Trayvon is the victim here.
He is dead.
Which is meaningless. It isn’t always the victim that dies. It is just as likely that Martin approached Zimmerman. In fact, that is what Zimmerman claims happened.
Zimmerman had the gun. Who approached whom first? Who decided to do exactly what the authorities said not to do? I stand by what I said: The man was told not to follow the child, and because he approached the child, there was an altercation and we have a tragic death.
Not indicating that Martin is a criminal. But if a criminal approaches me and hits me. and I respond by shooting the criminal, that does not make the criminal the victim. That makes me the victim.
**Kathryn’s reply: **Yes Trayvon is dead. There was an altercation. Zimmerman was told not to approach. They’ve been running the recordings of that conversation for weeks now. Zimmerman was told not to approach. He decided to anyway. These are facts.
Prove it. Prove to me and everyone else that Zimmerman approached Martin.
**
Quoting Kathryn:**
Trials depend all the time on recordings, evidence, and common sense.
The jury is not at the scene of the crime or altercation when it occurred, yet they have a right to base their decisions on the facts. They have the right to ask these questions we all ask:
No they don’t have the right to ask any questions. Juries do not ask questions.
Who was armed?
Who was defenseless?
Who approached whom?
Kathryn reply:* I live in the U.S.A, where at trial by jury, the jury hears all the questions asked by the attorneys. The jury members retire to the jury room and are allowed to talk among themselves and to have the transcripts presented to them, containing all questions asked by the attorneys.** These questions have not only already been asked by the public and by Trayvon’s family, but will most certainly be addressed by the attorney’s***.
Jury members will be listening for these answers.
Wow. You already know what questions will be asked!! Great. Do you know who they will be questioning? Or are you just guessing???
Kathryn’s reply: And the jury then goes into deliberation, where the transcripts are provided them, and where they are free to discuss the witness’s answers.
No, not always. I am guessing that you don’t know a whole lot about the court system. Maybe only what you have seen on TV? Juries aren’t really like that. They don’t always get transcripts, lots of times they don’t get to take notes and many trials go on for weeks. (Yes, I have been a juror, as part of a capital murder case.)
Young Trayvon Martin was “packing” iced tea and Skittles candy, walking home.
Young T Martin was over 6 foot tall and had at least in the past been a football player
Zimmerman chose to follow him, packing a loaded gun.
None of which is against the law.
Hmmm. Let’s us pause a moment at those facts.
I paused. And???
We have to let the courts decide. We each have a right to our opinions.
Peace,
Kathryn Ann
Based on the facts, and these are tragic. I tend to side with the powerless. If a grown man is packing a loaded gun, and if that grown man is told by authorities not to approach, yet chooses to do so, he has escalated the situation. I’m siding with the innocent child carrying home the candy and iced tea.
How do you know he is innocent? How do you know he was powerless? I guess you think Zimmerman broke his own nose? Or banged his own head against the pavement?
- Had Zimmerman not approached, had he waited for the authorities to come, there would not have been an altercation and a child would be alive today*.
Very true, IF Zimmerman approached Martin. If Martin approached Zimmerman, that is different.
Just my opinion, based on what we know.
That is your opinion, but it is based on opinion. Not on what we know.
I pray for the young man’s family, for justice, and will leave this thread now, as it’s up to the judicial system to decide.
Respectfully,
Kathryn Ann