that", Kuritz said.
[197]
Background yells for help in 9-1-1 calls
In recordings of the
9-1-1
calls, yells for help are audible in the background. Zimmerman's family
says it was Zimmerman yelling for help, Martin's family says it was
Martin yelling for help, and independent audio analysts offer differing
opinions as to who was yelling for help. During the trial, friends and
family members of both Zimmerman and Martin testified as to who they
thought the voice was, but expert testimony regarding voice
identification was not allowed.
[citation needed]
In an interview with prosecutors on March 19, Zimmerman's father
identified the yells as George Zimmerman's, stating, "There is no doubt
who is yelling for help. It is absolutely my son." Other relatives of
Zimmerman, including his brother, concur and are equally adamant.
[198]
During a bond hearing on June 29, the 9-1-1 recording was played in
court, and Zimmerman's father testified that "it was definitely
George's" voice heard yelling for help in the recorded 9-1-1 call.
[199]
According to police reports, after listening to audio recordings of
the 9-1-1 calls, Martin's father, Tracy Martin, told police
investigators that it was not Trayvon Martin's voice yelling for help.
[175]
Martin has since told reporters he was uncertain at that time, but that
when he heard an enhanced recording on March 16 he was convinced it was
his son yelling for help. Investigators interviewed Martin's mother,
Sybrina Fulton, who reviewed the 9-1-1 calls to police and identified
the voice crying for help as her son.
[200]
Investigators also interviewed Martin's cousin who stated that without a
doubt "on a stack of bibles" it was Martin yelling for help on the
9-1-1 tape.
[201][202]
Zimmerman's attorneys requested a
Frye
hearing regarding the admissibility of the testimony of the audio
analysts, to determine if the methods used by them are generally
accepted by the scientific community.
[203][204]
The judge said in her ruling that, "There is no evidence to establish
that their scientific techniques have been tested and found reliable."
Her ruling did not prevent the 9-1-1 calls from being played at trial.
[205]
Shooting aftermath
Martin family response
Supporters of Trayvon Martin rally in Union Square during a "Million
Hoodie March" in Manhattan on March 21. Martin's parents addressed the
crowd.
[206]
Tracy Martin was skeptical of the account of his son's death told to
him by Sanford police investigators and believed Zimmerman did not act
in self-defense. Two days after the shooting, he was referred to civil
rights attorney
Benjamin Crump,
[76] who was retained to pursue legal action and to persuade the news media to cover the case.
[207] Attorney Natalie Jackson and publicist Ryan Julison, both of Orlando, also joined the Martin team.
[76] Due to their efforts, the case started to receive national attention on March 7.
[76][208] On March 9, Crump announced he was suing to have 911 calls from the night of the shooting made public.
[209] They were released by the Sanford mayor on March 16.
[76]
As attention to the case grew, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton gave
media interviews and appeared at some of the protests being held which
called for Zimmerman's arrest.
[76][206][210]
On April 5, 2013, more than a year after the shooting, it was
reported that the Martin family had settled a wrongful death claim
against the Retreat at Twin Lakes Homeowners Association.
[211] The details of the agreement were sealed under court order, and the amount of the settlement was not disclosed, but the
Orlando Sentinel claimed that the sum was thought to be more than $1 million.
[212][213]
On June 28, in an interview with CNN conducted during the trial of
George Zimmerman, Alicia Stanley, Trayvon Martin's step-mother
(Trayvon's father's former wife), stated that she believed Zimmerman had
profiled Trayvon as a criminal, although she was not convinced that the
profiling was based on race.
[214][215] She said that she had no doubt that Zimmerman had started the fight and that Martin had reacted only in self-defense.
[214][215]
Zimmerman and family
While the shooting was being investigated, Zimmerman, his wife, and
his parents went into hiding due to threats they were receiving as the
case gained more attention.
[155][216] Zimmerman left his job, and his school expelled him, citing safety concerns.
[3][217]
On April 9, Zimmerman placed a self-created web site on the internet,
which included some brief statements, but no information about the
shooting, since he had been advised by legal counsel not to discuss it.
He also solicited donations for living expenses and legal defense costs.
[218]
After taking over as Zimmerman's defense counsel on April 11,
Mark O'Mara
took down Zimmerman's self-created web site and replaced it with a
professional information site. He arranged for a second web site to be
set up to collect donations overseen by an independent third party.
[219]
Following Zimmerman's April 20 bond hearing, he and his wife were
accused by prosecutors of not disclosing the funds raised through the
original web site; as a result of these allegations, Zimmerman's
original bail was revoked. He was subsequently released again with a
higher bail amount.
[220] Zimmerman's wife, Shellie Zimmerman, was charged with felony
perjury in June 2012;.
[221]
She pleaded guilty to misdemeanor perjury on August 28, 2013 as part of
a plea deal, and was sentenced to 100 hours of community service and
one year of probation, as well as writing a letter of apology to Judge
Kenneth Lester Jr. The conviction will be expunged at the end of her
probation period.
[222]
George Zimmerman's defense team had set up a
Twitter account, a
Facebook page and a website with a defense fund registered with the Florida Division of Consumer Services.
[219][223][224] After three months, the Facebook page was shut down by O'Mara, because he said it was leading to unhelpful discussions.
[225]
In July 2012, Zimmerman returned his original web site to the
internet, and his parents also created their own web site. Both sites
discuss how the case has changed the Zimmermans' lives and seek
donations for living expenses.
[226]
On January 30, 2013, Zimmerman's attorney, Mark O'Mara, asked on
Zimmerman's defense fund website for the public to donate more money.
O'Mara stated that Zimmerman's legal defense could cost up to $1
million.
[227]
Public response
After the shooting, Zimmerman was criticized by the Martin family and
in the media for following Martin and for carrying a weapon.
[229][230][231]
Sanford police chief Bill Lee stated that neighborhood watch volunteers
are not encouraged to carry a gun but have a Constitutional right to do
so.
[37]
Lee further stated, "Mr. Zimmerman was not acting outside the legal
boundaries of Florida Statute by carrying his weapon when this incident
occurred."
[230] Sanford Police volunteer program coordinator Wendy Dorival, told
The Miami Herald
that she met Zimmerman in September 2011, at a community neighborhood
watch presentation. "I said, 'If it's someone you don't recognize, call
us. We'll figure it out,' 'Observe from a safe location.' Dorival said."
[37] The director of the
National Sheriffs' Association (NSA) said Zimmerman's "alleged action ... significantly contradicts the principles of the Neighborhood Watch Program."
[232] The Neighborhood Watch program that employed Zimmerman was overseen by the local police department rather than the NSA.
Protests were staged around the U.S. prior to Zimmerman's April 11 indictment on murder charges.
[233] Over 2.2 million signatures were collected on a
Change.org petition, created by Martin's mother, calling for Zimmerman's arrest.
[229] It was the website's largest petition ever.
[234]
Since Martin was killed while wearing a
hoodie, hoodies were used as a sign of protest over the handling of the case.
[235][236][237][238][239][240] Additionally, some professional athletes, including
Carmelo Anthony,
Dwyane Wade,
LeBron James, and the entire
Miami Heat roster, donned hoodies in Martin's honor.
[241]
Bags of
Skittles candy and cans of
Arizona Iced Tea were also used as protest symbols. Martin was reported to be returning from a
7-Eleven convenience store with these items when he was shot,
[242][243][244] although the beverage he purchased was actually a can of Arizona Watermelon Fruit Juice Cocktail.
[245]
Walkouts were staged by students at over a dozen Florida high schools,
[246] and thousands of people attended rallies around the country to demand Zimmerman's arrest.
[247] Members of the
Occupy movement marched in solidarity during the "Million Hoodie March".
[248][249]
A number of high-profile citizens made public comments or released
statements calling for a full investigation, including Reverend
Al Sharpton,
[250][251] Reverend
Jesse Jackson,
[252] and
President Barack Obama.
[250]
Speaking on the day of Zimmerman's arrest, Al Sharpton said,
"Forty-five days ago, Trayvon Martin was murdered. No arrest was made.
The Chief of Police in Sanford announced after his review of the
evidence there would be no arrest. An outcry from all over this country
came because his parents refused to leave it there."
[253][254] Jesse Jackson also referred to Martin as "murdered and martyred".
[255] And U.S. Rep.
Frederica Wilson (Dem.), who represents Martin's hometown of Miami, used the word "murdered" when she referred to Martin's fatal shooting.
[256]
President Obama, speaking to reporters on March 23 after federal
investigators were deployed to Sanford, said, "When I think about this
boy, I think about my own kids, and I think every parent in America
should be able to understand why it is absolutely imperative that we
investigate every aspect of this... If I had a son, he would look like
Trayvon."
[250]
Former presidential candidate
Herman Cain objected to what he called "swirling rhetoric" and "a war of words",
[257] and former Garland, Texas
NAACP president
C.L. Bryant
singled out Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson for being "race hustlers" who
were exploiting Martin's death "to inflame racial passions". Bryant
also criticized President Barack Obama for his "nebulous" comment, "If I
had a son, he'd look like Trayvon."
[258][259] Former education secretary
William Bennett
criticized what he called a "mob mentality", saying that "...the
tendency in the first days by some, including Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson
and an angry chorus of followers, was to rush to judgment with little
regard for fairness, due process, or respect for the terrible death of a
young man."
[260]
Senior Fellow
Shelby Steele at
Stanford University's
Hoover Institution
said that the tragedy of Trayvon Martin's death was being exploited by a
generation of "ambulance-chasing" black leaders who have promoted "our
historical victimization as the central theme of our group identity".
[261]
According to Zimmerman's father, George Zimmerman received death
threats after the shooting and was forced to move out of his home.
[262] The
New Black Panther Party offered a $10,000 reward for the "capture" of George Zimmerman;
[263][264] this was condemned by the city of Sanford.
[263]
In parts of the U.S., various acts of vandalism, assaults and crimes
were connected in part to alleged revenge for the shooting of Trayvon
Martin.
[265][266][267][268]
Film director
Spike Lee retweeted to his 200,000
Twitter
followers an address in Sanford, Florida, erroneously purported to be
Zimmerman's, which forced a family out of their home to avoid harassment
after they received hate mail and unwanted visits from reporters.
[269][270][271] Lee was criticized for his retweet
[272]
and he later issued an apology for having tweeted the wrong address.
Lee also "settled financially" with the Florida couple for an
undisclosed amount.
[273]
Professor
Alan Dershowitz
criticized the probable cause affidavit against Zimmerman as "so thin
that it won't make it past the judge", calling it "irresponsible and
unethical", and opined that the charges were motivated by prosecutor
Corey's desire to be re-elected.
[274][275]
The deadline for qualifying to run against Corey was 9 days after she
filed charges, and no one stepped forward to challenge her, so she won
re-election.
[276]
In June, Dershowitz said that Corey had contacted the dean of Harvard
Law School about his remarks, threatening to sue Dershowitz for libel
and slander, and the school too, and saying she wanted him to be
disciplined by the
American Bar Association.
Dershowitz said the dean defended his remarks under academic freedom,
and he commented that "[e]ven if Angela Corey's actions were debatable,
which I believe they were not, I certainly have the right, as a
professor who has taught and practiced criminal law nearly 50 years, to
express a contrary view."
[277][278] CNN legal analyst
Mark NeJame expressed concern over Corey's threats and questioned if the prosecution of Zimmerman was for political reasons.
[279]
Chicago Tribune columnist
Eric Zorn
wrote "...what's often overlooked in all the heated conversations about
this tragedy is the actual timeline based on police documents." and
"[The timeline] indicates that the victim as well as the accused made
some terrible choices that night...and it tells us to keep our minds
open and our tempers in check, at least until some of [the] gaps get
filled at Zimmerman's trial."
[280]
Fox News Channel host
Geraldo Rivera claimed that Martin's "gangsta style clothing" was "as much responsible for Trayvon Martin's death as George Zimmerman was".
[281][282]
Rivera was quoted saying, "I am urging the parents of black and Latino
youngsters particularly to not let their children go out wearing
hoodies."
[281]
Faced with outrage over his statements, Rivera apologized, saying that
he had "obscured the main point that someone shot and killed an unarmed
teenager".
[283]
When a 7-Eleven surveillance video showing Martin making a purchase on
the night of the shooting was released two months later, however, Rivera
referred to the clothes he had been wearing as "thug wear". His
comments were criticized by the Martin family attorney, Benjamin Crump,
who compared them to people blaming rape victims for wearing short
skirts.
[282]
Bill O'Reilly of Fox News called for restraint and urged other
pundits to stop trying the case in the media. He said that the case is a "tragedy" but should not be tried in the media.
[284]
After Zimmerman's bond was revoked for misrepresenting how much money he had when his bond was set,
[285]
Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump said he expected the prosecution
to bring Zimmerman's credibility "front and center in this entire case".
[286]
Zimmerman's attorney, Mark O'Mara stated that it was a "mistake" that
had "undermined his credibility, which he will have to work to repair".
[287]
Alleged race issues
Zimmerman was accused of being motivated by racism
[4][144] and of having
racially profiled Martin.
[4][94][262][288] During early media coverage of the incident, Zimmerman's call to the police dispatcher was
misleadingly edited by NBC
so that it appeared that Zimmerman had volunteered Martin's race. The
unedited audio recording proved that the police dispatcher specifically
asked about Martin's race, and only then did Zimmerman reveal that
Martin was black. NBC apologized for the misleading edit and disciplined
those involved.
[289] Other reproaches to Zimmerman include his extensive history of 911 calls
[290] and an alleged obsession with law and order and the minutiae of suburban life.
[291][292]
Defense of Zimmerman's character
In an
open letter
on March 15, 2012, Zimmerman's father, Robert Zimmerman, defended his
son against allegations that his actions were racially motivated,
stating that Zimmerman was
Hispanic,
was raised in a multiracial family, and "would be the last to
discriminate for any reason whatsoever," saying that the portrayal of
his son as a racist "could not be further from the truth." Just as
George Zimmerman's trial was set to begin, Robert Zimmerman published an
e-book
about the case in which he said that prior to the shooting, he had
generally believed racism was no longer much of a problem and that he
had personally not experienced much racism, despite being married to a
Hispanic woman, but that since the shooting he had found that racism is
"flourishing at the insistence of some in the African American
Community".
[293]
In a chapter called "Who are the True Racists", Robert Zimmerman listed
a host of African Americans he says are racist, including the
Congressional Black Caucus, the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the
National Basketball Players Association, the
National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, the
National Black Chamber of Commerce, and the
United Negro College Fund, among others.
According to George Zimmerman's family, some of Zimmerman's relatives are black.
[30]
Zimmerman's former lawyer Craig Sonner stated that Zimmerman is not a
racist, and that he had mentored black youths in the past.
[294] Joe Oliver, a former television news reporter who is acquainted with Zimmerman,
[295]
noted "I'm a black male and all that I know is that George has never
given me any reason whatsoever to believe he has anything against people
of color."
[296]
In early April, an anonymous letter to the NAACP, which was signed "A
Concerned Zimmerman Family Member," said Zimmerman had been one of the
few to take any action to protest the 2010 beating of Sherman Ware, a
black homeless man, by the son of a Sanford police officer. Zimmerman
reportedly distributed fliers in the black community trying to get
others involved too, and helped organize a January 8, 2011, Sanford City
Hall community forum to protest the incident.
[297] Zimmerman's father confirmed his son's efforts on Ware's behalf.
[298]
In May, the Miami Herald secured an audiotape of the January 8, 2011,
Sanford City Hall community forum. On the audiotape, Zimmerman was
heard criticizing the conduct of the Sanford Police Department in the
Ware case. Zimmerman criticized former chief, Brian Tooley, and said
Tooley had engaged in a "cover-up" and that he should lose his pension.
He also said he'd been on ride-alongs with Sanford police where he found
them to be lazy. The Herald also reported that it had contacted five
out of six black churches where Zimmerman was reported to have
distributed fliers on the Ware beating, however no one recalled
receiving them.
[46]
On July 12, 2012, reports of some of the more than 30 interviews
conducted by the FBI were publicly released. Sanford Police investigator
Chris Serino told FBI agents that he believed Zimmerman's actions were
not based on Martin's race. Zimmerman's neighbors had nothing derogatory
to say about him, and his co-workers were complimentary.
[104] CNN headlined its article on the FBI interviews "Witnesses tell FBI that George Zimmerman is no racist".
[104]
Allegations against Martin
During the trial, defense attorney Don West implied that the language
Martin had allegedly used was evidence that Martin had introduced race
into the confrontation.
[299]
State's witness #8, Rachel Jeantel, testified that Martin, during his
telephone conversation with her just prior to the shooting, had referred
to Zimmerman as a "creepy-ass cracker".
[299][300]
On cross-examination, West asked Jeantel, "So it was racial, but it was
because Trayvon Martin put race in this?" and "You don't think that
'creepy ass cracker' is a racial comment?"
[301]
Jeantel replied that she believed race was involved because Martin was
being followed by a white man, not because Martin had called Zimmerman a
"creepy-ass cracker."
[137][302] She said that people in her community call white people "cracker" and she did not find the term offensive.
[300][303][304] Jeantel also testified that Martin, during his telephone conversation, referred to Zimmerman as a "
nigga."
[145] Jeantel said that Martin's use of the word "nigga" to describe Zimmerman was "slang"
[305] when asked by lead prosecutor Bernie De La Rionda.
Allegations against the Sanford police
For not arresting Zimmerman, the Sanford police faced heavy criticism, protests, and allegations of racial bias.
[4] The NAACP wrote
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder expressing "no confidence that, absent federal oversight, the
Sanford Police Department
will devote the necessary degree of care to its investigation" and
requesting that personnel be detailed to Sanford to review the case
without bias.
[94][144]
Lee repeatedly defended the investigation, stating that the Sanford
police did not feel they had conducted a racially biased investigation
and welcomed a review of their efforts.
[288][306]
Allegations were also made that the Sanford police were protecting Zimmerman.
[163]
Lee told reporters that they could not arrest Zimmerman because no
evidence contradicted his story, and that to do so would leave the
police open to litigation.
[288] In regards to the 9-1-1 dispatcher telling Zimmerman that "We don't need you to [follow him],"
[307]
Lee said "That is a call taker making a recommendation to him. He's not
under a legal obligation to do that, so that is not something we can
charge him with."
[94]
On March 21, 2012, three out of the five members of the Sanford City Commission, including the mayor, passed a
motion of no confidence in regards to the Police Chief Bill Lee, and his handling of the case; however, the vote was advisory only.
[308]
The following day, Lee announced that he had temporarily stepped down
from his position as chief of police, stating "my involvement in this
matter is overshadowing the process." Lee further stated, "I do this in
the hopes of restoring some semblance of calm to a city which has been
in turmoil for several weeks."
[36]
On April 23, 2012, the city of Sanford announced that Police Chief Bill
Lee would resign but city commissioners voted to reject the
resignation.
Some commissioners had concerns about the fairness of Lee losing his
job and the mayor stated he preferred to wait for the results of an
investigation. Lee was to remain on
paid leave.
[309]
In an interview with CNN, following his testimony at Zimmerman's
trial, Bill Lee said that he felt pressure from city officials to arrest
Zimmerman to placate the public rather than as a matter of justice.
[310]
Lee said, "It was relayed to me that they just wanted an arrest. They
didn't care if it got dismissed later." Lee further stated in the
interview that the Sanford Police conducted a "sound" investigation, and
the evidence provided no probable cause to arrest Zimmerman at the
scene.
[310]
Lee said that the police needed to do a job, and there was some
outside, and inside influence, that "forced a change in the course of
the normal criminal justice process." The former police chief said the
investigation was taken away from us and "we weren't able to complete
it." Lee also said that his lead investigator made a recommendation that
Zimmerman be charged with manslaughter, as a matter of protocol. The
Sanford police presented a "capias request" to the state's attorney,
asking that they determine whether it was a "justifiable homicide."
[310]
"Stand your ground" laws
The Zimmerman defense team initially planned to seek to dismiss the
case against Zimmerman under the protection afforded by Florida's "
stand your ground" self-defense law.
[32]
The controversial law, passed in 2005, permits the use of deadly force
when someone reasonably feels he or she is at risk of great bodily harm
in a confrontation.
[311]
Zimmerman's defense team ultimately did not seek a pretrial hearing for
immunity from prosecution based on the stand your ground law.
[312][313]
However, as required by the stand your ground provision of the law,
during the trial the judge instructed the jurors that Zimmerman had had
no duty to retreat and had had a right to stand his ground and use
deadly force if he reasonably believed doing so was necessary to defend
himself.
[311]
Prior to the passage of Florida's stand your ground law, the standard
jury instructions from the judge would have included a statement that a
person had a duty to attempt to retreat using "every reasonable means"
before using deadly force.
[311]
Self-defense laws in the United States, particularly
regarding justifiable homicide, vary by state. In many states, such laws exempt people in their own homes from the
common-law requirement that one first
attempt to retreat, if one can safely do so, before resorting to the use of deadly force (the so-called "
castle doctrine", based on the notion that "a person's home is his castle").
[314] Florida's stand your ground law extends the no-retreat doctrine to vehicles and public places.
[315] At the time of Martin's shooting, 22 other states had adopted similar stand your ground laws.
[315]
Three weeks after the shooting, Florida Governor Rick Scott commissioned a 19-member
task force to review the Florida
statute that deals with justifiable use of force, including the Stand Your Ground provision.
[316]
After holding seven public hearings around the state, and reviewing
more than 11,000 comments submitted by the public—nearly three times as
many of which were opposed to the law as were in support of it,
[Note 11]
the task force recommended against repealing the statute, saying that
Florida residents have a right to defend themselves with deadly force
without a duty to retreat if they feel threatened.
[318][Note 12]
Critics said that the members appointed to the task force had been
chosen to heavily bias the panel against any significant changes in the
law, and that, as a result, the panel's conclusions were no surprise.
[320][321]
The task force did suggest that law enforcement agencies and the courts
increase training on the self-defense law to ensure the law is applied
fairly, and that the legislature more clearly define the role of
neighborhood watch participants to avoid vigilantism and fund a study of
how the law had been applied, examining effects such as race,
ethnicity, and gender.
[318]
However, the task force largely rejected recommendations of Miami-Dade
County State Attorney Katherine Fernandez-Rundle (one of the task force
members) that would have restricted the law, including a recommendation
to limit immunity from prosection to defendants who have not provoked a
confrontation.
[318][322]
In January 2013, Martin's mother joined two Democratic lawmakers in
Florida and called for the repeal of the state's "stand your ground"
law.
[323]
Several bills subsequently introduced in the Republican-controlled
legislature's 2013 session proposing to repeal or revise the Stand Your
Ground provisions of the law died without committee hearings.
[324][325][326]
Several months following Zimmerman's acquittal, in October 2013 bills
to revise Florida's Stand Your Ground law provisions in accordance with
several of the suggestions offered in 2012 by the governor's task force
began advancing through the Florida legislature with bipartisan
support.
[327]
A proposal offered by State Senator David Simmons, a Republican who had
served on the governor's task force and who had been a principal author
of the original law, and State Senator Chris Smith, the Democratic
senate minority leader, would clarify language in the law to deny
aggressors in a confrontation from being able to claim immunity under
the law, would allow innocent bystanders harmed by a person standing his
or her ground to sue for
negligence,
and would require the establishment of guidelines and training
protocols for neighborhood watch programs that would restrict
neighborhood watch volunteers to only observing and reporting.
[328]
The proposal was received favorably by the Florida Department of Law
Enforcement, the Florida Sheriffs Association, the state public
defenders association, and the NAACP,
[328]
although several Republican state legislators voted to block the bill's
passage and gun rights advocates expressed opposition to several of the
proposals.
[327][328]
The Dream Defenders, who several weeks earlier had occupied the state
capitol demanding that the legislature take up debate on the Stand Your
Ground law, said the bill did not go far enough and urged the
legislature to repeal the law entirely.
[328]
Media coverage
For the first 10 days after Martin's death, the story was covered by only the Florida media.
[207]
In order to bring more attention to the case, Martin family attorney
Natalie Jackson sought the assistance of publicist Ryan Julison on March
5.
[76]
On March 7, 2012,
Reuters covered the story,
[76][208] and the following day,
CBS News, acting on a tip it received from the network's local bureau in
Atlanta, Georgia, obtained an exclusive interview with Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton that was broadcast on
CBS This Morning.
[207][329]
Also on March 8,
The Huffington Post,
The Young Turks, and TheGrio.com, which is affiliated with
NBC News, started to cover the case.
[207][330][331][332] On March 9, 2012,
ABC World News featured the story on their nightly broadcast.
[333] CNN first reported on the case on March 12, 2012, and by the end of that week, radio hosts and
bloggers were also reporting on the story.
[207][334] National coverage started to increase the week of March 12 and intensified after March 16, when tapes of
9-1-1 calls were released to the public.
[207][335]
Having the 9-1-1 calls, which the police had previously declined to
release, gave radio and TV reporters more material on which to report.
[207][335]
The Project for Excellence in Journalism reported that media coverage
of the Trayvon Martin case became the first story in 2012 to be
featured more than the presidential race. According to the Project, the
varying types of media have focused on the case in different ways. An
article in the Tampa Bay Times wrote that, "on Twitter, people are
outraged at Zimmerman and want justice, while on cable news and talk
radio people are discussing the state's laws for self-defense and gun
control and on blogs the focus has been on race."
[336]
Fox News host
Geraldo Rivera,
a former NBC employee, asserted that MSNBC "made an ideological
decision that... they would argue strenuously for the prosecution of
George Zimmerman and the ultimate conviction of George Zimmerman...
[T]hey are cheerleading for the conviction of George Zimmerman."
[337]
Portrayals of Martin and Zimmerman
The contrast in the photos of Martin and of Zimmerman which were most
widely used in early media reports of the shooting may have influenced
initial public perceptions of the case.
[338][339] The most commonly published image of Martin, provided to media by his family,
[340] showed a smiling baby-faced teen.
[338][Note 13]
The only image of Zimmerman initially available to news media was a
7-year-old police booking photograph released by law enforcement
officials after the shooting.
[339] The image showed a heavy-set Zimmerman who appeared to be unhappy or angry,
[339] with an imposing stare.
[338]
The AP quoted academic Kenny Irby on the expected effect, "When you
have such a lopsided visual comparison, it just stands to reason that
people would rush to judgment," and another academic, Betsi Grabe, as
saying that journalists will present stories as a struggle between good
and evil "[i]f the ingredients are there."
[338]
Zimmerman's ethnicity
The initial police report on the shooting described Zimmerman as white.
[344][345] Early news media reports which mentioned Zimmerman's race also referred to him as white.
[346][347][348][349] Although Zimmerman had personally identified as Hispanic on his voting records and driver's license,
[350]
this information was not revealed to the public in early media reports,
when Zimmerman had gone into hiding and no one was speaking to the
media on his behalf.
[351][352] That changed when Zimmerman's father delivered a statement to the
Orlando Sentinel calling Zimmerman "a Spanish speaking minority."
[351] Several media outlets, such as
CNN and the
New York Times,
subsequently began describing Zimmerman as a "white Hispanic" in their
reports on the case, prompting discussion, and some criticism, of the
choice of that term.
[353][354] Conservative commentators, including
Rush Limbaugh and
Bernard Goldberg, accused the media of misrepresenting Zimmerman's race to fit a political narrative of a racially motivated killing.
[355]
Goldberg opined that "if George Zimmerman did something good . . . they
wouldn't refer to him as white Hispanic, he'd just be Hispanic."
[355]
Other commentators remarked on the difficulty of deciding how best to
describe Zimmerman's race in media reports intended for audiences
largely unfamiliar with the complexity of Hispanic identity in
contemporary America.
[350][356] Michael Getler, the
ombudsman for
PBS, said that after reviewing viewers' criticism of the
PBS NewsHour's
having called Zimmerman "white" in an April 2012 broadcast, the
NewsHour staff suggested that it might be best in future reports to
simply show an image of Zimmerman and not try to describe him.
[357]
Zimmerman's call to police
Economist and commentator
Thomas Sowell
criticized the national media for implying that Zimmerman had continued
to follow Martin after the police dispatcher said, "We don't need you
to do that." He said that they mostly left out Zimmerman's answer,
"O.K." because "too many people in the media see their role as filtering
and slanting the news."
[358]
After the audio of the call was released, reports by
CNN[359]
and other news outlets alleged that Zimmerman had said "fucking coons"
two minutes and twenty-one seconds (2:21) into the call. Two weeks later
on April 4, 2012, CNN claimed that enhanced audio revealed that
Zimmerman had said "fucking cold" (alluding to ongoing rain in
February).
[360] The following day, April 5, 2012, CNN's
Martin Savidge reported that
forensic audio expert Tom Owen claimed it was "fucking punks."
[361] It is said to be "fucking punks" in the
affidavit of
probable cause, dated April 11, 2012.
[183]
Other reviewers of the call have offered alternate interpretations of
what was said, some labeling it "unintelligible." According to the
Associated Press, the alleged racial slur "fed growing outrage over the
police department's initial decision not to arrest Zimmerman."
[362][363][364][365]
Deceptive audio editing by NBC
Between March 19 and 27, 2012, the NBC Nightly News, NBC's
Today show, and NBC's network-owned Miami affiliate
WTVJ[366]
ran segments which misleadingly merged parts of Zimmerman's call. On
one version of the recording played by NBC, Zimmerman was heard saying,
"This guy looks like he's up to no good or he's on drugs or something...
He's got his hand in his waistband, and he's a black male."
[367][368]
In another what was played was, "This guy looks like he's up to no
good. He looks black." In the original 9-1-1 recording, Zimmerman said:
"This guy looks like he's up to no good. Or he's on drugs or something.
It's raining and he's just walking around, looking about." The 9-1-1
operator then asked: "OK, and this guy, is he black, white or
Hispanic?", and Zimmerman answered, "He looks black."
[289]
The phrase, "He's got his hand in his waistband, and he's a black male"
came several exchanges after that point in the conversation.
[369]
Erik Wemple of the
Washington Post wrote that NBC's
alterations "would more readily paint Zimmerman as a racial profiler. In
reality... Zimmerman simply answered a question... Nothing prejudicial
at all in responding to such an inquiry... To portray that exchange in a
way that wrongs Zimmerman is high editorial malpractice..."
[289]
NBC issued an apology for "an error made in the production process that we deeply regret,"
[370] but never apologized on the air.
[371] The network said that the
Today
show and Miami edits took place in two separate incidents involving
different people. A Miami-based NBC News producer lost her job, WTVJ
reporter Jeff Burnside was fired,
[372] and two other employees were disciplined.
[373][374] Lilia Luciano, who was the reporter on broadcasts containing both edited versions of the audio,
[367]
was also fired, and some of her aired reports on the Trayvon Martin
story, along with the misleading audio, were removed from the NBC News
website.
[369][375]
On December 6, 2012, Zimmerman filed a defamation lawsuit against NBC
alleging that they intentionally edited the phone call so that
Zimmerman would sound racist. The lawsuit said, "NBC saw the death of
Trayvon Martin not as a tragedy but as an opportunity to increase
ratings, and so set about to create the myth that George Zimmerman was a
racist and predatory villain."
[376][377]
A NBC spokeswoman said the network strongly disagreed with the
accusations that Zimmerman made in the complaint, stating; "There was no
intent to portray Mr. Zimmerman unfairly and we intend to vigorously
defend our position in court."
[378]
In June, 2014 a summary judgment was issued in the network's favor
which ended the lawsuit filed by Zimmerman. In the ruling, the judge
wrote that there was "no clear and convincing evidence that defendants
knew that the information published was false at the time it was
published, or recklessly disregarded the truth or falsity of those
statements".
[379][380]
Surveillance video mistake
ABC News
obtained a surveillance video of Zimmerman walking unassisted into the
Sanford police station after the shooting. An officer is seen pausing to
look at the back of Zimmerman's head, but ABC originally said that no
abrasions or blood can be seen in the video.
[381] The Daily Caller disputed this claim, and posted a still from the ABC video which showed an injury on the back of Zimmerman's head.
[382]
ABC later reported that it had "re-digitized" the video, and said that
this version showed "what appear to be a pair of gashes or welts on
George Zimmerman's head," but the story's main focus was on a doctor who
claimed it was unlikely that Zimmerman's nose had been broken.
[383][384]
Juror B29 controversy
In his July 26, 2013 column,
Slate journalist
William Saletan
accused several major news organizations of editing interviews with
"Juror B29" to make it appear that she maintained Zimmerman had gotten
away with murder when, according to Saletan, she had not actually done
so.
[385]
Trial and verdict
On April 11, 2012, Zimmerman was charged with
second-degree murder
in Martin's death. The trial began on June 24, 2013, and was presented
to the jury for deliberations on July 12. The defendant was found not
guilty the following day.
[386]
Aftermath
Some legal scholars, including Charles Rose of Stetson University and
Jonathan Turley
of George Washington University, were not surprised by the verdict and
said the prosecution had tactically erred by charging Zimmerman with
second-degree murder, which, given Florida's laws on self-defense, made
it almost impossible for the prosecution to prove their case beyond a
reasonable doubt with the evidence at their disposal.
[387][388][389] Several attorneys commenting on the case, such as
Paul Butler
of Georgetown University, said that the prosecution had failed to
adequately prepare their witnesses for trial and had been out-maneuvered
by the defense attorneys.
[390][391]
Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz remained extremely critical of
State Attorney Angela Corey's actions in the case, charging that "her
conduct bordered on criminal conduct" and "in 50 years of litigating
cases ... rarely have I seen [a prosecutor] as bad as this prosecutor".
[392]
George Zimmerman remained in hiding after the verdict, although it
was reported that on July 17, four days after the verdict, Zimmerman
helped rescue several people from an overturned vehicle in Sanford,
Florida.
[393]
The family rescued by Zimmerman had planned a press conference but
later dropped the plan because they were worried about adverse public
reaction to saying anything positive about Zimmerman.
[394] A month later, Zimmerman was seen in
Cocoa, Florida touring a factory of the company that manufactured the gun he had used in the shooting.
[395] Zimmerman was said to have asked about the legality of buying a 12-gauge shotgun.
[395][396]
Zimmerman's parents said that they too had received a large number of
death threats and were still too afraid to return to their home after
the verdict.
[397] A
Winter Park, Florida
woman whose phone number was posted online by a website that mistakenly
identified the number as George Zimmerman's said she also was receiving
a barrage of death threats.
[398]
The woman said that when she reported the calls to the Seminole County
Sheriff's Department, she was told that the sheriff's office was
receiving 400 death threats per minute on social media websites.
[399]
The day after the verdict was delivered, the
NAACP posted a petition formally requesting the Justice Department to open a civil rights case against George Zimmerman.
[400] Within hours, 130,000 people had signed the petition.
[401]
During a speech at to the NAACP, Attorney General
Eric Holder stated that the
Department of Justice
was continuing to investigate Zimmerman for civil rights violations
after the verdict, and also criticized existing "stand-your-ground"
laws. Holder's speech was denounced by the
NRA and Florida Governor
Rick Scott.
[402]
Although there were scattered incidents of disturbances and vandalism
following the not-guilty ruling, fears of widespread civil unrest (as
per the
Rodney King verdict in 1992) were unrealized.
[403][Note 14] A Hispanic man in
Baltimore
was reportedly beaten by a group of youths, one of whom was armed with a
handgun, while the group chanted "This is for Trayvon!"
[408] A white man in
Wauwatosa, Wisconsin said he was beaten by a group of African-American youth who were yelling "this is for Trayvon Martin!"
[409][410] The man said he was saved from the assailants by a young African-American couple who came to his rescue.
[409][410] In
Washington, D.C.,
an adult white male was kicked by three African-American men, and
robbed of his phone and wallet. The man said the three assailants yelled
out "This is for Trayvon!" Police investigated the incident as a hate
crime.
[411]
Just days after the Zimmerman trial verdict had been announced,
several dozen activists known as the Dream Defenders began to camp
outside Governor Rick Scott's office in the Capitol, demanding that the
governor call the legislature into special session to pass what the
activists called
The Trayvon Martin Civil Rights Act, which would repeal the Stand Your Ground law, outlaw racial profiling, and discourage the use of
zero tolerance policies in schools.
[412]
As the occupation entered its second week, Governor Scott maintained
that he would not order a special session of the legislature.
[413]
Democratic leaders in the Florida legislature, Senate Minority Leader
Chris Smith and House Minority Leader
Perry Thurston,
also called on the governor to convene a special session of the
legislature, in order to overhaul or possibly repeal the Stand Your
Ground provisions of Florida's self-defense laws.
[324] Senator Smith said that the verdict in the Zimmerman trial showed the adverse effect of the Stand Your Ground law.
[324]
On July 19, six days after the verdict, President
Barack Obama gave an impromptu
20-minute speech in the
White House Press Room, in which he spoke about the trial and about race relations in the United States.
[414]
Obama said that he identified with Trayvon, that "Trayvon Martin could
have been me, 35 years ago." He also said that black men in the United
States (himself included, before he became a senator) commonly suffered
racial profiling.
[415]
A week after the verdict, peaceful rallies and vigils were held in
more than 100 cities nationwide to protest racial profiling, demand the
repeal of Stand Your Ground laws, and call for a federal trial of
Zimmerman for violations of civil rights laws.
[416][417]
A nationwide poll conducted for the
Washington Post and ABC News found sharp divisions along racial and political lines over the shooting and over the jury's verdict.
[418]
Nearly 90% of African Americans called the shooting unjustified,
compared to 33% of whites; and some 62% of Democrats disapproved of the
verdict, compared to 20% of Republicans.
[419] Gallup reported that the reaction was "almost exactly the opposite" of that following the
O. J. Simpson murder case, when 89% of African Americans agreed with the jury decision, compared to 36% of whites.
[420] A
Pew Research Center poll found similar divisions along racial lines in the Zimmerman case.
[421]
The Pew poll also found large differences in reactions to the trial
verdict according to age. The majority of Americans younger than 30
expressed dissatisfaction with the verdict (53% to 29%), while the
reaction was reversed for those age 65 and older (50% satisfied versus
33% dissatisfied).
[421]
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