K
kelvinf
Guest
What’s your point?
What’s your point?
just referencing her entire post,opposed to two words selectively quoted.What’s your point?
I asked you because you used the term.Why don’t you ask Dawnia? Because she basically said that, in a “normal” fight, Trayvon wouldn’t have beaten George.
This:What exactly are you asking about?![]()
44S?Originally Posted by kelvinf
What size and weight adv.? So you really believe that during the whole ordeal that lasted at least 44s, the only time Zimmerman could show strength was to overpower Trayvon in getting the gun? What the heck was he doing when his head was supposedly being bashed and when at one point, Trayvon apparently had one hand on his nose and the other hand bashing his head?
Referencing her entire post wouldn’t in anyway change what I said.just referencing her entire post,opposed to two words selectively quoted.
A “surprise” sucker punch administered after clearly informing your opponent that you intend to kill them?! Excuse me while I look up the word “surprise”…See David & Goliath for an example of a very much smaller, weaker guy beating a larger opponentIt does happen.
I don’t think that in a normal fight that Trayvon could have beaten George, but a surprise sucker punch to the face can give one opponent an advantage that they normally wouldn’t have. Size and strength are not everything in a fight. Heck, even I could put down a much larger male with a single well placed knee.![]()
I do not. Stand Your Ground does not apply when the murder victim was actively pursued.As I predicted, and I anticipate he will prevail as well.
About half your list is irrelevant as it cannot be documented by a picture (which, if you recall, is what we were discussing).There are external signs of a broken nose, other than bones sticking through the skin.
The state is going to have to prove that Zimmerman was “actively pursuing” Treyvon Martin when Martin attacked him. A notion that disagrees with the publicly available facts.I do not. Stand Your Ground does not apply when the murder victim was actively pursued.
And you have judged his account of events to be the truth. So what? We are both free to believe what we want.You apparently have already judged him, found him guilty, and determined his punishement.
And without all of the facts.
Ah, seems like you weren’t/aren’t on the parallel Zimmerman thread. I pretty much detailed what I am saying here there.This:
44S?
When did he “overpower” Martin?
Show Strength?
Sounds like Martin had his hands full of head and nose? The point being?
Nonsense. The publicly available facts prove that Zimmerman followed Martin in his car and approached him.The state is going to have to prove that Zimmerman was “actively pursuing” Treyvon Martin when Martin attacked him. A notion that disagrees with the publicly available facts.
That is quite backwards. Travon was followed and approached by stranger with a gun. It was Travon who had the right of self defense not Zimmerman. The law clearly states that it is not applicable for the party which provoked the conflict.All Zimmerman has to prove, as part of his self-defense claim, is that Martin was beating him and he had no recourse but to use lethal force to defend himself.
And scenario 2 is supposed to make more sense than scenario 1 because what, 28 yr olds who follow strange kids around at night can be assumed to have more brains than said kids? “Martin came back” is just as irrational as “Zimmerman setting out with intent to kill” - which, I suppose is why he isn’t charged with 1st degree murder.1.) Zimmerman deliberately followed Martin intending to murder him (which makes no sense right from the outset, since he would never have told the dispatch he was following him), then shot him, simultaneously caused his gun to jam so that it would look like it was on the ground, then smashed his head and face into something repeatedly to make it look like he was attacked, and managed to get 2 witnesses to lie about it to support his story
or
2.) Martin came back, started attacking him, and Zimmerman shot in self defense.
Completely irrelevant to self-defense. Martin could have just gone home. Martin could have called 911 himself. Martin could have walked up to Zimmerman and asked him why he was following him. Following someone isn’t a crime. It is perfectly legal, as long as you aren’t trespassing, to follow someone.Nonsense. The publicly available facts prove that Zimmerman followed Martin in his car and approached him.
The Salem witches killed kids? News to me.Political correctness “hate crimes” is the new Salem witch trials.
Not in the slightest. The Stand Your Ground law clearly states that it does not apply to the party which provoked the use of force; Zimmerman in this case.Completely irrelevant to self-defense.
It’s also legal to go to the store and walk back to an apartment where you have every right to be. The only illegal thing that happened that night is the shooting of an innocent kid who may or may not have been defending himself against an adult aggressor.Completely irrelevant to self-defense. Martin could have just gone home. Martin could have called 911 himself. Martin could have walked up to Zimmerman and asked him why he was following him. Following someone isn’t a crime. It is perfectly legal, as long as you aren’t trespassing, to follow someone.
Following someone is not provocative. And there is evidence that Zimmerman was headed back to his car when Martin initiated the confrontation.Not in the slightest. The Stand Your Ground law clearly states that it does not apply to the party which provoked the use of force; Zimmerman in this case.
What is lacking? You mean his clear statement that “they always get away”? How else could his intent have been more clearly stated, by him spelling it out on an apartment wall with bullet holes?Following someone is not provocative. And there is evidence that Zimmerman was headed back to his car when Martin initiated the confrontation.
Show me anything…from any credible source, the demonstrates that Zimmerman provoked the confrontation that lead to Martin’s shooting. A critical element of provocation law is mens rea (guilty mind). The** prosecution** has to prove that Zimmerman had the intention of provoking Martin into a confrontation. Substance to make this case is sorely lacking.
Zimmerman followed Martin in his car, continued to follow Martin as he tried to walk briskly away, continued to follow Martin after he started running away, then approached him with a loaded gun in a menacing manner. That most certainly IS provocative. The fact that Martin was approached is evident by the account of his girlfriend who heard the entire course of events all the way up until the scuffle began. Martin had every right to defend himself against a stranger who stalked him and approached him with a gun.Following someone is not provocative. And there is evidence that Zimmerman was headed back to his car when Martin initiated the confrontation.