With GZ’s history, I think GZ may very well have had a quick temper that could have led to the confrontation.
Except that you have evidence that GZ was calm, informing police of the concern, making arrangements with the dispatcher where to meet police, afterward was completely cooperative, did not immediately “lawyer up” and continued to cooperate after the incident.
You’re trying very hard to ignore the evidence that TM initiated the confrontation. We have this in Zimmerman’s words, in Jeantel’s words (even if she’s not that believable when what she says agrees with Zimmerman’s rendition it is more likely to be true). TM had fled the scene. According to the track on the photo I previously posted he was a significant distance from Zimmerman during the time of the call.
Think about what makes the most sense. That Zimmerman having arranged to meet police, speaking on the phone with the dispatcher, spent the time tracking down TM and although shorter, slower and less athletic than TM decided to pick a fight with him? Given his history of reporting incidents, working with neighbors and police, there is no evidence that he would suddenly change his tactics and be engaged in a fist or gunfight just as the police arrived.
Use some logic and get emotion out of it. It makes far more sense that TM was angered by being followed. He was a young black man who had probably experienced the suspicion of others. He was interested and had engaged in street fighting and was probably confident he could teach the “crazy a** cracka” a lesson. For all he knew GZ was just some nosy neighbor wanting to know what a black kid was doing in “his” neighborhood. Impulse control is low, testosterone is high.
I think he circled back, saw GZ and unfortunately the words and fists flew, resulting in Martin’s death.
That is the story told by GZ, by the witnesses such as they were, by the call to the dispatcher, and by the “map” of their respective travels that evening.
Lisa