George Zimmerman (killer of unarmed Florida teen Trayvon Martin) found not guilty

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He doesn't have to prove he's innocent. The state has to prove he is guilty. The burden of proof is on the prosecution.

He's already admitted he killed trayvon Martin. He has to present his argument that he did it in self defense. The state has to prove he didn't do it in self defense. They can do this directly or they can approach the situation from a different angle (By say, arguing that under the circumstances, George Zimmerman did not have the right to use lethal force in self defense, because he was committing the crime of assault)
 
nothing like dinosaurs attempting to understand technology. is it true there is no police testifying on behalf of the prosecution? and what does that mean, they don't think zimmerman is guilty? would seem cops love to get attention, unless they've been told not to so they don't come off as the next mark fuhrman

There was one. But, he just stated what the scene was like after he arrived. Didn't really go either way for the pros or def.
 
So, was all that about the prosecution believes she followed on Twitter George Zimmerman, or his brother?

And yes, awful celebrity choices
 
Is testifying in court the only way for him to get his version of the events into evidence?

Pretty much. There's the picture of his injuries, but that's not really enough to demonstrate his whole story, IMO. A defendant who takes the Fifth is considered unavailable for purposes of the hearsay rule, but his story to the police doesn't fit into any of the hearsay exceptions (former testimony, statement under belief of impending death, statement against interest,statement of personal or family history, statement by deceased or ill declarant similar to one previously admitted)
 
So, was all that about the prosecution believes she followed on Twitter George Zimmerman, or his brother?

And yes, awful celebrity choices

She did follow him. She said she doesn't know how to use Twitter and used the "follow" button as proof she isn't following him.

The follow button is there for the person who's logged in though, not the account you're looking at.

ETA: What kind of sick person follows Donald Trump Jr?
 
So, was all that about the prosecution believes she followed on Twitter George Zimmerman, or his brother?

And yes, awful celebrity choices


if shes following her brother the prosecution can argue that her testimony was given to benefit the defense of GZ.. they can bring it up in closing arguments and it would make him look bad which is why they brought the issue up to the judge outside of a jury so it can be approved into court or dropped without hurting either side
 
He doesn't have to prove he's innocent. The state has to prove he is guilty. The burden of proof is on the prosecution.

Well, in this case, isn't it a little different? Zimmerman admits to killing Trayvon. That is not in question here. The question is wether it was in self defense or not. Zimmerman says it is self defense, so shouldn't he have to prove it?
 
Well, in this case, isn't it a little different? Zimmerman admits to killing Trayvon. That is not in question here. The question is wether it was in self defense or not. Zimmerman says it is self defense, so shouldn't he have to prove it?

Depends on Florida I would think, but my instinct is that the burden still remains on the prosecution to prove that it wasn't self-defense. I don't really have any emotion in this case, btw, so if Florida has some different stuff going on that's cool too.
 
Depends on Florida I would think, but my instinct is that the burden still remains on the prosecution to prove that it wasn't self-defense. I don't really have any emotion in this case, btw, so if Florida has some different stuff going on that's cool too.

That seems crazy to me. Anyone can kill and just say 'self defense' prove it was not! If there are no witnesses, you are scott free. :/
 
Well, in this case, isn't it a little different? Zimmerman admits to killing Trayvon. That is not in question here. The question is wether it was in self defense or not. Zimmerman says it is self defense, so shouldn't he have to prove it?


the prosecution has to prove that the killing wasn't in self defense, the defense has to disprove/discredit the evidence brought by the prosecution.
 
Well, in this case, isn't it a little different? Zimmerman admits to killing Trayvon. That is not in question here. The question is wether it was in self defense or not. Zimmerman says it is self defense, so shouldn't he have to prove it?

Burden of proof actually encompasses three separate concepts, the burden of pleading, the burden of production, and the burden of persuasion.

Per Florida law, Zimmerman has to raise the defense (bears the burden of pleading) and produce some evidence to support it (burden of production) but the prosecution still must persuade the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that it was not self-defense (burden of persuasion).

http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=...=cPUjgVt789_NOiU0LzV83Q&bvm=bv.48572450,d.dmg
 
Well, in this case, isn't it a little different? Zimmerman admits to killing Trayvon. That is not in question here. The question is wether it was in self defense or not. Zimmerman says it is self defense, so shouldn't he have to prove it?

It does have to be substantiated, not necessarily proven, though. His injuries would substantiate his claim. However, the witness testimony that the person on top was the one who walked away from the fight would throw that into question, and trayvon's actions (attempting to run away according to both zimmerman and his GF) seem to suggest that he was the one acting defensively.

I said this before, but based on the circumstances, Zimmerman, I beleive, faced the choice of murder or death. Am I saying that Zimmerman does not have the right to defend himself? No. I'm saying under these circumstances, Zimmerman didn't have the right to kill Trayvon Martin.
 
Does anyone have a copy of the instructions that were given to the jury? That would likely explain the self-defense thing in the clearest language. I just found the general instructions from the Florida Supreme Court, but the specific language is chosen based on the case.
 
Does anyone have a copy of the instructions that were given to the jury? That would likely explain the self-defense thing in the clearest language. I just found the general instructions from the Florida Supreme Court, but the specific language is chosen based on the case.

Jury instructions are given at the end of the case, not the beginning.
 
Burden of proof actually encompasses three separate concepts, the burden of pleading, the burden of production, and the burden of persuasion.

Per Florida law, Zimmerman has to raise the defense (bears the burden of pleading) and produce some evidence to support it (burden of production) but the prosecution still must persuade the jury beyond a reasonable doubt that it was not self-defense (burden of persuasion).

http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=...=cPUjgVt789_NOiU0LzV83Q&bvm=bv.48572450,d.dmg

I've never been clear on something. Self-defense is a justification, meaning that no crime was committed, as the law permits someone to perform the action taken. But, say, an insanity plea is an excuse, meaning a crime was committed, but there's some reason the punishment should not be doled out anyway. Do you know if the state still has to persuade beyond a reasonable doubt for a lack of insanity? Or does the fact that it's an excuse change it to something like a civil affirmative defense, where the burden of proof shifts completely to the defendant? And if it does shift, is it a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard, or preponderance of the evidence?
 
I've never been clear on something. Self-defense is a justification, meaning that no crime was committed, as the law permits someone to perform the action taken. But, say, an insanity plea is an excuse, meaning a crime was committed, but there's some reason the punishment should not be doled out anyway. Do you know if the state still has to persuade beyond a reasonable doubt for a lack of insanity? Or does the fact that it's an excuse change it to something like a civil affirmative defense, where the burden of proof shifts completely to the defendant? And if it does shift, is it a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt standard, or preponderance of the evidence?

Most states defendant has to prove insanity by a preponderance, minority of states prosecution must prove it BRD. In federal cases defendant has to prove it by C&C.
 
Jury instructions are given at the end of the case, not the beginning.

Good point. I'm guessing that the instructions they'll be given are set, but maybe that's not the case. Anyway, would rather not speculate and sounds like this discussion has happened before.

edit: Dude Abides dropping actual knowledge in these parts. I'm a fan.
 
Pretty much. There's the picture of his injuries, but that's not really enough to demonstrate his whole story, IMO. A defendant who takes the Fifth is considered unavailable for purposes of the hearsay rule, but his story to the police doesn't fit into any of the hearsay exceptions (former testimony, statement under belief of impending death, statement against interest,statement of personal or family history, statement by deceased or ill declarant similar to one previously admitted)

Is it a calculated risk they might only take if they sense things are going well for them? It seems like it would be taking a hell of a chance to not have his version of events in there.
 
Is it a calculated risk they might only take if they sense things are going well for them? It seems like it would be taking a hell of a chance to not have his version of events in there.

If he takes the stand he's open to cross examination by the prosecution, though. And that reason is precisely why most defendants are advised against testifying.

Telling your side of the story also means the prosecution gets a chance to pick it apart.
 
Now we need a timeline, unless I missed it. From when she heard the gun shot, to when she saw this person and they said call the police. If it's within a couple seconds. Zimmerman gon' get fucked, IMO.
 
I'm only listening to this at the moment, and without seeing anything, the attorney speaking sounds close to EXACTLY like Kevin Costner. So weird.
 
Let me just say, I'd hit it.

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