Prosecutors want to admit calls in Zimmerman trial
KYLE HIGHTOWER, AP
SANFORD,
Fla. (AP) — Past police dispatcher calls made by George Zimmerman
should be presented to jurors at his second-degree murder trial since
they show his state of mind and provide
context to his fatal encounter with 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, a
prosecutor argued Tuesday.
Prosecutor
Richard Mantei told a Florida judge the five calls are central to the
prosecution's argument that Zimmerman committed second-degree murder
since it shows his growing ill will
at people he viewed as suspicious who were walking through his
neighborhood. In each of the calls, which were played for Judge Debra
Nelson with the jurors out of the courtroom, Zimmerman described the
suspicious characters as black males.
The
calls made in the six months before Zimmerman fatally shot Martin on
Feb. 26, 2012, reflect the neighborhood watch volunteer's growing
frustration with repeated break-ins at his gated
community of townhomes and plays into the prosecution's theory that his
view of Martin as a suspicious character was "the straw that broke the
camel's back," Mantei said.
Defense
attorney Mark O'Mara argued that the calls were irrelevant and that no
previous incidents matter except the seven or eight minutes prior to
when Zimmerman fired the deadly shot
into Martin's chest.
"They're
going to ask the jury to make a leap from a good, responsible, citizen
behavior to seething behavior," O'Mara said of the prosecution's
depiction of Zimmerman's actions.
Nelson said she would make a ruling after reviewing prior cases.
Zimmerman,
29, could get life in prison if convicted of second-degree murder for
gunning down Martin as the black teenager, wearing a hoodie on a dark,
rainy night, walked from a convenience
store through the gated townhouse community where he was staying.
Zimmerman is pleading not guilty, claiming self-defense.
The
case took on racial dimensions after Martin's family claimed that
Zimmerman had racially profiled the teen and that police were dragging
their feet in bringing charges. Zimmerman,
who identifies himself as Hispanic, has denied the confrontation had
anything to do with race.
Prosecutors
on Tuesday called the former coordinator of the Sanford Police
Department's neighborhood watch program who testified how she had worked
with Zimmerman to set up a watch program
in his neighborhood, The Retreat at Twin Lakes.
When
asked by prosecutor John Guy if neighborhood watch participants should
either follow or engage with suspicious people, she answered "no."
"They
are the eyes and ears of law enforcement," said Wendy Dorival, the
Sanford Police manager. "They're not supposed to take matters into their
own hands."
But
Dorival said she was impressed with Zimmerman's professionalism and
dedication to his community and asked him to join another program,
Citizens on Patrol, which trained residents
to patrol their neighborhoods. He declined.
"He seemed like he really wanted to make changes in his community, to make it better," Dorival said.
The
prosecution began opening statements Monday in the long-awaited murder
trial with shocking language, repeating obscenities Zimmerman uttered
while talking to a police dispatcher moments
before the deadly confrontation.
The
defense opened with a knock-knock joke about the difficulty of picking a
jury for a case that stirred nationwide debate over racial profiling,
vigilantism and Florida's expansive
laws on the use of deadly force.
Guy
portrayed the then-neighborhood watch volunteer as a vigilante, saying,
"Zimmerman thought it was his right to rid his neighborhood of anyone
who did not belong."
Defense
attorney Don West told jurors a different story: Martin sucker-punched
Zimmerman and then pounded his head against the concrete sidewalk, and
that's when Zimmerman opened fire.
(
racial profiling as much as we may wish it otherwise happens, it
happens every day, it begins with our youth Taught suspicion, taught
fear, it is in our movies, it is in our music,
it is in the thousand unspoken assumptions made silently and secretly
every day, we are shocked when we see it, but sadly we are not
surprised. was this a case of racial profiling? It sure looks like it,
what would be the reaction if the victim of this
crime had also been Hispanic, or Asian or white? The idea that
Zimmerman may have felt a man walking in his neighborhood warranted
suspicion is one thing, the deadly actions he took are another, the
question I must ask is this, If Zimmerman was so quick
to act with deadly force, not in some lawless frontier, not in some war
torn desolation but in a relatively nice place, a place where there is
rule of law what does that say about us as a people? What does it say
about our so called civilization? )
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