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Zimmerman Charged With Second Degree Murder

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Compiled from various news and wire sources

 

Angela Corey, Special ProsecutorAngela Corey, the special prosecutor investigating the death of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin announced Wednesday evening that George Zimmerman, who told police he shot Martin in self defense, has been charged with second-degree murder. Zimmerman will plead not guilty to the charges, according to his attorneys. He faces up to life in prison if convicted.

 

Zimmerman arrest came almost two months after he fatally shot the 17 year old Miami native. Trayvon's parents, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton, solemnly watched Wednesday's news conference in Washington on a small television. As Corey read the charges, the slain teen's parents held hands and watched. “Thank you, Lord,” said Benjamin Crump, the family's attorney as he patted Martin's knee. Neither of Martin's betrayed any emotion as they watched.

 

After the charges were announced, Fulton said she was thankful for the outpouring of public support. “I just want to speak from my heart to your heart, because a heart has no color," she said. "It's not black,  it’s not white, it's red, and I want to say thank you from my heart to your heart." The Rev. Al Sharpton, one of the more prominent supporters of the Martin family, said the case would not have progressed without "the nameless, faceless people, black, white, Hispanic and Asian ... who

said 'take another look at this'." 

 

 

"People took their time and money, and stood up and said that that could be my son, that could be my grandson, and because of that this got a second look," he said. "Even conservatives on the other side of the political spectrum said we’re going to take another look.” But Sharpton stressed the importance of continuing to seek justice. Zimmerman, Sharpton said, "deserves a fair trial." “We do not want anyone high-fiving tonight," Sharpton said. "There is no victory here. There are no winners here. They lost their son. This is not about gloating. This is about pursuing justice."

 

Trayvon Martin's ParentsZimmerman, who has been in hiding for weeks, is in police custody. Special prosecutor Corey said during a news conference in Jacksonville, Fla., she would not reveal where Zimmerman was out of concern for his safety. "He is within the custody of law enforcement officers in the state of Florida," Corey said. The murder charge indicates prosecutors plan to prove Zimmerman shot Martin with malice, though without premeditation. A manslaughter charge would have required prosecutors to prove only that Zimmerman acted unlawfully and with criminal negligence in shooting the teen. "The difference between murder and manslaughter is your mental state," said Mark Geragos, a Los Angeles defense attorney, who is not connected to the case. "To elevate it to murder, you have to have the element of malice."

 

In Florida, a grand jury must be convened before issuing first-degree murder charges. On Monday (April 9) , Corey announced she would not convene a grand jury, which had been scheduled the following day, in the Martin case. Zimmerman, 28, shot and killed 17-year-old Martin Feb. 26 in a gated community in Sanford, Fla., where Martin was visiting his father and his father's girlfriend. Zimmerman served as captain of the neighborhood watch and told police that he shot Martin in self-defense after the teen attacked him. Martin was unarmed at the time of his death, according to police.

 

On the night of the shooting, Zimmerman was questioned at the police station, but released shortly afterwards. Sanford Police Department investigated and determined there was not enough evidence to refute his claims of self-defense. The case became a flashpoint in the ongoing national debate over racial profiling and gun control. Attorneys representing Zimmerman have called the shooting a clear case of self-defense under Florida's Stand Your Ground law, which gives citizens broad latitude to use deadly force against an attacker if they believe their life is at risk.

 

Corey called the Stand Your Ground law a "tough" defense to counter, but said her office would fight it if it became an issue at trial. To prevail, the prosecution would have to demonstrate that Zimmerman's account of events is false, then present the jury with a compelling alternative to the altercation, experts said. "They will go very hard at (Zimmerman's) credibility," said Paul Callan, a defense attorney and former New York prosecutor who is not connected with the case. "This is how prosecutors customarily disprove bogus self-defense claims."

 

Martin's death and subsequent handling of the investigation also sparked national outrage and calls for Zimmerman's arrest. From the start, Martin’s family and attorneys questioned the impartiality and thoroughness of the police investigation into the teen’s killing. Law enforcement experts said that Sanford police made key errors early in the investigation and made crucial decisions before important evidence was gathered. Martin's cell phone records were not immediately checked. Investigators did not talk with key witnesses for more than a week.

 

While police conducted a criminal background check on Martin, as well as post-mortem drug and alcohol tests, Zimmerman was not Crumpsubjected to similar tests. It was learned later that Zimmerman was arrested in 2005 for assaulting a police officer. During the news conference Wednesday, Corey criticized leaks of confidential details about the case that appeared to bolster Zimmerman's self-defense claims. "So much information on the case got released that never should have been released," Corey said. The announcement of the charges comes a day after Zimmerman's previous attorneys withdrew their counsel, saying they lost contact with him and that he repeatedly ignored their legal advice. They said Zimmerman reached out to Corey's office directly and had an off-the-record conversation with the Fox News host Sean Hannity without their knowledge.

 

A crowd of nearly 200 people gathered at Allen Chapel A.M.E church in Sanford, the local hub for organizers surrounding the Martin cause. “The mood is just … happy, but still more like a sigh of relief,” said Traymon Williams, 26, who joined his neighbors at the church after watching Corey’s news conference at home. “It feels just like when you have a headache, a migraine and you take an aspirin and you just can feel the pressure slowly starting to ease.” But both the defense and prosecution face the challenge of trying a case that has drawn extraordinary media scrutiny, and inflamed passions both for and against Zimmerman. Jury selection will be a crucial and difficult task given the tremendous media coverage afforded to the shooting, experts said.

 

"This case is won or lost in jury selection," Geragos said. For some, the prosecution of Zimmerman may also be a symbolic test of Florida's ability to conduct a fair trial in a case that has polarized the public and fueled marches and protests across the country. Just last year, Casey Anthony, a young Florida mother accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter, was acquitted of murder, a verdict that many decried as a miscarriage of justice. "The state of Florida is on trial here," said Kenneth Nunn. "A law professor at the University of Florida. "Not just Zimmerman." Legal experts expressed surprise that a Florida state prosecutor is seeking a second-degree murder charge against Zimmerman, given that he wasn't arrested or charged the night of the fateful altercation. 

 

Zimmerman’s legal team is expected to invoke the controversial “Stand Your Ground” provision of Florida law as a key strategy in defending him against the charge, which was announced Wednesday evening by Special Prosecutor Angela Corey. "It seems like an enormous swing to be able go from not feeling you have enough evidence to arrest him, to charging him with essentially as high as you can charge him in second-degree murder," Richard Hornsby, a criminal defense attorney in Orlando, Fla., told msnbc.com. "Second-degree murder requires him to have engaged in an intentional act with ill will, hatred or spite. It means he basically went and was looking to shoot Trayvon Martin."

 

Other legal experts have pointed out that no one has had access to all the evidence in the case that the prosecutor has seen. Plus, a jury could decide to convict Zimmerman of the lesser charge of manslaughter. The lack of an immediate arrest or charges in the case had sparked protests in many cities around the country and inflamed debates about race and crime in America. Martin was black. Zimmerman has a white father and a Hispanic mother. Zimmerman could face up to life in prison if convicted of second-degree murder.

 

Zimmerman's attorney Mark O'Mara said his client would plead not guilty to the charges. He asked people not to jump to conclusions about his client's guilt. Zimmerman is likely to be tried before a jury in Sanford, Fla., where the killing took place Feb. 26, though defense attorneys may argue that the trial should be moved to another jurisdiction, according to NBC News. Two attorneys who earlier worked with Zimmerman quit the case on Tuesday. NBC News legal analyst Kendall Coffey, a former federal prosecutor, called the charges "aggressive," and Corey's presentation of seeking justice in the case "masterful" for emphasizing that she was following the law. Shortly before the charge was announced, Coffey said

prosecutors likely face a difficult time at trial.

 

“Bottom line is there is very big difference between a righteous prosecution and an easy prosecution,” Coffey told MSNBC TV. “I think she believes in her heart and in her mind that this is a righteous prosecution and the chips are going to fall where they may.” Critical to the defense is the 2005 Florida "Stand Your Ground" law, which says a citizen doesn’t have to retreat before using deadly force against an attacker, legal experts say. The law also can let a judge, in an evidentiary hearing before a jury trial, determine that a defendant can’t be prosecuted due to the self-defense argument. Corey will need to prove that Martin’s death was caused by a criminal act of Zimmerman, and that the act was “demonstrating a depraved mind without regard for human life,” NBC News reported.

 

There’s no telling what happens here. Say what you will about the case, it’s not a slam-dunk in terms of the evidence,” Savannah Guthrie, chief legal analyst at NBC News, said shortly before charges were brought. “There’s conflicting evidence and in our system the tie goes to the accused. Innocent before proven guilty.” According to legal experts, the first hurdle for prosecutors will be that special evidentiary hearing that is part of the “Stand Your Ground Law.” In it, Zimmerman can argue that he deserves immunity from the charges because he was acting in self-defense. But to convince the judge, Zimmerman will have to present a "preponderance of evidence" that he acted in self-defense, which means he will have to show he had a "reasonable belief" that such force was necessary. Though the “preponderance” standard is less than “reasonable doubt” of a full trial, it is difficult to prove, criminal defense attorneys say, and many judges have frowned on deciding such cases on their own.

 

Last modified on Thursday, 12 April 2012 17:30

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