"you can go a long way killin black folks in this country"-the WireTim Wise said:Lets travel back to 1984 shall we, and hypothetically apply this logic to the Bernhard Goetz case in a little thought experiment so as to illustrate the point.
Goetz, as youll recall, was the white man who, afraid of young black men because he had been previously mugged, decided to shoot several such youth on a subway. They had not threatened him. They had asked him for money, and apparently teased him a bit. But at no point did they threaten him. Nonetheless, he drew his weapon and fired several rounds into them, even (according to his own initial account, later recanted), shooting a second time at one of the young men, after saying, You dont look so bad, here, have another.
Goetz, predictably, was seen as a hero by the majority of the nations whites, if polls and anecdotal evidence are to be believed. He was a Dirty Harry-like vigilante, fighting back against crime, and more to the point, black crime. Ultimately he too would successfully plead self-defense and face conviction only on a minor weapons charge.
Which is the case here. Taking out the racial component this case is very mundane, but race is constantly injected despite zero evidence of it, and even evidence against it.
One thing that surprised me was the lack of variation amongst the jurors. All women. Other than one hispanic, the rest were white and most were 50 or above.
Totally ignoring the idea of race in the trial itself, are you honestly suggesting that Zimmerman would have trailed and confronted a white youth walking through his neighborhood with a soft drink speaking on a cellular phone? Are people really this naive?
The way the US media and the kids family have tried to steer the story their way is truly disgusting. Can't wait for my #Treyvon hoodie.
Good to see he's not getting locked up.
What? What do you mean by this?Good to see he's not getting locked up.
feel free to stalk people at night with a gun. if they fight back and you kill them, you're a-okay if your white in Florida
come on, breh... I'm on your side here. being black had zero to do with this. and unfortunately, there's no one to witness who really started shit. what this was self defense and it didn't matter how weak his injuries appeared, only his bitch-ass weak state of mind.
that's not fair, but that's the crux of what happened here according to the laws of Florida.
fixed
The way the US media and the kids family have tried to steer the story their way is truly disgusting. Can't wait for my #Treyvon hoodie.
Good to see he's not getting locked up.
And what state do you think that's different in? I believe this was discussed in the trial thread, and self defense needs to be excluded beyond a reasonable doubt by the prosecution almost everywhere once the defense offers any evidence in support of it. It's also unlikely that Zimmerman simply following Trayvon would be illegal anywhere.
I think there are more people mindlessly attacking it. It's incredibly frustrating.
This was the right result, based on the evidence. The absolute core principle of our justice system is that it's better to let a guilty person go free, than to convict an innocent one. This is why we require the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard. People are/were emotionally invested in this case and it's taken on significant meaning for quite a few, which I understand, but the system operated exactly as its meant to.
as if some Hispanics aren't white?
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Looks like we might not get any jury interviews any time soon. Shame. Wish at least one of them can provide some insight.
Yeah pretty much this.
I find peoples reaction to this really frustrating.
Welp, time for me to walk away for awhile.
Was anyone surprised? This case should've never come to trial in the first place, and the special prosecutor who brought the charges is known for over charging.
I think there are more people mindlessly attacking it. It's incredibly frustrating.
This was the right result, based on the evidence. The absolute core principle of our justice system is that it's better to let a guilty person go free, than to convict an innocent one. This is why we require the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard. People are/were emotionally invested in this case and it's taken on significant meaning for quite a few, which I understand, but the system operated exactly as its meant to.
Texas and Florida are the only states to my knowledge that require the prosecution to prove it's not self-defense. In other states, self-defense must be proved beyond reasonable doubt. That is, burden shifts to the defense in that scenario cause the events of the crime have already been settled (we know x killed y).
You really thought any of them would actually do an interview after all of this
Is it frustrating? Like you didn't expect this. Everyone wants to boil it down to 3 sentences when it's more complicated than that. The law is screwy. Race will always been involved in a case like this. America allowing guns will lead to more of the same.
How would the case be presented differently if the prosecution were to "explain to the jury why Zimmerman could be found guilty of manslaughter"? Manslaughter is a lesser included charge with murder in the second degree and the jury absolutely could have charged him that way if they felt it was justified. This conspiracy theory is nonsense.
People should be more outraged over the terrible "Stand your Ground" law than trying to make this a race issue.
I think it speaks volumes that the jury had to ask for a clarification on the manslaughter charge during deliberations. If the prosecution had been on their game, there would have been no need for them to ask for that. Also, to prove Zimmerman guilty of manslaughter, all the prosecution had to do was prove:
1. George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin.
2. George Zimmerman intentionally committed an act or acts that caused the death of Trayvon Martin.
We all know that Zimmerman shot Trayvon, so point one is a given. Point 2 would have been easy to prove because had Zimmerman not profiled Trayvon and stayed in his car when he was told not to follow him, Trayvon would be alive. Had the prosecution told that narrative, then the result would have been completely different. Zimmerman would not be a free man today.
Something's fishy about the way the prosecution handled that case.
I don't believe that's correct. Again, this was discussed at length in the trial thread. Beyond that, does it make sense to require the defense to prove their innocence beyond a reasonable doubt? That's entirely backwards. Once evidence is provided to show self defense it morally makes sense that the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a crime was committed, meaning they have to show it was not an excusable killing.
I think it speaks volumes that the jury had to ask for a clarification on the manslaughter charge during deliberations. If the prosecution had been on their game, there would have been no need for them to ask for that. Also, to prove Zimmerman guilty of manslaughter, all the prosecution had to do was prove:
1. George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin.
2. George Zimmerman intentionally committed an act or acts that caused the death of Trayvon Martin.
We all know that Zimmerman shot Trayvon, so point one is a given. Point 2 would have been easy to prove because had Zimmerman not profiled Trayvon and stayed in his car when he was told not to follow him, Trayvon would be alive. Had the prosecution told that narrative, then the result would have been completely different. Zimmerman would not be a free man today.
Something's fishy about the way the prosecution handled that case.
And why not? Why should a grown-ass man who weighed more than a 17-year-old boy who we now know for a FACT wasn't doing anything wrong not be expected to answer for instigating a series of events that led to that boy, with his deadly skittles and iced beverage, being shot dead?
Was anyone surprised? This case should've never come to trial in the first place, and the special prosecutor who brought the charges is known for over charging.
Stand your ground played no part in this case.
No! If the prosecution fails to disprove self defense none of that matters. It's all excused as a justifiable homicide.
I think it speaks volumes that the jury had to ask for a clarification on the manslaughter charge during deliberations. If the prosecution had been on their game, there would have been no need for them to ask for that. Also, to prove Zimmerman guilty of manslaughter, all the prosecution had to do was prove:
1. George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin.
2. George Zimmerman intentionally committed an act or acts that caused the death of Trayvon Martin.
We all know that Zimmerman shot Trayvon, so point one is a given. Point 2 would have been easy to prove because had Zimmerman not profiled Trayvon and stayed in his car when he was told not to follow him, Trayvon would be alive. Had the prosecution told that narrative, then the result would have been completely different. Zimmerman would not be a free man today.
Something's fishy about the way the prosecution handled that case.
Yes, it does make sense to require the defense actually have to prove undeniably it was self-defense. Otherwise, you open yourself to lots of "excusable killings'.
Because there has always been reasonable doubt that GZ did not intentionally mean to kill TM. That is what the case boiled down to.
Because there has always been reasonable doubt that GZ did not intentionally mean to kill TM. That is what the case boiled down to.
It is pretty amazing how quickly people started to paint Trayvon in a negative light.
"thug"
Really?
Really?
Trayvon was not on trial here, but judging by some of the posts made, it's almost as if he was.
The lesson here for you black dudes is avoid white guys you don't know at all costs, particulalry in gun-wacko states like Florida, because you never know which of us might be a gun-toting vigilante.
Yes it did. Zimmerman had no obligation to attempt to leave because of this law. When he was being beat by Trayvon, he was NOT legally obligated to attempt to make an escape. Having this law on the books that tells citizens they can shoot when their life is in danger (without making an attempt to leave), changes the whole dynamic of an altercation like this.
You really thought any of them would actually do an interview after all of this
WELL HERE WEREN'T NO ANJUL EITHER.
This is wrong. Stand your ground is protection from civil and criminal penalties if you can demonstrate the defendant acted in self defense in some pre-trial hearing. If the judge rules favorably there is no trial and the person can never be sued.
There is no duty to retreat in Florida unless that person was the initial aggressor, in which case they simply have to attempt to withdraw. The jury could simultaneously believe that Zimmerman started the fight AND that he found himself underneath Trayvon unable to escape. We can't know just yet how the jury looked at this but "duty to retreat" is not a factor if they found he was unable to do so.
But Trayvon still died by his actions, and here we have people such as yourself implying that the case should have never gone to trial in the first place...
Exactly since only 2 people were involved, the state had an uphill battle of proving a negative.Except, of course, we know George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin beyond reasonable doubt.
The prosecution just couldn't prove it wasn't self defense which is impossible in a case involving only 2 people. All this case says is "if you want to kill someone, make sure to start a fight and be the only 2 people, or, alternatively, lure someone into your home then kill them."
I don't know if the incident and trial was about race. What I do know is that people have fallen on racial lines. It's 2013, and for some reason, we still in America can't move beyond the colored line to be empathetic with our fellow Americans. Why this continues, and why people can't see an unarmed teenager and a bully who tracked him down, but rather a black teen and a white man, I don't know.
Except Zimmerman is Hispanic, Black, and white..? Race wasn't a factor here, whether or not the prosecution could prove Zimmerman did not act in self defense was.