Here’s what I’m trying to figure out: what possible conversations could they have had?
Reportedly Martin was saying on the phone that he was being followed and was trying to get away. Meanwhile, Zimmerman is out of his truck and following Martin despite the 911 dispatcher’s comments.
(It’s really a shame Martin didn’t call 911. With any luck, they could’ve said “Hold it, guys, you’re both talking to us, and everything’s cool”).
So: Zimmerman follows Martin. If he started the conversation, was it “Halt! Who goes there?” or more of an “Excuse me, can I help you?” Or maybe just “Hi! I’m with the neighborhood watch. Are you lost?”
Assuming good faith on Zimmerman’s part, I’m hard-pressed to think of anything reasonable Zimmerman would say that would provoke a response other than “Oh, thank God, I thought you were a mugger!” Obviously there are outrageous things he could’ve said that he should’ve known would provoke an attack – fighting words, etc. – that would lay the blame on him; but, assuming good faith, I can’t think of anything coming out of Zimmerman’s mouth that would’ve resulted in Martin dying.
On the other hand, if Martin started the conversation, it doesn’t matter what he said; Zimmerman could just respond by saying “Neighborhood Watch.” End of fear on both sides. Again, assuming good faith, I don’t see how Martin dies.
That leaves two possibilities: no conversation at all (one of them just up and attacks the other, in which case the one who started it is probably responsible), or one of them was acting in bad faith.
And all we have so far is Zimmerman poking his head in where it didn’t belong – a self-appointed “neighborhood watch guy” who clearly doesn’t like black people, carrying a weapon while “on patrol” and pursuing someone after being asked not to.
Yes, the police found blood on his head (which explains and probably justifies the lack of arrest at the time); but the injuries don’t sound like the kind you would get from a 17-year-old sitting on top of his prone body beating him with his fists; they’re too light.
Here’s where CSI comes in: if Zimmerman’s story is true, then the evidence should back up a point-blank shot from below, with serious injuries to Zimmerman from the “scared for his life” beating he was taking. If Zimmerman’s story is false, then the evidence should point to something else – e.g., a shot from further away, a more level bullet trajectory, and so on.
And for that, we’ll have to wait for the grand jury’s report.