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Zimmerman Charged With 2nd-Degree Murder

George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer who shot Trayvon Martin, was charged with second-degree murder. He faces up to life in prison if convicted in the shooting. From the article: "Special prosecutor Angela Corey announced the charges but would not discuss how she arrived at them or disclose other details of her investigation, saying: 'That's why we try cases in court.' Second-degree murder is typically brought in cases when there is a fight or other confrontation that results in death and but does [not] involve a premeditated plan to kill. Corey would not disclose Zimmerman's whereabouts for his safety but said that he will be in court within 24 hours."

995 comments

  1. Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not news for nerds.

    1. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      +1, Insightful.

    2. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      More like, still not news for nerds.

      How many fucking Treyvon/Zimmerman articles do I have to read here?

    3. Re:Bad Slashdot by koan · · Score: 5, Funny

      None, but stand your ground on this issue.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    4. Re:Bad Slashdot by twistedcubic · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wrong! Here's a news report citing Trayvon Martin's participation in an "open source" club. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHg5SJYRHA0

    5. Re:Bad Slashdot by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

      So can I shoot samzenpus now?

    6. Re:Bad Slashdot by koan · · Score: 1

      So does car culture ever notice that? Nerds and Geeks seem to love cars, and not just because they don't like walking.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    7. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because once he goes to jail, he'll be subject to more unwanted injections than an unpatched mysql box. There, happy now?

    8. Re:Bad Slashdot by Elrond,+Duke+of+URL · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh, for crying out loud... this sort of whining has been going on since Slashdot was first started.

      Why is it so hard for people to understand that Slashdot is "News for Nerds" AND "Stuff that Matters". Really, it's always been there, and it's hardly a long motto. RTFA has never been a favorite activity of Slashdotters, but it seems we've decended to the point where people can't even be troubled to read the entire name of the site. There was an enormous discussion on Slashdot on the day of the 9/11 attacks and that was hardly "News for Nerds", but it sure as hell fell into the "Matters" category.

      If you want to complain, then at least complain about the relative merits of this case being something that "Matters" outside of Florida or not. At least you'll be a little more on track with that.

      --
      Elrond, Duke of URL
      "This is the most fun I've had without being drenched in the blood of my enemies!"-Sam&Max
    9. Re:Bad Slashdot by interkin3tic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Slashdot's firehose is sorta like the national primaries. No one takes part in them to get rid of the crap, then everyone complains about the results.

    10. Re:Bad Slashdot by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Stand your ground!

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    11. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where exactly does Slashdot advertise that it is "News for Nerds"?

    12. Re:Bad Slashdot by Cazekiel · · Score: 1

      I love running around in there. It amazes me when people try to spam the place with vacation-package deals and wedding dresses.

      --
      You want to know how to help your kids? LEAVE THEM THE F*&K ALONE. --George Carlin
    13. Re:Bad Slashdot by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      On the title of the front page.

    14. Re:Bad Slashdot by crossmr · · Score: 1

      Are you fucking retarded?

    15. Re:Bad Slashdot by crossmr · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's not always been there, I see:
      "Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters"
      at the top of my browser.
      No "and"

    16. Re:Bad Slashdot by JWW · · Score: 1

      This is probably only the beginning. We'll probably get a whole series of articles about the post
      -Trevon world.....

    17. Re:Bad Slashdot by JWW · · Score: 1

      The interesting thing about th 9/11 posts was how quickly a lot of the discussion went to the impact the attacks had on the communications networks in and around New York.

    18. Re:Bad Slashdot by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      Corey is the one who dismissed the grand jury before it convened because she knew there was not evidence for first degree murder and it would be a waste of time to even try for that. The grand jury never even convened, so how could they "dismiss" a case?

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    19. Re:Bad Slashdot by cold+fjord · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How many fucking Treyvon/Zimmerman articles do I have to read here?

      None, if you stop clicking on the links. Odd that you are in this story when there are 14 other current stories, and links to 5 most talked about, and 5 "on this day" stories on the front page. You must want to be here.

      Besides, what is this, the second one? On a story of national interest?

      Or should we be checking your post for a secret clue to where you are being held captive and forced to read Slashdot against your will?

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    20. Re:Bad Slashdot by FunPika · · Score: 1

      Its mostly news for nerds...but there is always the occasional article about something outside of what is considered "nerdy" coming in, and I see no problem with that. Even more than 10 years ago Slashdot had no problem talking about issues that technically does not fall under "news for nerds". *starts imagining how that day would have been like with smartphones/modern social media*

      --
      After years of not using a signature, I am going to make one to say the following: Fuck Beta
    21. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always read that as "news for nerds" && "news that matters". This story only satisfies "news that matters".

    22. Re:Bad Slashdot by HornWumpus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Zimmerman was carrying a KelTec.

      He's only a 'gun nut' in the sense that he carried an unreliable cheap POS. That is nutty. He's _lucky_ it fired, must have had less then 100 rounds through it. I'm guessing no range time to speak of past whatever is required to get the carry permit in FL.

      He maybe a 'cop wannabe' but a 'gun nut' would be carrying a better weapon.

      Personally I'm convinced his status as 'Judges son' has everything to do with how his case was handled. Every i dotted etc as the prosecutors know they will be facing defense lawyers from hell.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    23. Re:Bad Slashdot by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      News for getting eyeballs on the ads so that the not-very-nerdy editors can get their paychecks.

    24. Re:Bad Slashdot by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      Ya, if I saw that kid walking down my street I'd be calling the cops too!

    25. Re:Bad Slashdot by niftydude · · Score: 5, Informative

      Why is it so hard for people to understand that Slashdot is "News for Nerds" AND "Stuff that Matters". Really, it's always been there, and it's hardly a long motto.

      I've always assumed that "Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters" meant that articles would be "News for Nerds" OR "Stuff that Matters", not AND.

      I've never nitpicked grammar before, but I'll be damned before I allow poor boolean logic to be applied to this site.

      Plus I get to write two sentences in this post that end with "and". Life doesn't get better than this.

      --
      You can never know everything, and part of what you do know will always be wrong. Perhaps even the most important part.
    26. Re:Bad Slashdot by steelfood · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why is it so hard for people to understand that Slashdot is "News for Nerds" OR "Stuff that Matters".

      FTFY.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    27. Re:Bad Slashdot by mapkinase · · Score: 0

      The killer looks like a fat Spanish nerd, and the killed one looks like a Black nerd.

      It's a slashdot tragedy, really.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    28. Re:Bad Slashdot by tomstockmail · · Score: 1

      Yeah, lets have another Sony hating article. NEVER 4GET

    29. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are wrong, this political crud doesnt go on slashdot.
      this item does not matter.
      you liberals get enough airplay here as it is.

    30. Re:Bad Slashdot by ArcadeNut · · Score: 1

      "News for Nerds" OR "Stuff that Matters"

      FTFY

      --
      Visit the Arcade Restoration Workshop @ http://www.arcaderestoration.com
    31. Re:Bad Slashdot by Elrond,+Duke+of+URL · · Score: 1

      Okay, okay, I admit that the boolean-ness, er, boolean-icity (?) of my sentence was off. :)

      I didn't mean to imply that any given story must satify *both* requirements, rather I meant that the Slashdot motto includes both phrases. That's why the "AND" wasn't in quotes.

      --
      Elrond, Duke of URL
      "This is the most fun I've had without being drenched in the blood of my enemies!"-Sam&Max
    32. Re:Bad Slashdot by Elrond,+Duke+of+URL · · Score: 1

      Which is why I did not put the "and" in quotes in the original statement, because it is not there. My intention was to point out that the Slashdot motto includes both quoted phrases, not to imply that a story must satisfy both conditions.

      --
      Elrond, Duke of URL
      "This is the most fun I've had without being drenched in the blood of my enemies!"-Sam&Max
    33. Re:Bad Slashdot by hawk · · Score: 1

      Let's face it; it's been more than ten years since slashdot was posting tech news that appeared in the prior days print edition of e WSJ (which, incidentally, was the only non-pornographer making money on the web with content [as opposed to advertising])

      hawk

    34. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this not news for nerds? WHave you never heard of PGP? The internet depends on strong encryption and no one has done more to put strong military grade encryption in the hands of regular citizens than Mr. Zimmerman. This last frame up job of the government is just going too far.

    35. Re:Bad Slashdot by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 2

      Tinfoil Hats! Getcher Tinfoil Hats right here, ladies and gents! Step Right Up! Only $9.99! Buy 2 get 1 free!

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    36. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or in the sense that he wanted a small, personal carry gun that's very easy to conceal in a pants pocket without printing.

    37. Re:Bad Slashdot by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      And what could have happened here was a discussion of the laws involved, which are the OS of society, and their application. It hasn't turned out this way so far, and there is a sizable subset of Slashdotters that don't like politics, but whatever. It's kind of like Idle...if you don't like it, don't open the discussion. Me, I come here specifically for the comments, and for all its flaws Slashdot still has in my opinion the best system I've encountered so far, so I welcome any topic of even mild interest.

    38. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Asshole, arent you a human being? Being a citizen concerned about human rights means nothing to you?

      If you are a NERD, no wonder your kind gets their ass kicked every day. Should, too. by everyone else.

      Go back to your 'does it run linux' jokes. up yours.

    39. Re:Bad Slashdot by AlienIntelligence · · Score: 1

      Stand your ground!

      I'm standing my ground... this stupid news, is NOT NEWS FOR NERDS.

      There is nothing technical, electronic, digital, computerized or other
      electron driven implementations to speak of here.

      Advertisers, when you wonder where the readership is going, this is the
      answer. About the only thing guaranteed on here anymore are the daily
      slashvertisements, the increase in ask slashdot which are either shills,
      or could have easily been answered with a googling and old, old, news.

      At one time, I could stay abreast of the most important news to nerds.
      Now I count the hours which stretch into days from when news occurs
      to when it appears on /.

      Slashdot != relevant

      --
      For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion
    40. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if( news.fornerds() && news.stuffthatmatters() ) {}

      It's failing on one condition, good sir.

    41. Re:Bad Slashdot by Newander · · Score: 1

      I think this falls under "Stuff that matters."

      --

      Jesus saves and takes half damage.

    42. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because gun rights vis-a-vis self defense, media bias, and a grand outpouring of racism... these have no interest to nerds, because everybody knows that the only thing nerds care about is whether or not Raspberry Pi has been released or not.

      You sound like Kristopeit with your obnoxious "slashdot != relevant." What's next, a 40 page discourse (with links) on the benefits of proper whitelisting in your hosts file, a la APK?

      For fuck's sake, stop being such an asshole.

    43. Re:Bad Slashdot by ThePeices · · Score: 3

      Stuff that matters for Americans, more like it.

      As a rest-of-the-world'er, this sort of news doesn't matter to us in the slightest. And there is nothing in TFA that would interest nerds either.

    44. Re:Bad Slashdot by philip.paradis · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Since you're making bold assertions regarding Kel-Tec (note the hyphen in the manufacturer name) weapons, I must surmise that you're a dissatisfied owner of one or more of their products. Given this, please state which model Kel-Tec firearms you own, and please specify the ammunition you've utilized with said firearms, as well as the number of rounds you've fed through the weapons (broken down by ammunition source and specific weapon, naturally).

      It should be noted that I am not an employee of Kel-Tec, nor do I have any financial interest in the company. Speaking as someone with a fair amount of experience (both civilian and military) in these matters, I eagerly await your reply.

      --
      Write failed: Broken pipe
    45. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is a COMMA not a substitute for AND?

      http://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/commas.asp -- See rule #2.

      Did you fail English, or are you simply ignorant as due to being ESL? Either way, now you know -- and knowing is half the battle!

      HTH, HAND.

    46. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is a COMMA not a substitute for AND?

      http://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/commas.asp -- See rule #2.

      Did you fail English, or are you simply ignorant as due to being ESL? Either way, now you know -- and knowing is half the battle!

      HTH, HAND -- your local grammar nazi.

    47. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, okay, I admit that the boolean-ness, er, boolean-icity (?) of my sentence was off. ... didn't mean to imply that any given story must satify *both* requirements, rather I meant that the Slashdot motto includes both phrases.

      Sorry, but your use of AND was appropriate. The mistake being made here is to assume the conjunction refers to criteria for the inclusion of any one story, rather than to the contents of the site as a whole.

    48. Re:Bad Slashdot by Askmum · · Score: 1

      So he's a nut with a gun. Kinda how the rest of the world sees the USA. Apologies for the overgeneralization.

      So what's a POS? I know P/OS, but that's not a gun.

    49. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There were no articles covering 9/11 on slashdot until weeks after.

    50. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it had been "News for Nerds OR Stuff that matters", the article would be relevant. But since it's AND and not OR, both need to be true for the entire sentence to be true. Which they are not. So the article is not relevant. Q.E.D.

    51. Re:Bad Slashdot by Rakshasa-sensei · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is; "News for Nerds" XOR "Stuff that Matters".

    52. Re:Bad Slashdot by RajivSLK · · Score: 1

      He's _ un lucky_ it fired

      FTFY

      I think he would be much better off if the gun didn't fire.

    53. Re:Bad Slashdot by crossmr · · Score: 1

      the comma would indicate that "stuff that matters" relates to the "news for nerds" not that it is creating a second category of news items.
      Otherwise if you were creating a list of independent things the last item should be proceeded by an "and"

    54. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a substitute when it isn't listing two ADJECTIVES (See rule #2 again). Technically, it's a list of descriptors, which is in fact missing entirely from your link. Try English comprehension next time. It works well with grammar.

    55. Re:Bad Slashdot by crossmr · · Score: 1

      Because in a list, a comma is only a substitute for and when an and comes at the end of the list. A, B, and C. Instead of saying A and B and C.

      Did you even read rule 2?
      That's a serious ESL issue. Rule 2 relates to the usage of and in amongst adjectives.

      Use a comma to separate two adjectives when the word and can be inserted between them.

      Are you claiming that "news for nerds", which contains 2 nouns and a preposition is an adjective?

      It's at best a noun-phrase which describes the site, but it is not being directly used as as an adjective. It's being used as a motto. Even then rule 2 does not say that a comma is a substitute for "And" it says that AND would be wholly inappropriate in that situation.

      Seriously if you're going to come to the big boy party bring your A game.

    56. Re:Bad Slashdot by AlienIntelligence · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, because gun rights vis-a-vis self defense, media bias, and a grand outpouring of racism... these have no interest to nerds, because everybody knows that the only thing nerds care about is whether or not Raspberry Pi has been released or not.

      You sound like Kristopeit with your obnoxious "slashdot != relevant." What's next, a 40 page discourse (with links) on the benefits of proper whitelisting in your hosts file, a la APK?

      For fuck's sake, stop being such an asshole.

      Why the fuck don't we add fucking parenting stories?

      I mean, I'm sure most of us have kids now.

      Hey, let's add some stuff about what's a good soccer mom van to buy!

      Let's not leave out the rich 1% of us... we need a good article on what's the best yachts.

      Why? Cause nerds like more things than tech. They have kids, they drive, they enjoy their Martha Vineyard weekends.

      OR... maybe nerds know how to find that type of news ELSEWHERE AND COME HERE FOR THE FUCKING TECH!

      Now, how about YOU FUCK OFF ASSHOLE.

      -AI

      And don't ever fuckin compare me to Kristopeit, he doesn't own that word.
      Grow some balls too and reply with your account. Or do you not have karma to spare?

      --
      For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion
    57. Re:Bad Slashdot by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      And speculation that the event would lead to erosion of civil rights. I love the comments on this site.

    58. Re:Bad Slashdot by hairyfish · · Score: 1

      I don't have any mod points, and you're already modded +5, but that was fucking funny!

    59. Re:Bad Slashdot by Kjella · · Score: 1

      No. If the qualifications to be posted on slashdot is "News for Nerds" OR "Stuff that Matters", the result is that slashdot is a site with "News for Nerds" AND "Stuff that Matters". /nitpick

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    60. Re:Bad Slashdot by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      Slashdot's firehose is sorta like the national primaries. No one takes part in them to get rid of the crap,

      Actually, in the Republican primaries they recently did get rid of the crap (along with the lube mixed with it...)

    61. Re:Bad Slashdot by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      Not news for nerds.

      Ain't you heard, Trayvon was using an iPhone at the time and George was an android fanboi. George was heard saying "you've got some nerve coming into this neighbourhood with an iPhone, this is Android country".

    62. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's very simple, the comma is a pause for emphasis: "News for nerd, I.E. stuff that matters."

      Can't anyone read?

    63. Re:Bad Slashdot by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. If the "stuff that matters" related to "news for nerds", then an en dash would be used.

    64. Re:Bad Slashdot by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Grow some class. The fact this site doesn't actually have technical journalists paid to provide articles on all matters regarding technology, from the start, should have been a clue that this place is just a forum for scraped articles aimed at a debate on them. They were predominantly targeted at IT, but it's long since expanded beyond that, even to include a Political Section. And yes, this involves Social Politics that impacts the entire Nation.

    65. Re:Bad Slashdot by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Stuff that matters for Americans, more like it.

      As a rest-of-the-world'er, this sort of news doesn't matter to us in the slightest. And there is nothing in TFA that would interest nerds either.

      Slashdot's parent company is an American Corporation. Your point?

    66. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's nothing: the sign on my local pub has too much space between "Pig" and "and" and "and" and "Whistle".

    67. Re:Bad Slashdot by crossmr · · Score: 1

      That's one way to do it.
      However, a website, provided in another post, clearly indicates that you can use commas to contain related information. It doesn't indicate that a comma has any business replacing "and" except in a list which has "and" before the last item. Since there are only 2 items, it would require an "and" to indicate these are two fully separate categories

      Later, I need to go to the grocery store, bank

      that just doesn't make sense.
      It's like a half-completed thought.

      However:

      Later I need to go to the grocery store, the one up-town

      is much more readable and it's obvious "the one up-town" is related to the grocery store. Putting something else in there completely unrelated to the first part after a comma like that makes absolutely zero sense.

    68. Re:Bad Slashdot by spike1 · · Score: 1

      But this story isn't news for nerds OR stuff that matters.

      Someone shot someone, who then died, so the first someone goes on trial for murder...

      How is ANYTHING in the above a story that matters? Slashdot doesn't reportt every other murder,. If it did there'd be no room for anything else.
      So why is this special?
      Or is the implication that as he was neighbourhood watch, that was somehow a vindication that granted him more powers than the average man in the street?

    69. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As it turns out, the truth conditions of the arguments are such that OR here is equivalent to XOR.

    70. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're just being stubborn and arrogant, and you're arguing about some inane grammatical point that makes no sense whatsoever. The second clause isn't an appositive. It's a site's motto or slogan, for crying out loud. Do you think every book review on this site, every blog or journal entry, or all the "Ask Slashdot" columns qualify as news?

    71. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I took the CCW permit course in Florida. It was an absolute joke. I'm sure different classes through out the state are a little different but there was no range time required. You literally shot a small 22 revolver with a single round inside a box at a target about 1ft away. That was it. Then you listened to some dumb redneck lecture you about how if Obama becomes president we'll lose all our guns, while some fat disgusting redneck trash in the front row munched out on a big bag of candy and chocolates with McCain/Palin shirt/stickers/pins/hat on. I am not joking or exaggerating. There was a small multiple choice written test too.

    72. Re:Bad Slashdot by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      EVERYONE EATS. Can't you see that?

      We need recipes, restaurant reviews, articles on culinary issues, plus dieting. All health-related news too, really.

      --
      This space available.
    73. Re:Bad Slashdot by metiscus · · Score: 2

      I have a highly reliable (scoff), but nonetheless true anecdote for you. My friend owns a Kel-Tek pf-9 and has had it for a number of years. After he fired a few hundred rounds (store bought Winchester target rounds) through it, the extractor sheared and the weapon would fail to extract the round. He contacted Kel-Tek support and they responded by sending him a replacement. He replaced the extractor and it promptly broke within the first magazine of rounds during his next trip to the range. When he contacted Kel-Tek again, they sent him a bunch of extractors because apparently they were had a bad batch of them. Our local gunsmith checked his work, and within a few hundred rounds, the new extractor broke again.

      What good is a gun that will not fire and cycle reliably? I guess if you need a club or something...

    74. Re:Bad Slashdot by Norwell+Bob · · Score: 1

      Just a thought... if you don't want to read it, don't.

      Another thought... chill out a little. This is the Internet, not real life. I'd bet a bitcoin or two you wouldn't speak to the guy that way if he was standing in front of you.

    75. Re:Bad Slashdot by Norwell+Bob · · Score: 1

      This.

    76. Re:Bad Slashdot by PyroMosh · · Score: 1

      Slashdot has done non-nerd, general interest stories before.

      While there may be some exceptions I can't think of, they're all huge general-interest stories. Literally front page of the NY Times caliber.

      The 9/11 attacks, the death of Bin-Laden, the start of the Iraq war, the 7/7 bombings, now this.

      That's why they don't just do parenting stories. Because that's fluff that other outfits use to fill slow news days.

      This, and the stories I referenced above are general interest. Virtually everyone in the country (in some cases, the planet) cares about these kinds of stories. So Slashdot carries them and gives nerds a place to discuss them from our own perspective.

      I can see why you're so hurt by this. It's a terrible tragedy that you had to see this article on Slashdot.

      You should sue. You know, for your emotional trauma.

    77. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's implied, don't be that guy.

    78. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I've never fired a Kel-Tec, but a quick Google search shows that Kel-Tec pistols seem to have problems with ejecting rounds.

      http://www.xdtalk.com/forums/non-xd-handguns/63152-kel-tec-pf9-problems.html

      http://www.warriortalk.com/showthread.php?93760-Keltec-PF9-failure

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvX8Z4oCNBY

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8MyEtFylmB4

    79. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The internets. srs bsns.

    80. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sure have wasted a lot of time to say... you don't have time for this. Don't look now, your douche is showing.

    81. Re:Bad Slashdot by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      You mean not news for only nerds. This is news for anybody and decidedly "stuff that matters." Had Martin been white and Zimmerman been black (Hispanic is not a race, there are Latinos of all races) he would have been in jail that night and might not have even survived the trip to the police station. Instead we get this.

      Racism affects everyone, including us nerds.

    82. Re:Bad Slashdot by idontgno · · Score: 1

      Oh, c'mon. Anyone who's read Slashdot in the last year understands that the equation is "News for Nerds" AND NOT "Stuff that Matters". Which is why slashvertising is so prominent.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    83. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Someone got some sand in their vagi-na (notice the hyphen in the genital name).

    84. Re:Bad Slashdot by WilyCoder · · Score: 1

      Well at least Slashdot is as pedantic as ever, regardless of the article content :)

    85. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USA has been pushing other countries to enact legislation to make those same countries similar to the USA. Being that that is the case, I would say that it does matter to you.

    86. Re:Bad Slashdot by horza · · Score: 1

      Totally agree. Just clicked to say PLEASE don't leave any comments on this thread to perpetuate it (apart from whinges like above). If you want to discuss this issue bugger off to somewhere like Reddit. Let this thread die the death it deserves (and perhaps suggest the replacement of samzenpus to /. management).

      Phillip.

    87. Re:Bad Slashdot by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      There was an enormous discussion on Slashdot on the day of the 9/11 attacks and that was hardly "News for Nerds"

      Yes it was. Bob Waring, author of a popular strategy guide book about DOOM, had his "Sgt. Hulka's Boot Camp" hosted on servers at the WTC. His site was down for a week or two, and I imagine a lot of other sites were as well. If that's not news for nerds what is?

      Not only that, the fact that they DoSed every damned newspaper in the country by flying airplanes into buildings and having everyone in the world go online to find news made it news for nerds too.

      That said, I agree with an earlier poster who said that this is a news forum where nerds gather to discuss stuff that matters, from our perspective. No fucking way would I join a discussion about this on Yahoo News with their normtard muggles posts. Some of the wannabe nerds here are bad enough.

    88. Re:Bad Slashdot by khallow · · Score: 1

      I think he would be much better off if the gun didn't fire.

      I'd wait on the trial outcome first. Zimmerman claimed that he was attacked and he apparently had some sort of cut on the back of his head consistent with the sort of attack he claims he experienced. If true, that's an indication that he would not have been better off.

    89. Re:Bad Slashdot by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      So can I shoot samzenpus now?

      You need to headbutt the sidewalk first.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    90. Re:Bad Slashdot by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Recipes, restaurant reviews, articles on culinary issues, and dieting aren't news, period, let alone news for nerds. They're articles of interest for certain select groups.

      Racism affects everyone. Even nerds.

    91. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stuff that matters for Americans, more like it.

      As a rest-of-the-world'er, this sort of news doesn't matter to us in the slightest. And there is nothing in TFA that would interest nerds either.

      Pfft, if you're not American, who gives a shit what you think anyway? Try being from a country that's done something fucking relevant recently, maybe then someone will give a shit what you think.

    92. Re:Bad Slashdot by ghostdoc · · Score: 1

      I vote 'News for Nerds' XOR 'Stuff that Matters' then we only get tech or trivia.

      --
      Business/App ideas are like arseholes: everyone's got one, they're mostly shit, but very rarely they contain a diamond
    93. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>> "News for Nerds" AND "Stuff that Matters".
      which means stuff that matters to Nerds _when_ we want to look at Nerd stuff.

      If we wanted to look at particulars of this BS,
      we would have logged onto Daily Kos or Fox News, take your pick.

      This junk news does not belong on Slash-Dot.

    94. Re:Bad Slashdot by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      I knew it....a big fucking boolean flamewar.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    95. Re:Bad Slashdot by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Redundant and offtopic. What's annoying me is this is the only place I know where one can have an intelligent conversation (sometimes), so there's a topic that concerns everyone, nerd and non-nerd alike, and the first of six screens contains no on-topic posts AT ALL. None. Every single comment is about whether or not the story should have been posted.

      That's what has me annoyed. I wanted to discuss the damned story, not whether or not it shoule be posted. Save that crap for your journal.

      Guess I just got here too late.

    96. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not always been there, I see:
      "Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters"
      at the top of my browser.
      No "and"

      You need to correct the settings on your and-block software :)

    97. Re:Bad Slashdot by zipn00b · · Score: 1

      Kel-Tec makes several models. I owned a P-40 which a number of people whined in forums was unreliable but there were plenty of us who had no problem. I used the "pinkie" extender on the clips to get a better grip because it was very unforgiving of anything resembling "limp-wristing" and would stovepipe in a heartbeat if you didn't have a firm grip. My understanding was the 9mm version was less picky which is why a lot of cops carried it as a backup weapon. I don't know too many cops that would carry a weapon they knew was unreliable..... Incidentally the bullets I had in it while carrying were Corbon 135 gr JHP which I NEVER ONCE had a single issue firing them out of that gun - they just were awfully pricey for on the range but I'd run a couple clips through every trip to be sure it was happy in case I needed to depened on that weapon. Cheap target rounds were typically where I had issues and I ended up swapping to a different set of springs if I was going to run much of that through it which solved that. But once you got around 200 rounds through that gun in one range session my wrists tended to hurt so I typically only ran a couple clips through :) That's one reason why I consolidated to mostly just 1911 style .45 in recent years.

    98. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the second time I took a chance-albeit a small one-and started reading some of the comment threads from this newsletter/site.. Again, I was treated to the ranting of a bunch of idiotic numskulls screaming virtual obscenities at each other instead of an intelligent discussion of the issues. Apparently the common belief that "nerds" as a group, despite adequate intelligence and more than enough formal education, lack interpersonal skills and social grace is as valid as ever. The whole bunch of you need to GROW UP!! No one with an ounce of intelligence wants to hear your juvenile bickering.

      I am done with this newsletter..not because the stories lack relevance (you don't have to read them if you're not interested.) but because of the sophomoric antics of the readership, most of whom, I have to add, seem to have formed very strong opinions about almost every issue without a shred of factual information to back them up.

      I suggest you all go audition for the Jerry Springer show. You'll fit right in.

      PS I am neither willingly anonymous nor a coward but since my log in info is not appearing above I am signing this
      Sincerely
      K. Clohessy

    99. Re:Bad Slashdot by niftydude · · Score: 1

      5 ands in a row. Very nice: you, sir, have my respect.

      --
      You can never know everything, and part of what you do know will always be wrong. Perhaps even the most important part.
    100. Re:Bad Slashdot by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

      Newsflash, gun manufacturers sometimes ship too soon. Kel-tec isn't the only one guilty of this.

    101. Re:Bad Slashdot by Optic7 · · Score: 1

      A writer can sometimes use a comma in place of "and", even if not enumerating a series with more than two items. Newspapers do it all the time on their headlines, even though it's not a very common construct otherwise.

      Some links for reference:
      http://forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=1295845
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asyndeton

    102. Re:Bad Slashdot by johanatan · · Score: 1

      Actually for all your nitpicking, you only supported his erroneous point. Case in point-- the TM/GZ article. Is it stuff that matters? Arguably, yes. Is it news for nerds? No. Per BOOLEAN OR, it belongs (Yes | No == Yes). Per BOOLEAN AND, it does not (Yes & No == No).

      However if you correctly read 'News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters' to mean: 'News for Nerds; i.e., Stuff that Matters', then it is clear that only news for nerds belongs here.

    103. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's been in the news here in Sweden...

    104. Re:Bad Slashdot by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      Notice that your logical usage of the word OR matches the parent's arguably-incorrect usage of the word AND.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    105. Re:Bad Slashdot by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      (Or, your usage of the word OR is based on negating the parent's incorrect usage of AND, which makes your usage also incorrect.)

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    106. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically "News for Nerds" OR "Stuff that Matters".... Just sayin'

    107. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever hear of curfew? I've had friends picked up on that.

    108. Re:Bad Slashdot by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      It's explicitly an American site, so that's assumed by everyone but the stupid. If you want non-American Slashdot, there's .jp for you. You choose to go on the American site and complain that it's an American site. That isn't a complaint about the site, so much as a badge of stupidity.

    109. Re:Bad Slashdot by crossmr · · Score: 1

      The first speaks mainly to an oratory use, which this is not. The second doesn't seem to indicate much agreement among thread posters that a comma can replace AND, except when it comes to Asyndeton, which again is mainly oratorical usage.

      The complaint here is also about the shift in stories, which would indicate a departure from normal posting. If this was the actual posting intent all along we'd always see a lot more stories like this which we did not. 9/11 was a pretty big exception because it was a pretty big event. You can't compare zimmerman to 9/11.

      Since this is a departure from normal posting, it seems unlikely that this title was written using Asyndeton and instead a much more common usage of the comma indicating that the "news for nerds" that would be posted would only be "stuff that matters"

    110. Re:Bad Slashdot by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      I was blissfully unaware of kristopeit until this thread. Now I know I feel dirty

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    111. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your sentence ended in "not and", so shouldn't that be "NAND"?

    112. Re:Bad Slashdot by Occams · · Score: 1

      I think it is a most relevant /. subject. I, for one nerd, would be pleased to see any gun happy vigilante bastard who is willing to shoot a youth in the back put in jail forever - if the court finds that that was the situation. We need a precedent like this to set a hard limit on neighbourhood watch powers. In spite of all the coverage we have to reserve judgement because we still do not know what really happened. The kid's color should be irrelevant, but probably it was not so to the accused.

      --
      Heavy is the head that wears the tinfoil hat.
    113. Re:Bad Slashdot by Drugmath · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself. I'm not American, yet I find this case quite fascinating.

    114. Re:Bad Slashdot by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 1

      as does eating.

      --
      This space available.
    115. Re:Bad Slashdot by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

      Yeah, even with race/ethnicity issues out of the picture, this is still a gun culture story.

      I'm not really sympathetic to the "not tech, why is it here?" arguments. "stuff that matters", after all.

      --
      I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
    116. Re:Bad Slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. No 'and' means that the topic doesn't have to be both at the same time. It can be either.

    117. Re:Bad Slashdot by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      I have to disagree with this being a story of national interest. How exactly does this affect people in Idaho, Maine, Kansas, etc.? It's only getting national attention because the media (and I'm including /. with that because they are running this article) are pushing it all over. How will any fallout from this story affect people nationwide?

    118. Re:Bad Slashdot by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it should be changed to "Slashdot: News for tinfoil hatters, AND some mainstream bullshit"

    119. Re:Bad Slashdot by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      The operator depends. the set of Slashdot posts consists of "News for Nerds" AND "Stuff that matters". A particular post is "News for Nerds" OR "Stuff that matters". I think it makes sense to use the operator that describes all of the sites posts for the tagline.

    120. Re:Bad Slashdot by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      I wish I could express to you how little this matters to me and everyone I know in my part of America, far from this incident.

  2. News for nerds? by rolfwind · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Too much politics here creeping on this site.

    1. Re:News for nerds? by unixwolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I gotta agree.. There are other places for this type of news.

    2. Re:News for nerds? by Phantom+Gremlin · · Score: 1, Informative

      I agree, this is not news for nerds.

      Others have already agreed with you, but I wanted to "pile on", in the hopes of influencing the "editors" who select these stories. Yeah, I know, it's silly for me to think this post might make a difference. Most of the time, the "editors" can't be bothered to even read the story; I have no realistic expectation that they might actually read our comments.

    3. Re:News for nerds? by SomePgmr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Too much politics here creeping on this site.

      Preach brother.

    4. Re:News for nerds? by darkmeridian · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Perhaps but I'm very interested, and I'm a law nerd.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    5. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are interesting "nerdy" aspects to this case because of the media manipulation and resulting public slant which brings up interesting issues like freedom, law, fairness, groupthink, mob justice, etc. that so affect society. Yes, maybe you could call that politics but it's still the technical machinery that keeps a society functioning (or not).

      I mean guilty or not this guy is toast and you know it.

    6. Re:News for nerds? by nbauman · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No. I spend a day coding, I look up at the screen, and I depend on Slashdot to tell me what's going on in the world.

    7. Re:News for nerds? by RyoShin · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Agreed. Someone commented on the post about Santorum dropping out of the race as being offtopic for this site; I was preparing a rebutal about how politics is nerdy, too, but in the same breath I said you can also get nerdy about cars and sports, neither of which should get reported on day-to-day news here (unless they're car analogies). As I typed that, I realized that the Santorum article indeed had no place on /., even if /. has a politics section; it wasn't nerdy, there were no great debates to lead from it or nitpicking/research to do, just people commenting on how he should have dropped sooner or theorizing on "real" reasons he dropped.

      This story, while of great national interest, is not about politics; government, sure, but not politics in the sense of wide-reaching leaders doing this or that, and, similarly to the Santorum article, doesn't appear on the face of it to have any "nerdy" qualities. So it doesn't belong on /. Then again, we've had articles regarding tech use in this case previously, so maybe this could be understood as followup/closure to issues raised in those articles.

      But then I begin to wonder: /. has changed much over the years, adding sections like that, perhaps we need to seriously re-evaluate the purpose of /. is. Either it's expanded to be a more inclusive big-news discussion site with extra emphasis on tech/science, in which case we should drop the "News for Nerds" moniker; or, it's still a site just for tech/science-related stories, in which case the "politics" section needs to go unless we limit it to just politics story expressly about tech/science being used or abused by the government (which, yes, happens quite often.)

      Consider various postings about the TSA. TSA gained relevance on /. due to their use of body scanners and so forth; however, at least a few of the more recent posts is about the gross ineptitude of the TSA, tech being merely one outlet for set ineptitude. Yet no one complains about TSA articles (that I've seen, anyway). How often do we get posts about censorship in general? Not even blocking the web/text messages, but just about laws regarding arresting people for speaking out by any means. These certainly don't deal with tech/science, but, once again, no outcry against them (again, AFAIK). In fact, those are often the most discussed posts on the site (both the tech and non-tech kind). Certainly, there are important matters outside of tech/science that require long, deep debates, and I've yet to find anywhere on the internet that can facilitate that as well as Slashdot does (take that as you will). The moderating system works well, though it has a serious bias from users.

      So I think that we, as a collective site, need to ask ourselves what we want Slashdot to be: A place for news--science, tech, or otherwise--that begs, nay, requires deep discussion and insight? Or a site dedicated explicitly to tech/science (which can still have said discussion about just those issues)? And, if the latter, where do we draw a line about what is a relevant news story?

      While we have editors (that we often passively rebel against) that ultimately choose what appears on the front page, the site is driven almost entirely by the community, from posts to comments to moderation, and so I believe it's up to the community to decide what the site should strive for.

    8. Re:News for nerds? by Spykk · · Score: 5, Funny

      If we start accepting news that is for the various sub-nerds then who knows what we will end up with. Slashdot is only for PURE nerds. Do you really want law nerds dating your daughters?

    9. Re:News for nerds? by couchslug · · Score: 2

      More to the point, too much IRRELEVANT politics which are AMPLY covered ELSEWHERE polluting this site.

      If it's MAINSTREAM, non-computer, non-science, non-nerd news it DOESN'T NEED to be here because posting it here is REDUNDANT.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    10. Re:News for nerds? by painandgreed · · Score: 5, Funny

      Too much politics here creeping on this site.

      Preach brother.

      Hey! We don't want any religion either!

    11. Re:News for nerds? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Consider various postings about the TSA. TSA gained relevance on /. due to their use of body scanners and so forth; however, at least a few of the more recent posts is about the gross ineptitude of the TSA, tech being merely one outlet for set ineptitude. Yet no one complains about TSA articles

      Of course not - the Slashdot mindset requires it's Two Minute Hate. All the TSA articles did was replace FUD about Amazon and Microsoft that was the primary source of the Two Minute Hate before that.
       

      Certainly, there are important matters outside of tech/science that require long, deep debates, and I've yet to find anywhere on the internet that can facilitate that as well as Slashdot does (take that as you will).

      I'd take that as damming Slashdot with faint praise - because long deep debates is something it sucks at.

    12. Re:News for nerds? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2

      No. I spend a day coding, I look up at the screen, and I depend on Slashdot to tell me what's going on in the world.

      Man are you gonna be confused.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    13. Re:News for nerds? by nbauman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Confusion is the first step on the road to knowledge.

    14. Re:News for nerds? by BasilBrush · · Score: 2
    15. Re:News for nerds? by FunkDup · · Score: 1

      Nerdy or not, Slashdot has always loved talking about racial issues and politics in general.

      I take your point though. Maybe it's time for a sister site aimed at politics. You never know how far that could go in terms of general worldwide political discussion.

      --
      Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds -- Albert Einstein
    16. Re:News for nerds? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Too much politics here creeping on this site.

      Did someone make you click on the story?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    17. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      can the law nerds date our sons?

    18. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      <title>Slashdot: News for nerds, stuff that matters</title>

    19. Re:News for nerds? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Nerds read comics. A gun happy vigilante is perfect comic book fodder.

      Someone else already mentioned Batman and Punisher.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    20. Re:News for nerds? by Rary · · Score: 4, Informative

      I agree, this is not news for nerds.

      Maybe it is, maybe it isn't (this nerd finds it interesting), but it could certainly be "stuff that matters".

      ...in the hopes of influencing the "editors" who select these stories.

      Your ~162K userid suggests you've been here for a while, so I, with my ~566K userid shouldn't have to tell you that there's this thing called the Firehose. But, well, here we are.

      --

      "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

    21. Re:News for nerds? by eugene+ts+wong · · Score: 1

      I'd prefer that we add politics to the mix. There is something about Slashdot culture that won't work in other places. I find more insightful posts here. I also sense that this is the only place where people mod up opinions that we disagree with. I haven't done it much lately, but I do it sometimes.

      I heard of Zimmerman outside of Slashdot, but I wanted to see what the community thought about it, and I did listen to both sides. Unless the court presents new evidence and witnesses, I think that I can have a very informed opinion, because the entire community presented a lot of views and a lot of claims and facts, which were very helpful.

      You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him think. You can lead a fool to pure facts, but you can't make him think. You can lead a wise man to a pile of crap, but he is still able to sort out the facts.

      I say all of this, knowing that I don't know your views on the issue.

      That being said, I don't know where to draw the line, but I feel that we can figure that out.

    22. Re:News for nerds? by maz2331 · · Score: 1

      Lots of nerds carry guns, though.

    23. Re:News for nerds? by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 1

      Ok, so here's the summary: Bobby Zimmerman, AKA Bob Dylan, shot and killed a black kid for sport. Now there are race riots and half of Jacksonville, MN is on fire.

    24. Re:News for nerds? by another_twilight · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not from the US. A lot of my understanding of current political issues within the US come from this site. I find considerable value in reading the comments of nerds to issues that may not, in themselves, be News _for_ Nerds.

      So add my vote to those saying that this _is_ the sort of thing I want to see on Slashdot (within reason, buyer beware, etc.)

    25. Re:News for nerds? by shibashaba · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think it's very easy to see that the Slashdot community is very interested in topics like this.

      Slashdot is about the only place where nerds convene on a regular basic to discuss politics. The editors simply need to look at the comments to see that the majority of people posting here are very interested in political and, especially, topics regarding society in general.

      I don't care if I get modded flamebait, people rarely take this much time to argue against political news on Slashdot these days. People (not me) are simply sick of hearing about the case and don't feel that it warrants the attention it's gotten. So they bitch about the relevence here, and on every other news site.

      Personally, I find it very disturbing and absurd that self defense laws can be used to justify deadly force against someone you were chasing at 7pm.

      --
      ---------- Open Source is capitalism applied to IP.
    26. Re:News for nerds? by philip.paradis · · Score: 1

      Yes. Especially if the law nerds are hot, show up in ladies business suits, and wear glasses. A thousand times yes.

      --
      Write failed: Broken pipe
    27. Re:News for nerds? by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      I think some people are interpreting "news for nerds" as "only nerdy news". But I think "news for nerds" means news...for nerds. Which already encompasses the idea that technology is just an emphasis, not a limitation. And this is news, and the readers are all nerds.

    28. Re:News for nerds? by Lotana · · Score: 1

      Do you really want law nerds dating your daughters?

      Daughters?! No True Scot... er.. Nerd will ever be in a position to procreate! Unless you live with your parents AND a slob AND single AND an intravert, you have no business calling yourself a pure nerd.

    29. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah I think he meant severe dissonance, like what a Fox News junkie gets when they finally get their news from a real source.

      Getting your political news from /. is just as bad as getting it from Fox News, with about the same number of dupes.

    30. Re:News for nerds? by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      PURE nerds don't have daughters. QED.

    31. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are you insisting that nerds and current events are mutually exclusive? I consider myself a nerd, and seeing that Zimmerman was charged was certainly news to me.

    32. Re:News for nerds? by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      It's also most of the rest of the steps.

    33. Re:News for nerds? by painandgreed · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm not from the US. A lot of my understanding of current political issues within the US come from this site. I find considerable value in reading the comments of nerds to issues that may not, in themselves, be News _for_ Nerds.

      I am from the United States and I would like to second that. Between Fox and Huffington Post, I really don't trust many news sources I can find. Everybody has their bias and their axes to grind. At /., I can look at a wide selection of opinions, and while as a group the readers here certainly have their bias, a well written post that provides informative or insightful information that goes against that bias, still gets modded Informative or Insightful despite that. When there is something I don't know much about, I often look forward to an article about it here as, while not perfect, the modding system here is better than any other one I've seen and the same goes for the people who post. Even our Anonymous Coward trolls are more well spoken and seem more intelligent than honest posters over on the Wall Street Journal. I've learned a lot about various issues from both people who show personal knowledge about something as well as just some decent logic.

    34. Re:News for nerds? by Americano · · Score: 1

      Be honest - nobody here reads the fucking articles anyway. We come here for the discussion.

      And in general, the discussion you're going to find here on Slashdot is quite different than the character of the discussion you're going to find on many other news sites.

      I appreciate seeing discussions like this, because, while I don't always agree with the people I'm discussing the issue with, I can generally rely on finding at least a couple well-informed "opposition viewpoints" that will show me something new, or frame the discussion in a way I hadn't considered before. I find that to be tremendously valuable; and let's be honest - if you're really offended by this type of story showing up - don't click on it, don't post a comment, just ignore it.

      I don't get all excited every time Raspberry Pi releases a press release announcing a new delay - so I don't usually click on those articles, I just bypass them.

    35. Re:News for nerds? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Be careful what you don't ask for, you might get it.

      http://religion.slashdot.org/

      Hmmm..... I sense a disturbance in the force..... as if tens of thousands of atheists cried out and then went silent . . . .

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    36. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is NOT a political issue. A man shot an unarmed boy. It is a criminal issue. Pundits MADE it a political issue to attempt to apologize for Zimmerman for some reason. I have no idea why. As far as I know, none of his apologists were related to him, and Zimmerman didn't owe them money or have any other good reason to keep him out of jail.

      Anywho, NOT a political issue. At all.

    37. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a trap!

    38. Re:News for nerds? by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      Touché. Though it IS in the news section. If we interpret that as a topic, it should be news on news, so this might fit the category in what the news is currently obsessing about?

    39. Re:News for nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Someone commented on the post about Santorum dropping out of the race as being offtopic for this site

      Stuff that matters.

      Not that I give a shit about the preliminary dogfight, but the election of the US president matters enough not just to the nation but the World, that it's covered by damn near every news outlet on the planet. So yea, I think it's safe to say it qualifies as "stuff that matters."

      This story, does not really matter. Yes, it's popular. Yes, it's edgy. Yes, it's a hot social topic right now. Big fucking deal. There's nothing really exceptional about this case.

    40. Re:News for nerds? by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      Consider various postings about the TSA. TSA gained relevance on /. due to their use of body scanners and so forth; however, at least a few of the more recent posts is about the gross ineptitude of the TSA, tech being merely one outlet for set ineptitude. Yet no one complains about TSA articles (that I've seen, anyway).

      TSA is relevant to geeks, because often nerdy contraptions are mistaken for bombs by screeners. And because geek's general lack of self-confidence may be mistaken for a suicide bomber's anxiousness.

      TSA's ineptitude has nothing to do with it (but of course, thrown into the mix, it makes the subject even more interesting).

    41. Re:News for nerds? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      If we start accepting news that is for the various sub-nerds then who knows what we will end up with. Slashdot is only for PURE nerds. Do you really want law nerds dating your daughters?

      In short, single, 40+, living in a basement and bitching about how come no playmate wants to bang a fat f'n slob?

    42. Re:News for nerds? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      From the length and vacuous content I bet you're a real playa with the ladies, eh?

    43. Re:News for nerds? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      I'm not from the US. A lot of my understanding of current political issues within the US come from this site. I find considerable value in reading the comments of nerds to issues that may not, in themselves, be News _for_ Nerds. So add my vote to those saying that this _is_ the sort of thing I want to see on Slashdot (within reason, buyer beware, etc.)

      Branch out to actual political law sites for real US Law and Political current events. If you think Slashdot is a broad reflection of the US Political landscape it's not surprising so many countries hate our f'n guts.

    44. Re:News for nerds? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      Covered, but not discussed, at least not to the level I'm used to from Slashdot. The discussion is the real value--this is one of the last bastions of comments above the youtube level on the internet.

      Side note, averaging more than 1-2 emphasis words per sentence makes you look crazy. Doubly so if you use caps instead of bold/italic/underline.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    45. Re:News for nerds? by another_twilight · · Score: 1

      Late reply, but wanted to address the suggestion

      Thank you - I realise that /. is hardly representative, that's actually what I am after. Subject and comments correlate with what interest I have and I prefer a known bias to something that may be better balanced and more comprehensive, but where I am less certain and less able to determine the bias(es).

    46. Re:News for nerds? by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      Where is the damn firehose? I just spent five minutes looking for it to no avail.

  3. Was Travoyn Martin a Nerd? by Internal+Modem · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I don't understand how this is news for nerds. Maybe it is stuff that matters if overblown, racially charged issues matter to you. However, there are bigger news items that don't make it to /.

    1. Re:Was Travoyn Martin a Nerd? by Cazekiel · · Score: 1

      Who's Travoyn Martin?

      --
      You want to know how to help your kids? LEAVE THEM THE F*&K ALONE. --George Carlin
    2. Re:Was Travoyn Martin a Nerd? by Internal+Modem · · Score: 1

      He was a minor, so belonged to his parents?

    3. Re:Was Travoyn Martin a Nerd? by Cazekiel · · Score: 1

      OH. Trayvon Martin, got it!

      --
      You want to know how to help your kids? LEAVE THEM THE F*&K ALONE. --George Carlin
    4. Re:Was Travoyn Martin a Nerd? by Tablizer · · Score: 2

      Skittles and iced tea?

      Yip!
           

    5. Re:Was Travoyn Martin a Nerd? by Zondar · · Score: 1

      This has no business on Slashdot. This has nothing to do with technology and everything to do with either politics or clicks/ratings.

    6. Re:Was Travoyn Martin a Nerd? by Internal+Modem · · Score: 1

      Do the newbie mods look at the timestamps? The comments above me are redundant except for the one left at the same time as mine.

  4. News for nerds? by supersteve1440 · · Score: 0

    Is this what passes as news for nerds nowadays?

  5. who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    And this is news that I care about? Get back to fusion, code, tech, etc. I can read about this on CNN.

    1. Re:Who cares? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      This is a local matter. Keep the damn politics off of slashdot... unless it involves technology.

      Guns and hoodies are technology.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:who cares? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Well, you've cared enough to click on the story, and then type an angry comment.

    3. Re:who cares? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      And this is news that I care about? Get back to fusion, code, tech, etc. I can read about this on CNN.

      Whose keeping you from skipping the article? Who made you slashdot neighborhood watch police, anyways? Next you'll be hunting down someone who doesn't agree with your choice of distribution of Linux and choice of FOSS licensing.

    4. Re:who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is news that I care about? Get back to fusion, code, tech, etc. I can read about this on CNN.

      And watch as each of those articles get maybe 50 comments max while stories like this one get 500+

  6. Who is he? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And why do we care?

  7. A question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why can't we use 'Stand Your Ground' against abusive cops who bust your door down in a botched bust? Or is there no such thing as self defense against a cop?

  8. What's worse than being tried in the media? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Being indicted in the media. Fantastic.

  9. And but does involve? by Oh+Gawwd+Peak+Oil · · Score: 0

    that results in death and but does involve a premeditated plan to kill

    Shouldn't that be but does not involve?

    Wow, crack Slashdot-style editing there.

  10. Racism by sugarmotor · · Score: 0

    Is it already racism to make the charge only second - degree murder? What are the options?

    --
    http://stephan.sugarmotor.org
    1. Re:Racism by ClioCJS · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You need to read up on what first degree murder is. There's 0 way it applies here. This is the correct charge. I was expecting voluntary manslaughter myself, so yay.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    2. Re:Racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think they are letting Zimmerman off easy because he is hispanic?

    3. Re:Racism by sugarmotor · · Score: 1

      You have a pointer for "what first degree murder is"? I don't readily see a mismatch.

      --
      http://stephan.sugarmotor.org
    4. Re:Racism by atriusofbricia · · Score: 4, Informative

      You have a pointer for "what first degree murder is"? I don't readily see a mismatch.

      I'm going to presume this is a serious question...

      First degree murder requires that you:

      1) Wanted to kill someone
      2) Planned to do it
      3) Executed the plan

      If you didn't mean to kill someone and planned to do it, it isn't first degree murder. Even if Zimmerman followed Martin around for a month, it wouldn't be first degree murder if *something* happens and Martin ends up dead. That planning it bit is pretty damned important.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    5. Re:Racism by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      First degree murder is when someone plans in advance to murder someone. If he has a grudge against this person and lured him out to the spot he was shot, that would be 1st degree murder.
      Since he did not, and likely even thought he was semi justified in shooting him, 2nd degree is not even guaranteed to pass.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    6. Re:Racism by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      First degree murder is premeditated. The fact that Zimmerman called the cops is pretty strong evidence that he didn't set out intending to kill Martin.

    7. Re:Racism by koan · · Score: 1

      Yes but only the Latino half, the white half has to do hard time... /eyeball roll

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    8. Re:Racism by sugarmotor · · Score: 1

      Thanks sounds good. I don't quite see your list as being authoritative, however there seem to be cases where planning isn't required.

      --
      http://stephan.sugarmotor.org
    9. Re:Racism by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      Then you must have low reading comprehension or an unwillingness to look things up. This is something I understood as a 7 year old, so you're just going to have to figure it out yourself.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    10. Re:Racism by jaymzter · · Score: 1

      When the prosecutor took the case out of the hands of the grand jury it guaranteed an "arrest by petition". I agree with your assessment of what he should have been charged with. The fact that he got 2nd degree murder seems to be the State's way of saying we charged him with something, but the bar for it is so high no jury will convict.

      After which come the riots....

      --
      If thou see a fair woman pay court to her, for thus thou wilt obtain love
    11. Re:Racism by ClioCJS · · Score: 2

      I think the jury will have the option to convict on a lesser crime, at least that's how it worked when my friend was shot. This is like asking for $60K/yr because you want to make $50K/yr.

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    12. Re:Racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      782.04Murder.—
      (1)(a)The unlawful killing of a human being:
      1.When perpetrated from a premeditated design to effect the death of the person killed or any human being;
      2. [death caused during the commission of some felonies]

      That is the quick version of it. The real problem is what constitutes a plan. It doesn't matter how short or long the time period is between the planning and the act, or how elaborate it is; All that is needed is a premeditated plan. For example, I am talking to someone in a bar, when someone embarrasses me in front of the hotty I am hitting on. I think, "man, I really want to hurt that guy," look around for half a second, find a pipe, and hit him in the head, killing him. That was second-degree murder. Same scenario but I think, "man, I really want to kill that guy." That was first-degree murder. The reason is that I had the plan and effected it, even though the time frame was so short. It is also tricky because in some instances the law assumes you meant to hurt someone, not kill them (like catching your wife in the act of cheating and there was no cool off period).

      In this case, I think it was so unclear what exactly Zimmerman meant to do; therefore, they went with second degree murder as it is easier to prove.

    13. Re:Racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It obviously varies from state to state. In most states you can also be charged with 1st degree murder even if you don't plan to kill someone if you are in the act of committing another felony. For example, if you rob a bank with a gun (felony) and shot/kill someone. You might not of planned to kill someone, but since you are in the process committing a felony while the shooting took place, the charge is then upgraded to the next higher charge. So the 2nd degree murder of depraved indifference becomes 1st degree murder.

      This is why if you are going to go around breaking the law, break only one at a time.

    14. Re:Racism by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      Certain aggravating factors can escalate a crime to first-degree. They vary by jurisdiction, but often include murder during rape, killing a member of law enforcement, or being party to a crime such as burglary or robbery where one of the accomplices is killed.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    15. Re:Racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First degree is also very difficult to prove, that's one of the reasons they don't usually go for it.

    16. Re:Racism by sjames · · Score: 1

      Actually, it is. Those are the requirements. It may not seem that way because sometimes a prosecutor will inflate the charges even though he knows better.

    17. Re:Racism by Qwade79 · · Score: 1

      First degree murder is premeditated. The fact that Zimmerman called the cops is pretty strong evidence that he didn't set out intending to kill Martin.

      Or, to play devil's advocate, knowing he was going to kill Martin, he called the cops to help pre-establish his innocence in the upcoming murder

    18. Re:Racism by xero314 · · Score: 1

      After which come the riots....

      You think maybe white people,or hispanics in this case, should riot if he is wrongly convicted? Won't happen since white people in the US don't riot, but would be an interesting turn of events.

    19. Re:Racism by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      Thanks sounds good. I don't quite see your list as being authoritative, however there seem to be cases where planning isn't required.

      Correct. As noted by others below there are certain special cases where what would otherwise be Murder Two or some other related charge becomes Murder One due to aggravating factors. I was merely speaking in general and classic terms.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    20. Re:Racism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to be aware that having a gun on you and pulling it covers steps (1) to (3) above.

    21. Re:Racism by swillden · · Score: 1

      Certain aggravating factors can escalate a crime to first-degree. They vary by jurisdiction, but often include murder during rape, killing a member of law enforcement, or being party to a crime such as burglary or robbery where one of the accomplices is killed.

      Also, the pre-meditation doesn't have to be lengthy or well in advance, and it doesn't have to be centered around a particular person. All that's required is a split-second decision, not in the heat of the moment, to kill. And, of course, the prosecutor has to be able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the killer made a cold-blooded decision to kill.

      Based on what little we know of the evidence, it seems pretty clear to me that even if Zimmerman did pre-meditate the act, there's no proof that he did so. Unless there's a significant piece of evidence we're not aware of, the prosecutor would be foolish to make that charge, especially if Florida law doesn't allow the jury to choose to convict on a lesser charge (I don't know if it does). That might force them to acquit even if they find that Zimmerman did commit murder.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    22. Re:Racism by elsurexiste · · Score: 1

      3) Executed the plan

      And the little fella!

      --
      I rarely respond to comments. Also, don't ask for clarifications: a brain and Google are faster, believe me!
    23. Re:Racism by Talderas · · Score: 1

      I think the jury will have the option to convict on a lesser crime, at least that's how it worked when my friend was shot. This is like asking for $60K/yr because you want to make $50K/yr.

      Make no doubt. A Manslaughter conviction is what the prosecution is seeking. Bringing the higher charge of 2nd degree, which they probably don't have the evidence to secure a conviction, if for two purposes.

      1. Plea bargain.
      2. Due to people generally trusting authority figures, bringing the 2nd degree charge increases the probability of securing manslaughter through the jury rather than if they brought the manslaughter charge up.

      Personally, I despise both of those since neither is seeking justice. They're conviction seeking behaviors.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    24. Re:Racism by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

      Your points are all valid!

      --
      -Clio
      Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
      Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
    25. Re:Racism by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      You watch to many TV cop shows.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    26. Re:Racism by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Bullshit!

      White people just riot for different reasons. Like the local college team winning a basketball tournament.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    27. Re:Racism by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Zimerman joined the neighborhood watch hoping to hunt the most dangerous game. He stalked black people unknown to him, in hopes one would confront him. One did. He got to feel the rush of the kill. That's 1st degree murder.

      Not saying it's what happened, but it's a possibility.

    28. Re:Racism by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      And if Zimmerman planned on killing someone, planned on killing someone and had the plan of calling 911 first to report the suspicious activity to help build a defense against the murder he was planning on committing?

  11. Nerdy point: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "and but does". Yeah.

  12. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by ClioCJS · · Score: 2
    Seeing as they've found people who haven't heard of cases for every trial ever (yes, including OJ, Casey Anthony, and all the rest), it's not going to affect the fairness of the trial. It's just going to extend the jury selection process. That is why that process exists in the first place. "Have you heard of the case? Yes? You're dismissed."

    Unless people perjure themselves, that is. Which is a dick move with the exception of being a fully informed juror.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  13. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Beelzebud · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How is this bullshit rated insightful?

  14. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    You know what gets me? The way the Trey's mother was on the media talking about how nailing Zimmerman to the wall will help them move on.

    For one, that won't bring back her son. For another, I think she's at least as responsible for Trey's death as Zimmerman was. When you have a son and he starts thinking that gangsta thug culture is GREAT, that all the rap and hip-hop about how awesome it is to be a career criminal is something more than entertainment, that's your cue to ACT LIKE A PARENT and straighten his ass out before he gets either jailed or shot in the streets. Of course, not deciding to start and raise a family in a high-crime area is a nice touch too.

    What the hell kind of parent allows this to happen and doesn't teach their kids that being a gangsta thug is not as glorious as MTV makes it look? What kind of parent raises a teenager who attacks strangers? A shitty unworthy parent, that's what kind. I mean seriously. Being a thug ("THUG LIFE YO!") has only one of two possible endings: prison for a very long time, or an early grave.

    The only surprise here is that it wasn't another violent teenager who shot him.

  15. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by matunos · · Score: 1

    Luckily, no one watches MSNBC.

    But did you hear that Davis was wearing a hoodie? JUSTIFIABLE HOMICIDE!

    (Incidentally, if he was wearing Crocs it would also be justifiable homicide.)

  16. "the neighborhood watch volunteer" by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He was not a neighborhood watch volunteer. He had no affiliation with any organization, no training and this whole tragedy stemmed from his disregard for standard neighborhood watch procedure.

    He was an armed vigilante.

    1. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by matunos · · Score: 1

      Actually, he did apparently organize some neighborhood watch activities, according to the NY Times article on this.

      The rest of your criticisms are spot on, though.

    2. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 5, Informative

      So I see:

      The people at the Retreat at Twin Lakes had been missing bikes, grills and a few times thought strangers were casing their town houses.

      When the homeowners association wanted to start a neighborhood watch, only one man stepped up: George Zimmerman, the 28-year-old who admitted to shooting an unarmed Miami Gardens teenager and who is now the focal point of a race-related scandal of national proportions.

      Interviews with neighbors reveal a pleasant young man passionate about neighborhood security who took it upon himself to do nightly patrols while he walked his dog.

      Licensed to carry a firearm and a student of criminal justice, Zimmerman went door-to-door asking residents to be on the lookout, specifically referring to young black men who appeared to be outsiders, and warned that some were caught lurking, neighbors said. The self-appointed captain of the neighborhood watch program is credited with cracking some crimes, and thwarting others.

      Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/03/17/2700249/trayvon-martin-shooter-a-habitual.html#storylink=cpy

    3. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just as of a technicality finely the beginning of justice.

    4. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how exactly do you become a Real(tm) "neighborhood watch volunteer"? How do you get your badge? Where's the training college? What exam do you need to pass? Whom do you report to?

      Zimmerman was as much a "neighborhood watch volunteer" as most anyone I've ever heard of.

    5. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basically there are two sides of this story which are very, very clear. There are the FACTS which absolutely show in every way possible he did not commit a crime. Every shred of evidence shows he's completely innocent.

      Then there are morons who take the other side of the story. Those morons are easy to see because they generally have no fucking clue about anything, let alone the facts surrounding this story.

      I sincerely hope you too are dragged through the muddy and US broken legal system and prosecuted while being completely innocent of a crime. As I hope everyone else who clearly know nothing, like you.

      Oh, that's right, this is slashdot. You're not supposed to actually know anything to contribute to a discussion. Slashdot, home of the wanna-bes, ignorant, and dumb.

    6. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not a member of The Bloodhound Gang.

      Leave the law enforcement to the professionals.

      You're most likely not even a member of the affected community.

      Let the legal system flow. Let him be judged by a jury of his PEERS (people who live in his district), and mind your own damned business.

      Look around your own neighborhood, and I'm sure you can find something worthy of your time. Then again, that would require you to do something other than type random nonsense about things you just heard about on the TV.

    7. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong on all counts.

      Trayvon Martin deserved what he got. He shouldn't have attacked Zimmerman if he didn't want to die. The next time some thug thinks about attacking a law abiding, upstanding citizen who is PROTECTING other citizens out of the goodness of their heart, I hope they remember what happened here before they end up face down in the grass too.

    8. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Licensed to carry a firearm and a student of criminal justice

      Damn, you know there's way too much red tape when you need a license to carry a student of criminal justice. I still want one though.

    9. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      Licensed to carry a firearm and a student of criminal justice, Zimmerman

      Don't they teach in criminal justice 101 that usually judge, jury and executioner are not supposed to be one and the same person?

    10. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I see:

      The people at the Retreat at Twin Lakes had been missing bikes, grills and a few times thought strangers were casing their town houses.

      When the homeowners association wanted to start a neighborhood watch, only one man stepped up: George Zimmerman, the 28-year-old who admitted to shooting an unarmed Miami Gardens teenager and who is now the focal point of a race-related scandal of national proportions.

      Interviews with neighbors reveal a pleasant young man passionate about neighborhood security who took it upon himself to do nightly patrols while he walked his dog.

      Licensed to carry a firearm and a student of criminal justice, Zimmerman went door-to-door asking residents to be on the lookout, specifically referring to young black men who appeared to be outsiders, and warned that some were caught lurking, neighbors said. The self-appointed captain of the neighborhood watch program is credited with cracking some crimes, and thwarting others.

      Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/03/17/2700249/trayvon-martin-shooter-a-habitual.html#storylink=cpy

      In short, he was an armed vigilante, not part of a legitimate neighborhood watch.

      "Neighborhood Watch" is supposed to be just that: the entire neighborhood watches out for potential crimes, and calls police when necessary. They typically have a special liaison with the local police that they can go to for assistance.

      Neighborhood Watch does not "patrol."
      Neighborhood Watch does not go about armed (except to the degree that people ordinarily go about armed.)
      Neighborhood Watch absolutely does not "warn" people who are "lurking."
      Neighborhood Watch absolutely does not "thwart" crimes.

      This "student of criminal justice" was a grown man playing cop, eg. a vigilante.

    11. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the "kid", 17 years old, i.e. a young man that could have had his driving license for two years in FL, was kicked out for school for being on drugs, who was then shot while snooping around a gated community in the dark. Come on, we can all see what happened here.

    12. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      well, that's the point. he was doing neighborhood watch like activities, was appointed and approved by the community..

      but they never registered with anything official, if they did then a) he wouldn't have been allowed to be the "captain" b) he would have been told to not carry around a gun and start asking from random visitors what is the purpose of their visit.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    13. Re:"the neighborhood watch volunteer" by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      I've got a Concealed Carry Permit. The State of North Carolina says that I can legally carry a firearm on my person in a concealed manner on any public street. Why would I not be allowed to carry it when walking a dog at night?

      I'm on a public street when I see someone that doesn't seem to belong to the neighborhood, and appears to be hiding their identity, very much like the previous perpetrators that I helped catch. What law forbids me from walking up to them and asking them questions?

      Being a member of a voluntary organization does not remove my rights or responsibilities.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  17. Loose ends by Ken_g6 · · Score: 1

    TFS isn't tied up well because it's missing a "not".

    "Second-degree murder is typically brought in cases when there is a fight or other confrontation that results in death and but does not involve a premeditated plan to kill."

    --
    (T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)
    1. Re:Loose ends by Obfuscant · · Score: 2

      TFS isn't tied up well because it's missing a "not". "Second-degree murder is typically brought in cases when there is a fight or other confrontation that results in death and but does not involve a premeditated plan to kill."

      And but you totally missed the absurd use of "and but", whether there is a "not" missing or.

    2. Re:Loose ends by nbauman · · Score: 1

      They fired their proofreaders in a cost-saving measure.

  18. not news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....human beings get killed every day. this trevor martin kid was no different

  19. drug dealer excuses by k6mfw · · Score: 0

    While interviewing various people (PBS Nightly News last week I think), one of the interviewees (sp?) said what happens frequently is a drug dealer will shoot at another, the other drug dealer returns fire but bullets hit innocent bystander. The drug dealer returning fire will say to police he was defending himself so no charges are placed, which illustrated problems with "stand your ground" law.

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
    1. Re:drug dealer excuses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Florida is a bit off (it is Florida, after all) - but that sounds like a large load of crap. There's a reason any "gun nut" you talk to will recommend very specific weapons for home defense (for example) - lolselfdefense isn't a valid excuse for collateral damage.

    2. Re:drug dealer excuses by jon3k · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Happens "frequently"? Please cite five. Actually let's start with one, where the defense worked, and they weren't charged with manslaughter.

    3. Re:drug dealer excuses by wonderboss · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up please. Also the relatives of the victim will successfully sue the perp for wrongful death.
      A decent gun safety course will teach you that every bullet you send down range has a lawyer attached to
      it hoping it damages something it should not.

      --
      more cowbell
    4. Re:drug dealer excuses by nbauman · · Score: 0

      In the past, unless it was a clear-cut case of self-defense, people who killed somebody with a gun were arrested and investigated by the cops. They'd have to hire a lawyer and defend themselves.

      After examining past cases, the NRA skillfully designed this law to tie the prosecutors up in knots when they tried to prosecute a shooting.

      They got the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) to lobby the law for them around the country. The members of ALEC are responsible -- including Coca-Cola, Pfizer, Kraft, Proctor & Gamble, R.J. Reynolds, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

    5. Re:drug dealer excuses by trout007 · · Score: 2

      Not true. If they are actual drug dealers (ie convicted) they can't lawfully have a firearm. If convicted it's up to 15 years.
      If possession of fire arm in commission of crime (drug dealing) minimum 10 years.
      If fired in commission of crime (drug dealing) minimum 20 years.
      If you hit someone in commission of crime (drug dealing) minimum 25 to life.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    6. Re:drug dealer excuses by user32.ExitWindowsEx · · Score: 1

      If you look up the law in FL it explicitly says it does not apply if you're already in the middle of an illegal activity.

      --
      "Evil will always triumph because good is dumb." -- Dark Helmet
    7. Re:drug dealer excuses by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Please site one incident where that has happened.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    8. Re:drug dealer excuses by misexistentialist · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually what frequently happens is that you spend maybe a year in jail, facing enormous pressure to plead guilty, until you have a chance at trial to prove the multi-million-dollar police apparatus wrong. You must really hate yourself and freedom in general if you support that state of affairs.

    9. Re:drug dealer excuses by k6mfw · · Score: 1

      > Please site one incident where that has happened.

      uhmm, sorry I can't. I was simply saying what was mentioned on the PBS News Hour. So maybe there have not been cases like this, or maybe there was. but as nbauman said, "They'd have to hire a lawyer and defend themselves." And wonderboss said, "every bullet you send down range has a lawyer attached to it." Whatever situation, you better be sure someone will kill you before you shoot them dead because will have to face wrath of lawyers, which is a toughie because I also heard firefights are extremely chaotic (i.e. Vietnam vets will tell you bullets flying everywhere, everybody is screaming and much of the time it is all over in less than a minute).

      --
      mfwright@batnet.com
    10. Re:drug dealer excuses by sjames · · Score: 2

      Stand your ground only protects you from charges due to injuring or killing your attacker. You're still on the hook if you hurt a bystander in any way or if you are the attacker.

      The law came into existence due to overzealous prosecutors pressing charges against people who were clearly defending themselves and expecting them, in the heat of the moment with less than 1 second to make the decision, to examine each and every possible avenue of retreat with the same thoroughness that a person hearing the facts afterward (and under no pressure at all) might.

      It just means you don't have to give Sir Robin a run for his money.

    11. Re:drug dealer excuses by nbauman · · Score: 1

      No, a good friend of mine was murdered. I just don't like people getting shot.

    12. Re:drug dealer excuses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he drug dealer returning fire will say to police he was defending himself so no charges are placed

      ...but he WAS defending himself. Assuming he can demonstrate that the other party fired first, that would qualify as self defense.
      Why does the mere fact that he is a drug dealer negate his right do defend himself?

    13. Re:drug dealer excuses by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      I'd be interested to see if the law in Florida protects those who use a firearm in the commission of a crime. I would suspect it likely does not, and the person claiming such is more than likely an idiot. I could be wrong though.

    14. Re:drug dealer excuses by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up please. Also the relatives of the victim will successfully sue the perp for wrongful death. A decent gun safety course will teach you that every bullet you send down range has a lawyer attached to it hoping it damages something it should not.

      Normally true, but Florida's Stand Your Ground law explicitly creates immunity for wrongful death suits.

    15. Re:drug dealer excuses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Happens "frequently"? Please cite five. Actually let's start with one, where the defense worked, and they weren't charged with manslaughter.

      SELECT COUNT(CRAP) FROM DATABASE.RECTAL;
      12083498127341348

      Happy?

    16. Re:drug dealer excuses by chrb · · Score: 1

      If they are actual drug dealers (ie convicted)

      A person can deal drugs without having being convicted.

    17. Re:drug dealer excuses by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      Well, no, SOME gun nuts will. Others realize it's bullshit and just reccomend you find a weapon you're comfortable with and practice practice practice.

    18. Re:drug dealer excuses by wonderboss · · Score: 1

      Drug dealer shoots innocent bystander is not protected by Stand your Ground law. Only the perp's relatives cannot sue. That is assuming the dead person is found to be the perp. Stand Yorur Ground laws say I don't have to retreat from an aggressor, not I'm allowed to be an aggressor and shoot whomever I want.

      Show me one case where an aggressor or a felon (drug dealer) shot anyone and got away with it because of a "stand your ground law".

      Now, I'm not actually in favor of "Stand your Ground". I think a weapon holder should be required to retreat if possible. But blaming
      "Stand Your Ground" laws in this or other cases is silly. As the parent said "cite one case".

      Zimmerman is charged. Not because he "stood his ground" but because he initiated the confrontation. 2nd degree murder is
      the right charge. The court will decide if he is guilty.

      "Florida's Stand Your Ground law explicitly creates immunity for wrongful death suits." from an aggressor or his family or his estate.
      Not from anyone else.

      --
      more cowbell
    19. Re:drug dealer excuses by Americano · · Score: 1

      Are you sure about that? I only see immunity in the version of the law I just looked through in cases where the person killed was the one on whom deadly force was used in self-defense.

      I don't see anything about "my stray bullet hit a neighborhood teenager in the head 3 blocks away, but since I was defending myself against another attacker, that kid's death is just a freebie for me."

      I'd expect that "acting in self defense" would be a mitigating circumstance and that you would be charged with something more like manslaughter than murder in that situation, but I don't see any clear "you're free from wrongful death suits," except in the specific case of the deceased attacker's family.

    20. Re:drug dealer excuses by Americano · · Score: 1

      Because stand your ground specifically says you must not be involved in unlawful activity.

      Drug dealing is typically held to be unlawful. You'd be hard-pressed to say, "Your honor, yes, I was dealing crack, when that guy ran up and tried to beat me down and take my stash. So I shot him in the face, because, you know, gotta protect what's mine."

      Such a case would be ineligible for a stand your ground defense.

    21. Re:drug dealer excuses by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      No, a good friend of mine was murdered.

      I'm sorry to hear about your friend, yet you are against laws that would have allowed him to defend his life without fear of prosecution. How fascinating people's emotional responses are. Strong protection of self defense does not condone or allow murder. Is your friend's murderer free? If so, on what basis, stand your ground (or other self defense) laws, lack of evidence or some other reason?

      I just don't like people getting shot.

      I presume you mean you don't like people getting killed. Surely you would be no happier about the situation if a different weapon such as a knife had been used to kill your friend, right?

    22. Re:drug dealer excuses by nbauman · · Score: 1

      My friend died when some roommates got into an argument and somebody pulled a gun. If there was no gun, he wouldn't have died.

      Every time somebody gets killed by a gun, the gun fans claim that if he had a gun, or a bystander had a gun, they could have defended themselves against the shooter. Which is ridiculous. In almost every case, the killings are over too fast to react.

      When Gabrielle Giffords was shot, there were people around with guns. They couldn't stop Loughner. By the time they realized what was going on, six people were dead.

      There are a few rare cases in which somebody with a gun did or might have stopped a shooter, but they're far outweighed by cases like this in which two people got into a fight, somebody died because of the presence of a gun, and nobody would have died if there was no gun.

      Because of the political power of gun owners, it's impossible to get even reasonable restrictions on handgun ownership in this country. There's nothing we can do about it, but it's the cause of something like 50,000 deaths a year.

      The other side of the coin is that if you kill somebody with a gun, and the shooting wasn't legally justified, you can go to jail for a long time. Even if the justification was simply unclear, you're liable to spend a long time and a lot of money defending yourself in court.

      As it should be. If you kill somebody, the cops should make sure it was justified.

    23. Re:drug dealer excuses by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      You will be able to use acting in self defense as a defense against the injury of a non-participant, but only in the same way that you can use swerving to avoid a head-on collision as a defense against the wrongful death of the child you ran over in the process. The jury will see it completely different if your were speeding (or shooting) next to a playground vs on a country road. In either case, there will/should be a trial to decide the circumstances and culpability.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    24. Re:drug dealer excuses by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      In NC, the law doesn't even help you if your the one that started the fight. And you can't use the law to stop someone else from being injured/killed, ie. you're not allowed to "save" someone.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    25. Re:drug dealer excuses by rohan972 · · Score: 2

      If there was no gun, he wouldn't have died.

      That's an untested hypothesis. Here in Australia, the highest recorded murder rate was after our gun laws were introduced, although it has since fallen. However, our murder rate was already falling before the gun laws were introduced nationwide and all the mass killings that prompted their introduction happened in states that already had similar laws. Now the most common murder weapon is knives. What makes you so sure that the person who killed your friend would have been unwilling to use a knife? And you didn't originally object to gun laws but to the strength of self defense laws, which operate independently of the weapon used. Did your friend's murderer get let off or not and what self defense laws were in place at the time?

      By the time they realized what was going on, six people were dead.

      That's a problem of situational awareness, not a failure of gun ownership. If you are armed you ought not walk around oblivious of your surroundings. Well, you shouldn't walk around oblivious of your surroundings even unarmed. This article claims that "everyone hit the ground" after the first shot, which was apparently from a very short distance. Unsurprisingly, if you lie down and make a passive victim of yourself, carrying a weapon won't help you. Even if they were all unarmed if they had rushed him it is unlikely that he could have killed 6 people. It's not that those armed people couldn't have stopped him, they decided not to stop him. In a panic, sure, but a decision nonetheless.

      There are a few rare cases in which somebody with a gun did or might have stopped a shooter, but they're far outweighed by cases like this in which two people got into a fight, somebody died because of the presence of a gun, and nobody would have died if there was no gun.

      Have violent crime rates gone up or down in American states that have liberalized their gun laws? It is my understanding that violent crime rates have gone down, but if you have evidence to the contrary please let me know.

      The other side of the coin is that if you kill somebody with a gun, and the shooting wasn't legally justified, you can go to jail for a long time.

      I agree that this is as it should be, but it should be so regardless of what weapon was used. Why should you get of easy for killing with a knife? Murder is murder, no matter how it is done.

    26. Re:drug dealer excuses by nbauman · · Score: 1

      Have violent crime rates gone up or down in American states that have liberalized their gun laws? It is my understanding that violent crime rates have gone down, but if you have evidence to the contrary please let me know.

      According to the Florida newspapers that have investigated the results of the laws, the rates of justified homicides have tripled. Most of those are cases that the prosecutors would have prosecuted as murder under the old laws, but didn't think they could convict under the new laws. Some of them involved people provoking a fight, getting beaten up, and killing the guy they originally attacked (which is what the prosecutor is charging Zimmerman with). A fair number of them involved drug dealers.

      So the result of the laws have been to convert violent crimes to justified homicides, and let people get away with what used to be murder.

      The last time I reviewed the literature, the researchers said that data comparing changes in crime associated with changes in gun laws didn't have the statistical power to draw statistically significant conclusions, and it was too difficult to separate the laws from other factors.

    27. Re:drug dealer excuses by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      According to the Florida newspapers that have investigated the results of the laws, the rates of justified homicides have tripled. Most of those are cases that the prosecutors would have prosecuted as murder under the old laws, but didn't think they could convict under the new laws.
      [snip]
      So the result of the laws have been to convert violent crimes to justified homicides, and let people get away with what used to be murder.

      Of course. It was considered that people were getting unjustly charged and convicted when defending themselves, so the law was changed with the intention of having exactly the effect you've described. People being allowed to defend themselves is a good thing. If it is possible to amend the law to make it more difficult for actual murderers to abuse, then good, let's do so. Let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater and resume prosecuting genuine cases of self-defense.

      Some of them involved people provoking a fight, getting beaten up, and killing the guy they originally attacked (which is what the prosecutor is charging Zimmerman with). A fair number of them involved drug dealers.

      I have been unable to find an article in which drug dealers used these laws to escape justice, although I did find a couple of quotes from "Buddy Jacobs, general counsel of the Florida Prosecuting Attorneys Association cited the Stand Your Ground law's unintended effects on cases involving drug killings in calling for its repeal during a task force hearing". It would be good if he gave an example, perhaps he has and I just can't find it. I did find on the BBC http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-17693084 a case of a gang shootout although they didn't mention drugs.

    28. Re:drug dealer excuses by nbauman · · Score: 1

      http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2012/03/why_george_zimmerman_trayvon_martin_s_killer_hasn_t_been_prosecuted_.single.html
      Why Trayvon Martin’s Killer Remains Free
      Florida’s self-defense laws have left Florida safe for no one—except those who shoot first.
      By Emily Bazelon
      March 19, 2012
      (Since Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law was passed in 2005, there have been many cases of people killing unarmed opponents and not being charged. The worst, according to Bazelon, is that the courts gave "true immunity," which means the judge can dismiss the prosecution before the trial begins, and the question of whether the killer was really defending himself doesn't even go to the jury.)

      http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/crime/article1128317.ece
      Five years since Florida enacted "stand-your-ground" law, justifiable homicides are up
      By Ben Montgomery and Colleen Jenkins
      October 17, 2010

      These are "justifiable" homicides because that's the category the stand-your-ground put them in. Under the old law, most of them would have been murders, if they had happened at all.

      You may think that if two people get into a fight and one of them "defends" himself by pulling a gun and killing the other guy, who is unarmed, that's a good outcome. I disagree. These are routine assaults, where nobody would have gotten killed without the gun.

      How do you know they were getting unjustly convicted? The juries had more of the facts and obviously disagreed with you.

      Even the killer of Yoshihiro Hattori was acquitted. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshihiro_Hattori These laws protect irresponsible shooters, like Rodney Peairs. Somebody rings your bell on Halloween, and you shoot him? These laws protect people who do that.

    29. Re:drug dealer excuses by nbauman · · Score: 1

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/stand-your-ground-laws-coincide-with-jump-in-justifiable-homicide-cases/2012/04/07/gIQAS2v51S_print.html

      Billy Kuch was a troubled kid. As an adolescent, he had bipolar disorder diagnosed and he’d been arrested a couple of times for driving under the influence. He drank too much, and he knew it.

      So when he was out at a party that August night on Golden Eagle Drive near the intersection of Gun Smoke Drive, he decided he was too blitzed to drive home. He left the party to lock his keys inside his car so he couldn’t get behind the wheel later that night.

      Kuch, then 23, stumbled back toward the party but forgot which beige stucco house was hosting the bash. He knocked on the wrong door, the one belonging to Gregory Stewart, a 32-year-old homeowner who did not appreciate having his wife and baby disturbed by a drunk kid after 4 in the morning. Kuch went away and texted his sister that he was totally confused about what was going on.

      Then Kuch found what he thought was the party house and tried the door. But he’d landed at Stewart’s place, again.

      This time, after Kuch turned the doorknob, Stewart told his wife to call 911. Then he grabbed his Smith & Wesson semiautomatic and went into his front yard.

      Stewart said he kept asking Kuch to leave, but Kuch, thinking the guys at the party were playing a joke on him, stayed.

      “Don’t make me shoot you,” warned the 6-foot-1 Stewart, according to police records. “I don’t want to shoot you.”

      Kuch, who stands 5-foot-9, raised his hands, asked for a light and lurched toward the homeowner. Stewart fired.

      Stewart broke down in tears when police arrived. “I could have given him a light,” he said. But he said he had felt threatened.

      Police asked Stewart why he hadn’t just waited inside until officers arrived.

      “I don’t know,” replied Stewart. His unwanted visitor, he said, was unarmed.

      “If I had a crazy drunk guy at my door,” said Jeanann Kuch, Billy’s mother, “I’d have locked my door and called 911.”

      Kuch spent five weeks in a coma. He woke with no recollection of the incident.

      Before the shooting, Kuch had supported the Stand Your Ground law, his parents said. Stewart’s view of the law is not known. He did not return repeated calls, and no court ever asked, because Stewart was never brought before a judge.

      Stewart was arrested that night, but Assistant State Attorney Manny Garcia concluded that his actions were “justified.”

    30. Re:drug dealer excuses by rohan972 · · Score: 1
      So you won't say whether your friend's killer got let off, you don't have any examples of drug dealers killing people and getting let off. Of the three examples you give:

      One, Billy Kuch, mentally ill and drunk, lurched toward someone who had informed him that he was armed and told him to leave his property. Undoubtedly an unfortunate affair, but not sufficient reason to change the law IMO. Simply not getting drunk and screwing around on other people's property at 4 in the morning will protect you from this without changing the law.

      Two, Rodney Peairs was acquitted by a jury and found liable in a civil suit, so it appears that stand your ground laws and immunity were not the issue, and

      Three, George Zimmerman has been charged, which took some protest but did not require a change in the law.

      These [not your examples but the increase in justifiable homicides] are "justifiable" homicides because that's the category the stand-your-ground put them in.

      Yes. That's intentional. The law was written specifically with the purpose of moving more homicides into the category of legally justifiable. It has not increased the number of homicides, so what is your complaint? You said it was people getting shot that you didn't like, but what you're complaining about is people not going to prison.

      You may think that if two people get into a fight and one of them "defends" himself by pulling a gun and killing the other guy, who is unarmed, that's a good outcome. I disagree. These are routine assaults, where nobody would have gotten killed without the gun.

      Here in Queensland, Australia there has been a prolonged government advertising campaign "One punch can kill" trying to make people stop and think before getting into bar fights. This has been prompted by the fact that there have been deaths from one punch, particularly by someone being knocked down and hitting their head. I disagree that any assault should be considered routine or that it can be assumed that it won't result in serious injury or death. To punch someone, particularly in the head, is to put their life at risk.

      How do you know they were getting unjustly convicted? The juries had more of the facts and obviously disagreed with you.

      I presume the juries were applying the law, and the legislators had unjust prosecutions and convictions brought to their attention so they changed the law. Remember that much of our legal system is based on making it hard to get convictions, based on the idea that it is better for many guilty to go free than for one innocent to be punished.

      If we could only choose between:
      1 - No murderers going free but some people who were genuinely defending themselves being imprisoned for life, or
      2 - Some murderers going free but no people who were genuinely defending themselves being imprisoned for life,
      I would choose option 2. How about you?

    31. Re:drug dealer excuses by nbauman · · Score: 1

      I don't know what happened to my friend's killers. His family was upset enough about it and I didn't want to bother them about it any more.

      Billy Kuch did nothing that justified being shot. Gregory Stewart was not in danger. He should have stayed inside his home and waited for the cops to arrive, as he admitted himself. It was an unjustified shooting. Stewart's warning was irrelevant. Billy Kuch was incapable of leaving or following orders. Even the gun nuts don't argue that we should kill mentally troubled people when they disturb other people at night. Why the fuck did he leave the safety of his house to play cowboy? And yet Stewart wasn't prosecuted.

      Rodney Peairs was acquitted by a jury because the gun laws in Louisianna are so ridiculous that they allow a homeowner to shoot and kill a stranger who goes to the wrong house even on Halloween (where it's customary for people to go from house to house). He was objectively not threatened at all. All he had to do was say the magic words that he "felt threatened" and he could kill anybody he wants not only in his home but anywhere around it, even on a public sidewalk.

      This is irresponsible and negligent. It's likely that they will kill an innocent person under those circumstances, and yet the law permits them to do so merely by claiming that they felt threatened. The prosecutors say it's almost impossible to disprove that defense. The law was designed that way by the National Rifle Association. They were bothered by the fact that when a homeowner shot and killed somebody, that homeowner would be investigated and have to defend his actions. They now have a law in which a homeowner can shoot and kill someone not just in his home but anywhere around his home, and not be investigated at all, even if he wasn't really threatened, even if he left the safety of his home while the cops were on the way.

      Nobody has cited cases in the U.S. of people who were genuinely defending themselves being imprisoned for life.

      Let me tell you something about political science in the U.S. Laws aren't made by a careful balancing of interests and weighing the dangers of innocent people going to jail against guilty people going free. Laws are made by following the power of lobbying groups. The NRA is one of the most powerful lobbying groups. They don't care, beyond crocodile tears, what happens to innocent people who get killed. They're advocates for gun owners. They want gun owners to be able to shoot people with as little restraint or concern for the consequences as possible. They want gun owners to get off, regardless of the circumstances.

      If your idea of a weekend's recreation is to go to a bar, get drunk, and get into a frontier fight, yes, if you kill somebody with an unlucky punch and you can't establish self-defense, you might be convicted of homicide or murder, in Australia or the civilized parts of America. That's what homicide is.

      This discussion isn't going anywhere. I don't see any rational engagement there.

    32. Re:drug dealer excuses by rohan972 · · Score: 1
      Disagreement is not irrationality.
      http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2010/09/07/long-island-man-arrested-for-defending-home-with-ak-47/
      http://news.nationalpost.com/2011/01/20/man-faces-jail-after-protecting-home-from-masked-attackers/
      http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2011/07/15/20110715arizona-guns-special-report-self-defense-story.html

      If your idea of a weekend's recreation is to go to a bar, get drunk, and get into a frontier fight, yes, if you kill somebody with an unlucky punch and you can't establish self-defense, you might be convicted of homicide or murder, in Australia or the civilized parts of America. That's what homicide is.

      You made the point that unarmed people had been shot and that you didn't consider it self defense if someone else used a gun. You consistently want to avoid the implications of your arguments. For many people a gun a reasonable tool to defend themselves from an attacker, even an unarmed one.

      The reason stand your ground laws have so much support is because they are just. Self defense is an inalienable right.

  20. Slashdot: Please fire samzenpus! by arcade · · Score: 0, Troll

    Zimmerman? Is that some US guy?

    Can someone please fire the moronic US-centered slashdot-editors that has no geeky credentials whatsoever? Like samzenpus? Please?

    The entire zimmerman-case has NOTHING to do with geeky news.

    --
    "Rune Kristian Viken" - http://www.nwo.no - arca
  21. Self defense? by mykos · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't know how you can both pursue someone against the advice of a 911 operator and claim self-defense.

    1. Re:Self defense? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because having someone threaten your life is not a direct consequence of doing something inadvisable. If someone cuts in front of me, in line, at the super market, and then I start attacking them, knock them down and stomp on their head, they pull a gun and shoot me, it is self defense. It's not self defense because they cut in front of me at the super market. It's self defense because I responded to their slight in an manner not befitting proper society, and since they had a gun, if I had knocked them out, their life was reasonably in peril.

    2. Re:Self defense? by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      Oh, easily. Look for the guy, walk up to him and say, "Excuse me, sir. Hi, my name is George. I'm captain of the neighborhood watch and like to introduce myself to people I haven't met." Somewhere between that exchange happening and the phone call we've all heard, Martin jumps you and commences to beat the ever loving crap out of you. In fear of your life, you shoot him.

      I'm not saying that's what happened. As I'm not a witness (or Zimmerman), I have no idea what happened. It's definitely possible, though.

    3. Re:Self defense? by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 1

      Because having someone threaten your life is not a direct consequence of doing something inadvisable.

      It is if that inadvisable action is reasonably perceived as a threat to that someone's life. I don't know about you, but I'd be sketched out by some un-uniformed slob stalking me through the streets after dark. Especially if I was a skinny young kid and he was a large adult male. I would feel threatened. I would try to escape, and I would fight them off if escape was not an option.

      In America in 2012, you don't approach strangers in the dark and expect them to believe that you are harmless.

    4. Re:Self defense? by icebraining · · Score: 1

      His injuries did not even require a trip to the hospital, though.

    5. Re:Self defense? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      but I'd be sketched out by some un-uniformed slob stalking me through the streets after dark. Especially if I was a skinny young kid and he was a large adult male.

      I take it you didn't realize that the "skinny young kid" was five inches taller than the "large adult male"?

      And not a lot lighter, either.

      Do remember that the standard picture of Martin that has appeared in the news constantly is a five-year-old picture - kids change a lot in the five years between 12 and 17....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    6. Re:Self defense? by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 1

      Height doesn't mean squat. Zimmerman was bigger, older, and illogically confrontational (Trayvon wouldn't have known about Zimmerman's paranoia about blacks and petty crime).

      Zimmerman was also armed, of course. So I suppose we should take from that that a person of any size chasing us around for no apparent rational or legitimate reason is a potential deadly threat.

    7. Re:Self defense? by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      Is sustaining injuries sufficient to require hospitalization necessary before you can defend yourself?

    8. Re:Self defense? by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      It may be 2012, but we have yet to be infested with flesh-hungry zombies. And if we were, the proper procedure is certainly not to get in a fist-fight! Martin had the cardio training, but he didn't run; he had his phone out, but he didn't call for the zombie removal squad. He got cocky, and that's when you get bitten.

    9. Re:Self defense? by adrn01 · · Score: 1

      Pursue, as in, the 911 operator hearing Zimmerman being apparently out of breath, and asking 'are you following?', and getting the response 'yes'.

    10. Re:Self defense? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Height doesn't mean squat. Zimmerman was bigger, older, and illogically confrontational

      Height means quite a lot. Tall people are more intimidating, all other things being equal. Zimmerman was wider, true. But not enough heavier (20 pounds, from what I've read) to actually look all that big.

      As to Zimmerman being "illogically confrontational", I'll have to assume you were there and defer to you on that one.

      Note, by the way, that I'm about Martin's size, and my father is about Zimmerman's size (we're about an inch taller in both cases). I wouldn't be intimidated by someone my father's size walking up to me unless he was carrying a knife...

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    11. Re:Self defense? by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 0

      Defend yourself with deadly force? Yes, it should be. So if you pick a fight with someone and they punch you, you should be able to shoot them? People get in fights all the time, do we really want to escalate every single one to "killing in self defense"?

    12. Re:Self defense? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Defend yourself with deadly force? Yes, it should be.

      The United States isn't Great Britain, Americans are allowed to defend themselves. No, it shouldn't be required to take potentially lethal damage to your body before you defend yourself with deadly force. Frankly, that goes beyond silly.

      So if you pick a fight with someone and they punch you, you should be able to shoot them?

      If it stops at that, generally no. But that isn't the claim here, and Zimmerman didn't pick a fight. Following someone isn't picking a fight. Here is a puzzler for you - if Martin was genuinely afraid, why didn't he simply call the police on his cell phone?

      do we really want to escalate every single one to "killing in self defense"?

      Since some American states have about 20 years of experience with concealed carry permits with firearms, and nearly every state now issues them, we can be quite certain that this isn't a problem worth worrying about.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    13. Re:Self defense? by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

      Yes, because saying hello is how you would approach a "fucking punk" (his words) who "always gets away" (his words again). Those words represent his state of mind just minutes before the shooting.

      Much more likely is that Zimmerman wanted to be a hero and tried to detain Martin until the police arrived. And if some guy who is clearly not an officer tries to detain me, I am going to put up a fight to defend myself. As a teenager, for all I know he's trying to kidnap me. And if I saw the gun, I would certainly fear for my life, which under Florida's SYG law means that I could respond with deadly force.

      --
      :(){ :|:& };:
    14. Re:Self defense? by iceperson · · Score: 1

      If you walked up and shot someone in cold blood (which is what people seem to claim zimmerman did) then you wouldn't expect to have any injuries at all, and you certainly wouldn't expect eyewitnesses to testify that they saw a struggle.

    15. Re:Self defense? by xero314 · · Score: 1
      Once you have sustained injuries that require hospitalization it's gone way to far.

      So if you pick a fight with someone and they punch you, you should be able to shoot them?

      You have every right to defend yourself before you sustain any injury at all. You also have a right to talk smack all you want, and if someone brings the threat of physical harm against you then you also have every right to defend yourself to the fullest of your abilities. So put simply, it doesn't matter how much a douche someone is you have no right to be a physical aggressor, and you should only do so if you are prepared to be mortally wounded for your actions.

      People get in fights all the time, do we really want to escalate every single one to "killing in self defense"?

      That certainly would cut down on the number of idiots that can't keep their violent tendencies in check. Most people don't get into fights all the time. Most people don't get into physical altercations at any point in their adult lives.

    16. Re:Self defense? by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      I'd urge you to think about that. You are suggesting that we should wait until we've been hurt fairly severely before we defend ourselves? Believe me, I'm very opposed to killing people, but if you're genuinely afraid for your life, are you really going to wait until the guy hurts you badly? Once he does, you may be in no position to stop him from doing whatever he wants.

      Of course I don't want fights to escalate into killings. I'm not even in favor of people getting into fights, honestly. But I do think we need to consider before swinging that first punch that once you do, you lose some control over how vigorous the other guy's defense is going to be.

    17. Re:Self defense? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Pursuit falls under the category of legal principles that nerds generally don't understand: those involving intent.

      Walking down a street that another person also happens to be walking down is not pursuit. Walking down the same street because that other person is walking down it is pursuit.

    18. Re:Self defense? by icebraining · · Score: 1

      The United States isn't Great Britain, Americans are allowed to defend themselves. No, it shouldn't be required to take potentially lethal damage to your body before you defend yourself with deadly force. Frankly, that goes beyond silly.

      More or less. You don't have to actually sustain it, but you do have to potentially sustain it; you can't use deadly force to defend yourself against any attack.

      776.012 Use of force in defense of person.-- (...) However, the person is justified in the use of deadly force only if he or she reasonably believes that such force is necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the imminent commission of a forcible felony.

      Now, whether Zimmerman was actually in fear for his life or not is hard to know; I do think he deserves the benefit of the doubt unless it is proven he wasn't.

    19. Re:Self defense? by icebraining · · Score: 1

      if someone brings the threat of physical harm against you then you also have every right to defend yourself to the fullest of your abilities.

      Sorry, but that's not true. According to the Florida legal code, you can only use deadly force "only if he or she reasonably believes that such force is necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm". It's not just a thread of physical harm.

    20. Re:Self defense? by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      How's that 'diversity' bullshit working out for you? Not happy that your country hasn't quite been turned into a third world hellhole yet? You Slashdot retards claim to be intelligent, so please explain how filling your previously all white country with millions of useless third world scum is making it better? You must really hate your children.

      For some like you, it was working quite nicely until Lincoln freed them.

    21. Re:Self defense? by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      So I can only use deadly force if my brains are about to spill out, not if they just plan to crack my skull open. Got ya'. Do they have to sign an affidavit of their intentions before or after they start bouncing the back of my head against the concrete sidewalk?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    22. Re:Self defense? by icebraining · · Score: 1

      You should ask a Florida legislator, not me.

  22. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by koan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why don't we all calm down, let justice get served legally, and not have any more people wind up dead.

    It took time to work out that he could be convicted, this is normal procedure, liek the prosecutor said "we don't prosecute by petition" and that's hwo we want it.
    He stayed in touch with authorities and now they are going to prosecute with a 2nd degree murder charge, if convicted he will be in protective custody, which means 23 hours a day in a cell one hour out for the rest of his life.
    That's a lot more brutal than you might imagine, and maybe a lot less than his family might want.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  23. Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a local matter. Keep the damn politics off of slashdot... unless it involves technology.

  24. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He wasn't just hispanic, he is a "White Hispanic" according to the original NYT story. White hispanic being a term used by the NYT only 5 times before in their entire publishing history.

    As for Obama, tell him if I had a son he would have looked a lot like Brian Terry. I'm still waiting for charges to be brought up against the racist DOJ for that one.

  25. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by koan · · Score: 1

    Trayvon's family of course, not Zimmermans.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  26. This is out of control by VinylRecords · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Someone put six bullet holes, last night they shot up, a parked police car that was left near the scene of the shooting. The message being that violence against the police is coming if they don't arrest Zimmerman and charge him with murder. They shot up a cop car. As if that neighborhood didn't need a reason for a neighborhood watch now they have guys firing live rounds into police cars? That's a safe neighborhood?

    The amount of media coverage. International press. 24/7 news cycle. The constant lies. "Zimmerman is white". Showing images of Trayvon Martin when he was only 12 and not 17 (and 6'3"). Editing the 911 call from Zimmerman to make him seem racist. The media wants a circus. A race riot. They want another OJ trial, or Rodney King riot, or Casey Anthony or Amanda Knox level ratings. Who cares if the guy is innocent or guilty or whatever. What's most important is getting ratings and possibly causing a race riot.

    And now we have the political pressure. Elections. Press. Appealing to the base. Even Obama had to give his opinion. "If I had a son he'd look like Trayon". Please Mr. President throw more gasoline on the fire. This is before Obama knew of the facts of the case. Just like when Obama blurted out an opinion about the cop who arrested the Harvard professor and then ended up having to have beer at the White House with the both of them. Will Obama have a beer with George Zimmerman?

    This event is exposing the worst of this country. A perfect storm of all that is wrong with where we are today. The media being anything but objective. The politics doing nothing but making everything racial and partisan. And the overwhelming majority of citizens ignoring the facts and rushing to judgement.

    1. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who wanted to see Zimmerman arrested, I concur. Too many people on all sides of the issue have lost sight of what this is really about and the media spin has been abominable.

    2. Re:This is out of control by Tablizer · · Score: 0

      Will Obama have a beer with George Zimmerman?

      Sure, when they are both in prison together ;-)

    3. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Watch Fox News much? Your willful ignorance of the facts is amazing. The police attempted to ignore the "facts" of this case and cover it up from day one. The lies started with the lack of an investigation and lies in their reports of the incident.

      While I don't agree with vigilante violence or retaliation, maybe people shot up the cop car because they're tired of seeing yet another white guy get away with killing someone simply because that someone isn't white. The cops involved did a horrible job. Whenever the FBI and the DoJ needs to step in to ensure a proper investigation, 99% of the time there is massive official misconduct involved. It's rare that there isn't.

      Regardless, If that kid had been white, this would have been handled radically differently from the first response by the cops.

    4. Re:This is out of control by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Someone put six bullet holes, last night they shot up, a parked police car that was left near the scene of the shooting. The message being that violence against the police is coming if they don't arrest Zimmerman and charge him with murder. They shot up a cop car. As if that neighborhood didn't need a reason for a neighborhood watch now they have guys firing live rounds into police cars? That's a safe neighborhood?

      It stopped being a safe neighborhood when armed vigilantes started stalking the streets, harassing people based on their suspicious blackness, and killing them when they legitimately stand their own ground against threatening behavior.

      The police didn't want to nip that in the bud, so now they have an even bigger problem. I hope they get off their asses and establish sanity with a minimum of further violence.

    5. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called a lynching. The US has a long history of it. Thank our "activists" for making it legitimate again.

    6. Re:This is out of control by RyoShin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I still have a twinge (only a twinge) of hope that by putting this in the court's lap we'll get to have actual facts during discovery and a real investigation by detectives, not the media.

      But at this point it's been worked into such a frenzy that so many sides have put their hand in the pot that there's almost no soup left. Each group will be approaching both defense and prosecutors with all sorts of conflicting information, promises, leads, and threats. Then you have the political pressure you brought up, where I'm sure there's a DA or ADA who wants to look good for elections and will sweep tidbits under the rug to "prove" Zimmerman guilty. Or whatever lawyer announces to do it pro-bono to get his own high horse and sweep a different set of tidbits under the rug to "prove" him innocent, all until the rug resembles a mattress. Then the hard part will be to find 12 people who can't/won't get out of jury duty and at the same time either have not heard of the case or haven't let the media frenzy tell them what to think.

      Still, a twinge.

    7. Re:This is out of control by N!NJA · · Score: 0

      The amount of media coverage. International press. 24/7 news cycle. The constant lies. "Zimmerman is white". Showing images of Trayvon Martin when he was only 12 and not 17 (and 6'3"). Editing the 911 call from Zimmerman to make him seem racist.

      This is all beside the point. He shot an innocent with candies and has not been arrested for it, Mostly because of a complacent police dept. There's an old saying that goes:

      After "I-am-sorry" was born, nobody ever got beaten up again.

      Apologies won't bring the dead back to life. Zimmerman must be tried for it and, if found guilty, he should be jailed for a lonnnnnng time.

      This event is exposing the worst of this country.

      Agreed. It's exposing racism and impunity.

    8. Re:This is out of control by jon3k · · Score: 0

      harassing people based on their suspicious blackness

      Bullshit.

    9. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It stopped being a safe neighborhood when armed vigilantes started stalking the streets, harassing people based on their suspicious blackness, and killing them when they legitimately stand their own ground against threatening behavior.

      Do you have real experience with or knowledge about this neighborhood, or are you just displaying a bias against neighborhood watches in general? Despite the best efforts of the media, I haven't seen any evidence at all (that wasn't easily debunked) to suggest that George Zimmerman was motivated by race, and I haven't read any stories of any other so-called "vigilantes" in that neighborhood, so I'm just wondering how you reached your conclusions.

    10. Re:This is out of control by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Zimmerman was well known for calling 911 to report black people as suspicious.

      You can (legitimately) hate the media hype, the political opportunism, etc., but the defendant is a creep who killed someone for no good reason.

    11. Re:This is out of control by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This event is exposing the BEST of this country. Most people are outraged by this event because up until a few hours ago THERE WOULD BE NO TRIAL. Now, the wheels of justice are spinning, in large part due to public attention on this case. The fact that Zimmerman wasn't arrested is where the travesty lies. He's not automatically guilty now that he's been arrested, and he's not automatically innocent because the police declined to arrest him originally. His innocence or guilt is in the hands of the court, which is where it belonged all along.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    12. Re:This is out of control by Sebastopol · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Funny how liberals pick the ethnicity that suits their argument.

      Obama is from mixed race parents, but is referred to as black because he looks black.

      Zimmerman doesn't look Euro white, but it is convenient to emphasize his white parent when picking sides in this story.

      Of course, the whole race issue in mixed race people is a clear indictment of how poorly we communicate about race in general.

      Also, I'm a flaming liberal.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    13. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure what Fox News has to do with it (I don't watch it), but I learned of these blatantly biased reports (misrepresenting much of what might resemble the truth) by reading past the extremely biased, (Fox included) media we have in this country.

      I'm not sure of how this became political. It's very creepy to think a murder, which has nothing to do with politics, became a political issue. I guess people don't care about what is actually right, but would rather see their 'side' win.

      I simply don't understand how people who claim to be so intelligent, can't wait for the full facts (as much as can be determined, anyway) to be revealed. It seems that many of you are as bad or worse than the average reading level of our fine country. I mean, get your heart and prejudice out of this and look at it for what it might actually be.

      It's disheartening when some of our finest minds actually take sides on something they know very little about.

    14. Re:This is out of control by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Translation: I either didn't read or understand what the OP said - but I picked up on the word "police", so I'll post an anti-police rant.

    15. Re:This is out of control by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 0

      It stopped being a safe neighborhood when armed vigilantes started stalking the streets, harassing people based on their suspicious blackness, and killing them when they legitimately stand their own ground against threatening behavior.

      Do you have real experience with or knowledge about this neighborhood, or are you just displaying a bias against neighborhood watches in general? Despite the best efforts of the media, I haven't seen any evidence at all (that wasn't easily debunked) to suggest that George Zimmerman was motivated by race, and I haven't read any stories of any other so-called "vigilantes" in that neighborhood, so I'm just wondering how you reached your conclusions.

      I have read that Zimmerman specifically targeted blacks for watching. E.g. http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/03/17/2700249/trayvon-martin-shooter-a-habitual.html

      But supposed that is either debunked or can be satisfactorily weasled around. Does it make his actions acceptable to you? Ignoring sane neighborhood watch protocols and the 911 operator and confronting someone while packing a gun?

    16. Re:This is out of control by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 2

      Funny how liberals pick the ethnicity that suits their argument.

      Obama is from mixed race parents, but is referred to as black because he looks black.

      Zimmerman doesn't look Euro white, but it is convenient to emphasize his white parent when picking sides in this story.

      How does Obama typically refer to himself? How about Zimmerman?

    17. Re:This is out of control by onefriedrice · · Score: 5, Insightful

      His innocence or guilt is in the hands of the court, which is where it belonged all along.

      Nope, it is where it belongs (in court) if the prosecutor decides to bring charges, and not before that time. It's easy to sit in your armchair and pretend to know facts that can really only come out of a thorough investigation, but there may be a time, if you ever happen to just be in the wrong place at the wrong time, that you are grateful that such things are investigated before arrests and charges are made. False charges have ruined the lives of innocent people before. The system may have flaws, but the fact that crimes (which may not be crimes) are investigated before charges are filed is not one of those flaws.

      In this case--unless the prosecutor is simply bowing to pressure from the uninformed masses, which would be disgusting--the prosecutor was not convinced of George Zimmerman's story or believes his actions were not sanctioned by the current laws on the books. In that case, a trial is perfectly reasonable. If Zimmerman is found guilty by a panel of his peers, he will be punished. If not, he will walk. This is the way it should be, but only after a proper police investigation and review of the facts by the prosecutor--not the supposed "facts" you get from your nightly news anchor, but the real facts insofar as they can be determined.

      --
      This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
    18. Re:This is out of control by trout007 · · Score: 0

      The police investigated and decided not to charge. Do you have a copy of their investigation? No? Me neither. Let's see what it says. If Trayvon initiated the use of force George was within his rights to shoot to defend himself. If the Prosecutor can prove George initiated the use of force to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt then he will be convicted. Otherwise he's not guilty. Pretty simple.

      Besides if George is found not guilty Obama can just execute him with he new found powers.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    19. Re:This is out of control by jon3k · · Score: 1

      So you know for a fact he never called about any one of any other race? Or just that most of the people he called in where black people he didn't recognize?

    20. Re:This is out of control by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      It stopped being a safe neighborhood when the residents felt the need to patrol their neighborhood because crimes were being committed and the police were ineffective in preventing and solving said crimes.

      The only problem is that criminals are coddled by the system.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    21. Re:This is out of control by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 0

      Zimmerman was well known for calling 911 to report black people as suspicious

      Translation: I heard from a website that Zimmerman did something.

      Martin was a drug using thief and so was a suspicious person who was creeping around a neighborhood.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    22. Re:This is out of control by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Most people who were outraged by this are outraged because of media hype and nothing else. And you know what? If Martin had succeeded in beating Zimmerman's head in, he would have gotten away with it.

      --
      There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
    23. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      harassing people based on their suspicious blackness

      Bullshit.

      Shenanigans on your Bullshit.

      Zimmerman obviously knew "he looks black" before the 911 Operator asked the question. It's completely irrelevant that he was even asked that question.

    24. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the REAL LEGAL QUESTION HERE. He was given a lawful order not to confront the suspect. The Police will almost always tell you to observe and report. The guy could have backed the SUV off a block and watched the kid walk down the street to the residence he was allowed to be at. If the kid tried to steal something he could have sped up and scared him off.

      Take away that silly "stand your ground" law and you have an armed adult, following a teen in a vehicle, then stopping WITH the weapon to "question" him?

      I would say the KID had more justification for self-defense. The guy was about to mount up in 6,000 lbs of dangerous weapon after harassing him. Maybe if e kid was aalive there would be a different story?

    25. Re:This is out of control by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 0, Troll

      It stopped being a safe neighborhood when the residents felt the need to patrol their neighborhood because crimes were being committed and the police were ineffective in preventing and solving said crimes.

      The only problem is that criminals are coddled by the system.

      There were a few property crimes. Zimmerman ultimately helped solve a small number of them, but only by creating an atmosphere of harassment of black people in their own neighborhood and eventually killing one.

      Or is that the kind of non-coddling that you are looking for?

    26. Re:This is out of control by khallow · · Score: 1

      Zimmerman was well known for calling 911 to report black people as suspicious.

      Do you have evidence that he preferentially reported black people? This just seems more of the unsubstantiated claims of racism that have been made. I think a good part of the case against Zimmerman must be pretty weak, else he'd have been charged before this point, no matter what ethnicity he is or who he was related to. He shot a person who was unarmed. It's almost certain that he made some sort of mistake to get into that position even if the shooting turns out to be justified.

      but the defendant is a creep

      At a glance, the core of Slashdot discomfort with Zimmerman seems simply that he appears to be a self-important busy-body of the "neighborhood snitch" perhaps with a hobby of playing cop. I think it's worth noting that even negative personality attributes and behaviors can be made more positive.

      One of the points of a neighborhood watch program is that it allows for a way for people with this sort of inclination to make a positive contribution to society rather a negative one. The "neighborhood snitch" is reporting genuine possible crime and criminals which helps other people rather than harms them.

      Similarly, they could part of a reporting network for a secret police or criminal network.

    27. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama made the BEST point of all though. Prior to being important, he was just another budding young law professor in a neighborhood "out of his class" just this neighborhood and just like this kid. If Obama's girls were boys (only a few years younger) and snuck out of the White House they'd get treated just like this kid did by everybody just walking down the street.

      I'd say the guy did a great job of holding back a lot worse comments.

    28. Re:This is out of control by jon3k · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Did you actually read that? Where in here does it talk about him being a racist? Because i'm reading the exact opposite. What is this damning evidence that he's a racist?

      “He would be the last to discriminate for any reason whatsoever,” Robert Zimmerman wrote. “One black neighbor recently interviewed said she knew everything in the media was untrue and that she would trust George with her life. Another black neighbor said that George was the only one, black or white, who came and welcomed her to the community, offering any assistance he could provide. Recently, I met two black children George invited to a social event. I asked where they met George. They responded that he was their mentor.”

      Interviews with neighbors reveal a pleasant young man passionate about neighborhood security who took it upon himself to do nightly patrols while he walked his dog.

      “He once caught a thief and an arrest was made,” said Cynthia Wibker, secretary of the homeowners association. “He helped solve a lot of crimes.”

      Zimmerman told neighbors about stolen laptops and unsavory characters. Ibrahim Rashada, a 25-year-old African American who works at U.S. Airways, once spotted young men cutting through the woods entering the complex on foot, and later learned items were stolen those days. “It’s a gated community, but you can walk in and steal whatever you want,” Rashada’s wife, Quianna, said. They discussed the topic with Zimmerman when the watch captain knocked on their door late last year. Zimmerman seemed friendly, helpful, and a “pretty cool dude,” Ibrahim Rashada said.

      Where is this racism? I don't get it? Where is your damning proof that he's a racist? He helped and worked with the black people in his community, who trusted and respected him. Where is he obviously racist?

    29. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I'd hate to be in Florida, where the investigation was closer to a cover-up, and you may be glad, if you ever happen to be the victim of a crime, if you are in place where the police do not do their best to avoid actually making an arrest, that the potential criminal has to constructively answer for their actions, not just make a declaration which has to be disproven, but an assertion that has to be proven.

      That's the way it should be when you kill somebody, you have to show us that it was right, not we have to show you were in the wrong.

    30. Re:This is out of control by sandytaru · · Score: 4, Informative

      A lot of the media hype was coming from those trying to defend Zimmernan's actions, like Geraldo Rivera saying wearing a hoodie is threatening. That particular comment got all the righteous mocking it deserved, because chances are good 90% of Americans have a hoodie in their closet (I do) and would probably wear it on a cool, late winter evening in the rain in Florida if they didn't feel the need to take an umbrella.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    31. Re:This is out of control by onefriedrice · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Does it make his actions acceptable to you? Ignoring sane neighborhood watch protocols and the 911 operator and confronting someone while packing a gun?

      I don't know that Zimmerman did confront Martin. The operator told him he didn't need to follow, and it's unclear what happened after that because of conflicting testimony. Considering how few real facts are known, the only reasonable response is to say that I have no idea whether Zimmerman's actions are acceptable or not. However, following someone is not usually illegal. Having a gun is not illegal. And, in Florida, shooting someone and killing them with a gun is not illegal under certain (very special) conditions which you may or may not agree with, although it is the law.

      Now it seems the prosecutor has collected enough facts that she thinks she can convict Zimmerman for breaking the law. A panel of Zimmerman's peers will determine whether or not he really is guilty. If he is guilty, I hope the trial is the least of his discomforts. If he is innocent, the trial will probably not be any worse than how the media and race baiters have already ruined his life, but having to battle false charges certainly wouldn't make things any easier. Whether he is guilty or innocent, let justice prevail.

      --
      This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
    32. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was? He called 911 46 times in 8 years. I've called 911 more times than that in 3, but maybe it's because my sorry ass is always in places where people get you know injured. You sucking at the media's tit and you're believing what they're telling you, hook, line and sinker.

    33. Re:This is out of control by Charliemopps · · Score: 0

      Armed vigilantes?
      It's our constitutional right to carry firearms.
      You're understanding of the term "vigilante" is a bit off.
      Neither of us have any idea what happened in this case. The simple fact that Al Sharpton is right in the middle of it should make you immediately suspect anything and everything coming out of the news media.
      So far there has been no evidence released to the public that shows either of the 2 men involved did anything illegal.
      Police departments are almost always woefully unprepared to deal with the media frenzy that surrounds cases like this. Their actions going forward should be almost entirely suspect. The D.A. as well. Half the public officials in the county are diving for cover while the other half are scrambling for camera time.
      A lot of shit is about to happen, the only thing you can be sure of is that the truth probably will not come out and justice will most assuredly not be done.

    34. Re:This is out of control by hort_wort · · Score: 2

      The amount of media coverage. International press. 24/7 news cycle. The constant lies. "Zimmerman is white". Showing images of Trayvon Martin when he was only 12 and not 17 (and 6'3"). Editing the 911 call from Zimmerman to make him seem racist. The media wants a circus. A race riot. They want another OJ trial, or Rodney King riot, or Casey Anthony or Amanda Knox level ratings. Who cares if the guy is innocent or guilty or whatever. What's most important is getting ratings and possibly causing a race riot.

      I used to watch MSNBC until this blitz. I wouldn't believe anything they say now.

      I would get the most amusement if he's found innocent, sues all the news companies for defamation of character, wins all their profits made while covering him, and uses the money to start an institution to monitor the media for this kind of deceptive practice.

    35. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They HAVE to file charges lest the idiots riot like LA in the early 90's. Doesn't matter if he's guilty or not. The media has ensured he'll never get a fair trial. Folks that claim he's a vigilante fail to realize the " ready to riot retards " pretty much ensure the path this is going to take. :|

    36. Re:This is out of control by misexistentialist · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The original prosecutor on the case was removed by the governor for not bringing charges. It's 100% political, mob justice. And juries have a strong bias towards conviction, in this case it will be close to 100% before the trial begins. Someone has to be held accountable when a boy dies...

    37. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize that any system of justice depends on proving guilt rather than innocence? Self-defense can never be proven on a fundamental level. I think you'd find it better to mistakenly be shot dead, than to be put in jail in a case where you were just fighting off an attacker.

    38. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was given a lawful order not to confront the suspect

      No, he was not. The 911 operator said he didn't need to follow. That's not an order of any kind.

    39. Re:This is out of control by coredog64 · · Score: 1

      You're a little confused about the sequence of events.

      Zimmerman _was_ arrested. That's where we got that video of him being walked into the police station in handcuffs.

      Zimmerman wasn't charged. And frankly, that was down to the state AG who said there needed to be a deeper investigation before charges could be brought.

      It probably wouldn't take a very good lawyer to overturn a conviction if it was found that Zimmerman's civil rights were violated during the investigation (*cough* OJ *cough*)

      Presumably the investigation has happened and now Zimmerman has been charged.

    40. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Explain this:
      Obama: half-black and half-white = black
      Zimmerman: half-Hispanic and half-white = white

      How about we just take "race" out of the equation?

      The cops did what cops should always do: gather evidence to present to a DA to build a case for prosecution. Innocent until proven guilty. You've fallen for the media circus BS.

      "Yet another white guy"? How many times has this happened? Your racist rant is uncalled for.

    41. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your opinion were correct, then the police would never arrest anyone, just let them go and hand the investigation over to the prosecutors to decide whether or not to bring someone in. The truth is that most prosecutors will rarely ever press charges if the police didn't do so in the first place. The police should have initially charged him and then let the DA decide whether or not to try the case and by not doing so, they effectively acted as judge and jury, bypassing the justice system.

      What I do think is wrong is to let /ANY/ details out to the press about suspects before a trial. I was the victim of a media man-hunt so big that I don't even know where you live and I can say with 100% certainty that you read very negative things about me numerous times before I was ever offered the chance of a trial. I didn't have a chance and had to accept the plea bargain as there was no way I could have had a fair trial. Unfortunately for me, even now that my background checks stopped showing my conviction, a quick google search of my very unique name provides tons of opinion, libel and lies about me that I can't escape.

    42. Re:This is out of control by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Not sure who modded you up, but you're really, really wrong about how the legal system is supposed to work.

      The prosecutor's job is not to determine whether to file charges or not. The prosecutor's job is to determine whether there's enough evidence, if the evidence is clean, etc. to file charges.

      Guilty or not, liable or not, responsible or not, is for the jury to decide. It is not for the prosecutor, nor for the police for that matter, to determine guilt.

      However--and this is a big however--since it is technically part of the prosecutor's job to bring something to court, if the prosecutor chooses not to bring something to court, neither judge nor jury nor the police can do anything about it. So the prosecutor does, from a practical sense, have a hand in determining the criminality of a situation.

      It's the same with the police. Their actual job is to prevent crime, to stop criminal activity in progress, and to investigate any (and only certain) potential criminal behavior. As a part of their investigation, they gather evidence, collect witness statements, etc. and file them in a report. They aren't supposed to determine whether a crime has been committed or not either. But as a part of their responsbilities, they need to make the judgment call of whether an action can be considered criminal or not. So they too have a hand in determining criminality.

      The entire sequence of events that leads to a conviction is largely a chain of events that pretty much begins with the police and the police report, and ends with the jury. If that chain is broken in any part, the person walks away scott free. But that's not how the system is supposed to work. It's just how the system ended up working.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    43. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how racists and simpletons who focus too much on race pick the ethnicity that suits their argument.

      FTFY.

      Obama is mixed and yet birthers, Stormfront, general racist fuckheads, etc. default to him being black with no consideration given to the European heritage he inherited from Ann Dunham or the lighter color of his skin in contrast to the literally black skin of pure African blood. The ones who voted for him because he was "black" have also been shortsighted in this way.

      The ones who want Trayvon Martin to be a topic of racial conflict (in this case the media) have played on Zimmerman's light skin and America's focus on color to horrible success. Racists against blacks try to rationalize and get indignant over the conflict (I'm talking the idiots who defend that the shooting wasn't racist yet include derogatory term in the same line). Racists against whites want are out for blood and want to bypass the system to lynch Zimmerman.

      The media has instigated this conflict with terrible success.

    44. Re:This is out of control by hawk · · Score: 1

      Elections aren't an issue; this is a special prosecutor.

      However, this may mean that large numbers of distributins drop his filesystem . . . :)

      hawk, wondering why this is on slashdot

    45. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Zimmerman looks white to me. I understand that some Americans (most Americans?) make some distinctions that I don't entirely understand.

      Obama calls himself black so I'm inclined to say the same, but at a cultural level I do think it's a bit odd that people who are half black, half white refer to themselves as black in the US. Seems like a holdover from the "one drop rule".

    46. Re:This is out of control by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Most people are outraged by this event because up until a few hours ago THERE WOULD BE NO TRIAL.

      Because THE INVESTIGATION WASN"T COMPLETE! One of the primary drawbacks of the American legal system is that it generally demands evidence for a conviction, and that takes an investigation. A small point, but it works in most people's favor. But if you want to start a new process of trial prior to investigation and evidence, go ahead, but you might meet some resistance.

      Now, the wheels of justice are spinning, in large part due to public attention on this case.

      Wrong again. If anything the public attention and pot stirring has made it more difficult to get at the facts. Threats, intimidation, and large racial grievance groups intervening dont' tend to improve the atmosphere for either the investigation or trial. How would you like to have to go to trial under a national spotlight of attention while thousands of people are demonstrating against you, and implying a threat of violence if you aren't convicted? How would you feel if people you knew were forced to go into hiding because a bounty was placed on your head and someone famous tweeted their address because they thought you were staying there? How would you like to have a bounty on your head because you are the "wrong" race? How would you like evidence in your favor to be concealed - perhaps out of some misplaced expectations of racial solidarity? It is amazing to me that you think this was in any way helpful to the cause of justice.

      The fact that Zimmerman wasn't arrested is where the travesty lies.

      The actual travesty is that you don't know what you are talking about but call for people to be arrested. They could have arrested him any time it was necessary, or when issued a warrant based on actual evidence of crime instead of vague feelings of injustice that nobody was arrested. The fact that he is now under arrest proves that point.

      His innocence or guilt is in the hands of the court, which is where it belonged all along.

      After the investigation, and after a prosecutor decides if there is good reason to believe an actual crime was committed, and that the evidence is strong enough to go to trial. Otherwise, it is a wasted gesture and blows the one opportunity you have to try someone for a crime under the law.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    47. Re:This is out of control by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      That's the way it should be when you kill somebody, you have to show us that it was right, not we have to show you were in the wrong.

      Interesting - so, no more presumption of innocence until proven guilty? Under your scheme it is guilty until proven innocent? I doubt that many people will go along. If you think the legal system is open to abuse now, . . . .

      One more thing, is this a standard that you plan to apply generally, or just in this case to nail Zimmerman? Somehow I doubt you want it generally applied.

      Too bad the Soviets lost power, they could use people like you to fill the labor camps and gulags.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    48. Re:This is out of control by chrb · · Score: 1

      Obama is from mixed race parents, but is referred to as black because he looks black.

      Actually, mixed race people are referred to as "black" in the United States due to the concept of hypodescent that was prevalent in the southern states. In other countries, Obama would be more correctly classified as "mixed race".

    49. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but following someone, to the point where they're annoyed, and probably closing in on them and confronting them, perhaps even flashing the weapon in the holster, really reduces the "self defense" argument. Throw in some f- and n-bombs, perhaps, and someone has just thrown gasoline onto the fire. The person w/o the gun starts freaking out, someone throws the first "punch" (it doesn't really matter), and, game on.

      My daughters played a game for a bit. One would touch the other, while loudly decrying, "Stop touching me!", as if the other was "touching" her. Was funny for a bit, but change the context a bit, and it's not so funny. Kind of reminds me of the bully picking on someone to the point where that someone strikes out, and the bully is crying after being confronted, having caved the other person's head in, "bu-bu-but...he hit me first!"

    50. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Where is he obviously racist?

      Well, it's right where...

      OMG!! Obama is going to LOSE!!!

      Quick!! Divide the people along racial & socioeconomic lines!! Incite race and class riots!!! Fan hatred!! Do something!! ANYTHING!!!

      NOW!!

      And along comes poor Georgie at the wrong place at the wrong time to become the latest political sacrificial goat to pander to racism, envy, and hatred.

      And most on /. lap it up because they want something/someone else to hate and blame for what they themselves have allowed to happen.

    51. Re:This is out of control by Kozz · · Score: 1

      I don't know that Zimmerman did confront Martin. The operator told him he didn't need to follow, and it's unclear what happened after that because of conflicting testimony. Considering how few real facts are known, the only reasonable response is to say that I have no idea whether Zimmerman's actions are acceptable or not. However, following someone is not usually illegal. Having a gun is not illegal. And, in Florida, shooting someone and killing them with a gun is not illegal under certain (very special) conditions which you may or may not agree with, although it is the law.

      I may have been reading just another piece of biased garbage, but an article I read just tonight indicated that the two men had their "scuffle" in a grassy area between some houses. I mean, let's think about this: Zimmerman had to get OUT of his fucking vehicle and chase/pursue Martin. (Or do you think that Martin somehow coaxed/forced him out of his vehicle?) Additionally, do you think that Zimmerman would have been so damned "brave" to chase down a potential hooligan if he wasn't packing heat? Maybe, say, if he was carrying some pepper spray? Probably not. Zimmerman seems to have appointed himself sheriff and injected himself and his firearm into a situation where it was far from necessary. Of course I welcome exposure to all the facts, but what we know so far doesn't sound so good for Zimmerman. I don't care if Martin DID make threats or shoot off his mouth or whatever. As for Zimmerman's wounds, it seems perfectly likely that Martin believed he was fighting for his life against some random crazy guy. And maybe he was.

      --
      I only post comments when someone on the internet is wrong.
    52. Re:This is out of control by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      I must know too many people from Florida. Zimmerman clearly looks like he could be part-Latino, and lo and behold, he is. (It also looks like he "could be" a number of other ethnicities that are less common in Florida.)

    53. Re:This is out of control by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Maybe. It seems fairly common for darker-skinned mixed-race people to identify as black and lighter-skinned as mixed-race. Modern forms rarely try to shoehorn you into one particular category, though, and let you pick whatever you want. In general, any answer but white is more beneficial to you.

    54. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So anyone who "looks black", regardless of being a total stranger to the neighborhood, can't be considered to be acting drugged up or suspiciously or it's racism. Got it.

    55. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone has to be held accountable when a boy dies...

      You say that like Zimmerman was a fucking passerby, when Trayvon had a heart attack and now is used as a scapegoat.
      The boy did not DIE. The boy was KILLED by Zimmerman. Whether Zimmerman is guilty of murder remains to be seen.

    56. Re:This is out of control by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      Zimmerman was registered as Hispanic and Democrat on his voter registration. Somehow I get the feeling that if he survives this that D changes to an L or R.

    57. Re:This is out of control by elgo · · Score: 2

      Correction: Someone has to be held accountable when a boy is killed. What better person to hold accountable than his killer?

      --
      - elgo
    58. Re:This is out of control by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Never underestimate how much _enjoyment_ many Americans get out of calling other Americans racists. Doing this makes them feel really good, because if you're pointing out how racist the other guy is, that means _you_ are a post-racial, intelligent, sensitive soul while that other guy over there he's a stupid racist. It's primitive ego gratification.

      That's why these things take off so much. On the plus side at least it made them take a closer look at Zimmerman, they massively fucked up that initial investigation. "Oh, self defense? Why then you're free to go Mr. Zimmerman!". No. They should have investigated seriously.

      On the minus side, Zimmerman will never get a fair trial now. Media whore prosecutor, 3 ring media circus, etc... Whoever's on that jury is going to have a lot of pressure to convict because, well, see my first paragraph. If you don't find him guilty you give people an excuse to call you racist.

      I'm fucking tired of it and generally change the radio with I hear anything about the case.

    59. Re:This is out of control by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah yeah yeah, we know. Everyone's racist but you and the right-thinking brigade and he better change his tune quick if he doesn't want to be labeled a racist.

    60. Re:This is out of control by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, Zimmerman's fucked. He will 100% be found guilty regardless of the facts. What juror wants to be the "racist" to let off this "murderer"? I don't know enough facts to know either way whether he's guilty (I'm inclined to think he's a fuckstick and needs manslaughter charges), but I know enough about human nature to know he's fucked. Just like that "bully" (lol) who recorded his gay roommate got fucked.

    61. Re:This is out of control by erroneus · · Score: 1

      There's a huge problem with your line of thought on the subject. It necessitates that everyone simply trust that the government will "take care of everything" and that the most people should do is lock their doors and report incidents to police. Meanwhile, there are more criminals than police and they often use better guns than police and are not limited to rules.

      You are essentially saying that letting crime go as it has been is "good enough." I just can't agree with that.

      "It stopped being safe" long before people were prompted to "vigilantism." Yeah, let's call it that with emphasis on vigil.

      You can speak of gun control and all of the other ideas related to your general position, but the facts do not support your position all that well. (Yes, I am presuming you are anti-gun as well as anti-neighborhood watch and anti-conceal-and-carry) In every case where conceal and carry has been accepted, crime rates went down. There was no "blood in the streets." And it's inconvenient to point out six bullets in a police car... quite likely from an unlicensed firearm... from a actual criminal.

      When the choices boil down to roll-over and take it or take matters into your own hands, I'm not inclined to favor letting things just happen.

      *You* don't know what happened that night. I don't either. You are making statements like "standing their ground" as if the person trespassing the neighborhood was standing on HIS GROUND. He wasn't. And it's still very unexplained exactly why he was there... and by that, I mean the black teen with his history of "behavior problems." I can't say for certain what the demographic of that particular neighborhood was at the time, but if there were no black people living there, being black, in the middle of the night in a gated community, on foot fits the description of suspicious pretty well. And if he were there visiting friends, I think the news would have put that out by now.

      I urge you to think your position through. I get the feeling you've never been the victim of serious crime or witnessed death at the hands of violent teenagers before. And if you have, I'd be very interested to know how you could take your position even under those circumstances. You have the opportunity to change my views.

    62. Re:This is out of control by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, this opens the doors to race riots if a proper conviction doesn't occur. You are assuming they have enough evidence to support prosecuting. It is more likely that the police and prosecution are bowing to political and public pressure and are responding by passing the buck over to the judiciary. The judiciary will then have the uncomfortable decision of whether or not to risk neighborhoods and even lives of innocents if they return a "not guilty" and this is a case like so many others we have seen where race riots are likely to occur.

      (Isn't it funny how we say "race riots" when we mean something more specific? If it were white people rioting, we would call it "hate crime." Our denial of truth in our language says more about what we are afraid to admit than anything else.)

    63. Re:This is out of control by erroneus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      His name is Zimmerman -- he's obviously a white jew who hates black people.

      As with many others, I too initially thought he was a white jewish person. I also made a number of other assumptions which were not true -- that there were few, if any black people living in the neighborhood and more. The article is rather informative but the more interesting facts are later in the piece where people are less likely to read them. I especially liked the bit at the very bottom amending the story stating that the number of times police were called was between a much wider range of dates (from 2004 rather than from 2011).

      The fact about people, myself included, is that regardless of how much I want to learn the truth, we tend to blind ourselves to facts that disagree with our positions. The more I learn about this case, the more sympathetic I become to Zimmerman... not that I wasn't initially sympathetic... I was. But then I started reading slanted articles and statements which really painted Zimmerman as Rambo with an axe to grind against black people. But that's really not the case either.

      Zimmerman is being painted in ways that simply don't fit. I think that this case is too public now and real justice cannot occur. If he's acquitted, there will be riots -- violent riots and "warnings" using real bullets in targetting police cars indicate that retaliation for a not-guilty will involve the use of firearms. I also think a "guity' verdict will result in other tragic things such as a diminishing right to defend one's self, one's family and one's community. There will be no justice in this case. It's impossible.

    64. Re:This is out of control by fremsley471 · · Score: 1

      Zimmerman was registered as Hispanic and Democrat

      What? You have register your race? For what reason?

      Thought the US was a little more advanced than that.

    65. Re:This is out of control by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      "The amount of media coverage. International press. 24/7 news cycle. The constant lies. "Zimmerman is white"."

      He's definitely not black.

      Besides, has it slipped your mind that Zimmerman was accused for domestic violence and shouldn't even have got a gun license? No? I wonder how it works. Of course, Zimmerman can't be guilty of anything. He's an avenging angel, striking crime with justice!

      And before crying "mob justice!" - can you give an example where a black man walked away from a police station after shooting a white man in a confrontation without any witnesses? I haven't been able to find such case at all.

      THAT'S THE ISSUE. DA hasn't done anything to actually investigate the crime. Martin's identity had been established only after about 3 days after the shooting. The first witnesses were questioned after about A WEEK. WTF?

    66. Re:This is out of control by Rakshasa-sensei · · Score: 1

      There's a map out there, showing the paths each of them took and their positions at various points in their respective phone calls. Zimmerman was _NOT_ going back to his car, consider that he doubled back and went around the houses so that he'd approach the kid straight on.

    67. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're understanding of the term "vigilante" is a bit off.

      "You are understanding of the term vigilante"?

      I think "you are" English is a bit off, more like.

      http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/your

    68. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Innocent until proven guilty" is shorthand for "if guilt cannot be proven, then innocence must be presumed". The potential of being guilty is why people are brought to court, innocence comes when guilt is in doubt. Guilt or innocence only applies to the act itself and isn't considered until the defendant enters a plea. If they plead guilty, they are guilty and all other matters serve to mitigate sentencing. If they plead not guilty, the prosecution then presents its case for why they believe the defendant is actually guilty. It's pretty much a given that Zimmerman shot Trayvon. He is guilty of breaking the law against the act of killing another human being.

      Self defense is a special exception to the law against killing other humans, and if self defense can be proven, then the exception to the law is granted and Zimmerman would be found not to have broken the law, retroactively. If Zimmerman chooses to plead not guilty, it will be on the basis that he was acting in self defense in accordance with the "stand your ground" law. The prosecution will then present their reasons for why he shouldn't be found to have acted in self defense.

      The reasons for the act and the situation it was carried out in can be used to prove self defense. Exactly why Zimmerman decided he should shoot Trayvon, whether he felt threatened, whether a reasonable person in the same circumstances would feel the same (juries are useful for this), whether it was necessary that he shoot the kid (for which the stand your ground law seems to take away a need to find other solutions before using self defense, such as whether he could have escaped the danger). If the reasoning isn't plausible, then self defense is found to not have occurred. At the point that no other defense for committing the act can be brought forward, a guilty verdict is rendered.

    69. Re:This is out of control by baffled · · Score: 0

      I can't believe people argue the right to defend your life with a gun. Is it the gun people find offensive, or should we all only be permitted to run away when someone is trying to kill us? Hopefully you're quick on your feet.

    70. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He shot an innocent with candies

      You don't know whether Trayvon was innocent or not. Mentioning the candy is just an effort to create an innocent image of Martin. The fact that Martin had candy on his person is not relevant to the case.

      and has not been arrested for it, Mostly because of a complacent police dept.

      Zimmerman was detained and questioned by police for hours. Not everyone who shoots someone else is arrested, even if the police believe him to have committed a crime.

      Zimmerman must be tried for it

      He should be if the evidence warrants it. Hopefully, the prosecutor really does have a case and is not simply caving to political pressure.

      This event is exposing the worst of this country.

      Agreed. It's exposing racism and impunity.

      The only racism exposed so far is that of the New Black Panthers and, perhaps, that of the race-hustlers and racial ambulance chasers. There is no evidence whatsoever that Zimmerman was in any way motivated by race in any of his actions that night.

    71. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How in hell is it good that the media gets to decide who goes to trial and who doesn't?

    72. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Where is he obviously racist?

      His name, silly!

      If he'd had the decency to use a proper Hispanic name this story wouldn't have made the local advertiser.

      //sarcasm

      Admit it, didn't you assume he was white and probably Jewish when you first heard of this story? The media fell over themselves to be anti-semitic and blundered into "EditGate".

      P.S. Captcha is "lynched". How apropos.

    73. Re:This is out of control by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Besides, has it slipped your mind that Zimmerman was accused for domestic violence and shouldn't even have got a gun license?

      Do Americans lose their 2nd amendment rights as a result of merely being accused, without even a trial? What's the point of having a Bill of Rights? I'm an Australian and there is some discussion here about whether we should have a bill of rights. I like the idea, but in practice I'm not sure I see the point. Seems like a waste of paper, particularly since ours would be written by an established government, not recently successful revolutionaries, so the chances of us getting anything worthwhile written in are remote.

    74. Re:This is out of control by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      The prosecution should need to prove (beyond a reasonable doubt) you killed someone. Then, if your defense is that you did it in self defense, it should be your task to prove it, at least to some lesser standard of proof.

      Can you imagine if just claiming self defense would be enough to avoid arrest until the investigation was 'complete'? Gang shooting? 'Yes officer, we were afraid they were going to hurt us, so we defended ourselves. See, they have guns, so we were obviously justified in shooting them.'

    75. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand what race has to do with this AT ALL. You are not allowed to murder people! Period! It doesn't matter if you're racist or not. There is no question that Zimmerman shot an unarmed teenager to death. Who gives a shit if he's racist? Does that make him more dead? Who cares if he's not racist? Does that make him less dead? I just don't understand the obsession with arguing if he is or isn't racist. Someone is dead yes?

    76. Re:This is out of control by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      "Do Americans lose their 2nd amendment rights as a result of merely being accused, without even a trial?"

      To carry a hidden gun, yes. Medical reasons might also disqualify you.

    77. Re:This is out of control by oreaq · · Score: 1

      I have read that Zimmerman specifically targeted blacks for watching. E.g. http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/03/17/2700249/trayvon-martin-shooter-a-habitual.html [miamiherald.com]

      This lie has already been debunked a couple of times in this thread. Where does the linked article state that he "specifically targeted blacks"?

      Does it make his actions acceptable to you?

      Of course not. But the point ist: you are a fucking idiot for instigating racial tensions with your stupid lies.

    78. Re:This is out of control by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      So you don't lose the right to have one in your home, or carried in plain sight, just to conceal it? Is that only if you are charged for it or just if they apply for restraining orders? How long does your ban last?

      What happens if a policeman's wife accuses him of domestic violence? Does he still get paid while unable to work, or get put on desk duty? It seems pretty unjust to me that without any standard of proof you could lose your right to self defense and maybe even your right to do your job. Mind you, we don't have very strong self defense protection here in Australia anyway, unless you are a woman.

    79. Re:This is out of control by geoskd · · Score: 1

      Agreed. It's exposing racism and impunity.

      It's exposing far worse than that. It is exposing the extreme willingness of the mass media in this country to use racism and impunity to further their own monetary and political goals. The police have been very careful to dot their i's and cross their t's because they cant afford a mis-step in large part due to the over-amped media attention to this.

      Racism will never die as long as a story like this is a media sensation.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    80. Re:This is out of control by Talderas · · Score: 1

      Now it seems the prosecutor has collected enough facts that she thinks she can convict Zimmerman for breaking the law. A panel of Zimmerman's peers will determine whether or not he really is guilty. If he is guilty, I hope the trial is the least of his discomforts. If he is innocent, the trial will probably not be any worse than how the media and race baiters have already ruined his life, but having to battle false charges certainly wouldn't make things any easier. Whether he is guilty or innocent, let justice prevail.

      I don't think the evidence is there to get a 2nd degree murder conviction. I think there may be yet unreleased evidence that would lead to a manslaughter conviction. Bringing the 2nd degree charge is pretty much designed to achieve a manslaughter plea bargain or use as leverage by the prosecution to make manslaughter look like a valid conviction and have them drop the severity.

      I don't consider either of those cases to be justice. In the first, the state is using its power to intimidate the defendant with the costs of the trial to achieve a conviction. The second case is using the higher charge to influence the jury to sympathize with the prosecution even if they don't have the evidence to conclusively prove the lesser charge.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    81. Re:This is out of control by geoskd · · Score: 1

      This event is exposing the BEST of this country. Most people are outraged by this event because up until a few hours ago THERE WOULD BE NO TRIAL. Now, the wheels of justice are spinning, in large part due to public attention on this case.

      That is an extremely libelous statement, and one which I hope you are prepared to provide more than hear-say evidence. Are you an investigative journalist? have you personally been tracking down evidence for this case? You sir are the problem with this country, far more than racism (and that is saying a lot). When well meaning idiots go off half cocked at the slightest hint of conspiracy or injustice, you give power to the media who will use you and your ignorance to fuel their own agenda. Let the powers that be, do their work, and when you have hard evidence of real negligence, then speak up. Until then, take your righteous indignation and keep it to yourself lest you be accused of using someone elses tragedy to further your own public image.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    82. Re:This is out of control by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 1

      He shot an innocent with candies

      Objection. Assumes facts not in evidence. If Martin knocked Zimmerman to the ground and caused injuries to his nose and head, as Zimmerman claims, then Martin was not "an innocent."

      ~Loyal
       

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    83. Re:This is out of control by Talderas · · Score: 1

      I've thought this too. That's why I think the 2nd degree murder charge is never intended to see a conviction. Between the severity of the conviction, the fact that an impartial jury will take a long time, and the fact there exists a possibility that Zimmerman will not get bail you have a very compelling case to suggest that the prosecution is aiming for Zimmerman to accept a plea bargain for manslaughter.

      Figure that it takes 10 months to find a jury and that he would be serving time against his eventual sentencing if he did accept the plea bargain, it becomes more desirable to take the bargain.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    84. Re:This is out of control by Norwell+Bob · · Score: 1

      Do you edit audio for NBC? Because you left out some details for the sake of villifying Zimmerman.

      You stated: "He shot an innocent with candies," painting the image of a sweet little cherub skipping down the street with a big lollipop, and a bully with a gun taking his life with no cause. That ignores the evidence and eyewitness reports that a 6'3" man was smashing Zimmerman's head into the ground before he was shot, ostensibly in self-defense. That he had Skittles in his pocket at the time is irrelevant.

      At the end of the day, neither you nor I know what REALLY happened that night, and there is no way of knowing what was going through either man's mind leading up to and during the shooting. Zimmerman stated right from the beginning that he would turn himself in if he was charged.

      So now there is going to be a trial. I really hope that justice is served. I fear that even if Zimmerman is genuinely innocent, he will be made a sacrificial lamb on the altar of national guilt. I guarantee that, if he is found innocent, there will be protests, gnashing of teeth, potentially riots, and the man will probably never live in peace again.

    85. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the original original local Sanford prosecutor wanted to bring charges, but he was overruled from above. Was that political? I thought it was because someone died.

    86. Re:This is out of control by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      The media wants a circus.

      That, at least, should not be news to anyone.

      Even Obama had to give his opinion. "If I had a son he'd look like Trayon (sic)". Please Mr. President throw more gasoline on the fire. This is before Obama knew of the facts of the case.

      I don't know how Obama would have to "know the facts of the case" to state that if he had a son, his son would be black. I think he could pretty safely say that at any point whatsoever. Racism is still a real problem in America, and I'm sure it is an issue Obama has had to consider personally. Let's give you a moment to consider why that might be.

      This event is exposing the worst of this country. A perfect storm of all that is wrong with where we are today. The media being anything but objective.

      The media has been anything but objective for a very long time now. Glad you caught on. We'd do well to bring back the Fairness Doctrine, require that news reporting actually be factually accurate, and amend the Constitution to definitively state that corporations are not people and therefore have no inherent human rights. Guess what the chances of any of those are?

      The politics doing nothing but making everything racial and partisan.

      To be quite honest, that's been happening since Obama's election. I've seen a tremendous increase in blatant, open racism, as well as the subtler types, ever since he became a serious candidate, let alone won. Whatever you think of him (and I don't have a particularly high opinion of him on a lot of things), we should judge him on the merits of his policies and actions, not anything else. But the "anyone but Obama" rhetoric is sure showing what the real trouble is here, when even someone as crazy as Santorum could ever be under serious consideration. Anyone who thinks Santorum is a better choice than...really, anyone...has something else going on besides evaluating a candidate on their merits and platform.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    87. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, and we need to make sure there is a conviction - can't upset the black community, ya know. LA riots and all...

    88. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The original prosecutor on the case was removed by the governor for not bringing charges. It's 100% political, mob justice. And juries have a strong bias towards conviction, in this case it will be close to 100% before the trial begins. Someone has to be held accountable when a boy dies...

      Yes, someone has to be held accountable when a boy dies...

      Howabout someone whom, by his own admission, pulled the goddamn trigger?

    89. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The moral of the story is don't shoot someone unless you are willing to demonstrate you did it properly. This case should go to trial so everything is okayed. What shouldn't happen is that it becomes a media circus. This man deserves respect with process irregardless of what happens. I personally have difficult understanding how you can fear for your life when you have a gun and the other person does not. You have complete control of the situation even if the other person doesn't know it.

    90. Re:This is out of control by jimmifett · · Score: 1

      It stopped being a safe neighborhood when the residents felt the NEED for an armed vigilante.

      I personally think EVERYONE should be armed and have proper training in firearm use and safety, as well as knife fighting and martial arts training for when firearms are impractical. When criminals realize that citizens will no longer consider themselves victims and are willing to stand their ground, criminals will think twice.

      Yes, I am implying Trayvon is likely a criminal, I've lived in both Sanford and that part of Miami, and everyone knows his HS is filled with thugs, as Trayvon appears to be from his suspension records and twitter feeds.

    91. Re:This is out of control by jimmifett · · Score: 1

      The sad fact is that, even if found not guilty (not guilty is not the same as being found innocent btw), thug Trayvon's family will probably win a civil 'wrongful death' suit against him like what happened to the Juice.

    92. Re:This is out of control by jimmifett · · Score: 1

      Only idiots and ppl trying to hide their identity would wear a hoodie that absorbs and retains water, in the rain, in the wind, while it's cold, at night to buy a yoohoo and some skittles.

      One also don't walk in cold, wet, windy rain if they can avoid it. They run to their destination whenever possible and try to cover their head with something, which makes them quite conspicuous, unlike burglars and thieves who would want to make a little eye catching motion as possible while they stake out their next score.

    93. Re:This is out of control by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      Reread his post.

      He's not alleging that Zimmerman's actions were illegal. he's alleging Zimmerman failed to follow standard neighborhood watch protocol, confronted Martin, and carried a gun. While it's possible his actions were legal, it is not possible that they were anything but stupid.

      I've been active in Neighborhood Watch organizations, such as Detroit's CB Radio patrols. The point of these organizations is to take some of the workload of patrolling a neighborhood off the police, so they can do real stuff. And everything Zimmerman did is the exact opposite. He's calling the cops to report a kid who wasn't doing anything. This means they have to send a patrol out to stop a kid with Skittles. Instead of preventing rape the police in Zimmerman's neighborhood were preventing Skittles.

      He's following the kid, which is statistically likely to lead to said kid turning around and asking "Why are you following me?," which (best-case scenario) results in an argument and more calls to the cops. The police have to send more then one car, because one cop can't really do much to keep two idiots from beating the shit out of each-other. They probably need three or four to be safe. Which is a significant proportion of the cops they have on duty. And their rape prevention effort grinds to a halt until they can track down the arguing pair, who have now committed at least one actual crime ("disturbing the peace"). Zimmerman's neighborhood watch group increased the number of criminals in his neighborhood. George Zimmerman is an idiot.

      He's carrying a gun. It's loaded, so he clearly wasn't planning on bluffing. This proves that he knew that his following the kid could result in a confrontation, and he was prepared to win it. This was the biggest no-no of all in every meeting our group had with the cops. People who feel safe because they're armed take risks. neighborhood watchman, who typically have no training whatsoever, don't know how to make those smart risks. Somebody's gonna die if you let your neighborhood watchman carry their Glocks on patrol, and odds are that it won't be an actual criminal. It'll be a 17-year-old kid on a Skittles run.

      It's entirely possible George Zimmerman can prove he isn't a murderer. In fact with Florida's stand-your-ground-law he can probably skate even if forensics prove he beat himself up to make his story more credible. But the simple facts are a) his overly-aggressive tactics turned a simple Skittles-run by a 17-year-old kid into a murder case, b) he dragged his hometown's name through the mud, c) he probably ruined his life and d) if he wasn't an idiot none of this shit would have happened.

    94. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Licensed to carry a firearm and a student of criminal justice, Zimmerman went door-to-door asking residents to be on the lookout, specifically referring to young black men who appeared to be outsiders, and warned that some were caught lurking, neighbors said.

      (Emphasis mine)

      It might just be the way it's worded, but seeing as it's a paraphrase of something the neighbours said, I would say it's relevant.

      For the colour-blind or willfully ignorant among us - it makes it seem like he wasn't bothered if you were white and stealing shit, and would find you suspicious just for being black.

      Once again however - I am not stating I believe this, just saying what it sounds like his nieghbours were saying.

    95. Re:This is out of control by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      His tendency to report blacks has been widely reported. Both Mother Jones and the Daily Beast listened to every 911 call still on record, and most of the ones about people are young black males:
      http://motherjones.com/politics/2012/03/trayvon-shooters-911-calls-potholes-piles-trash-black-men
      http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/03/23/did-trayvon-shooter-abuse-911.html

      All the ones that report one or two guys for basically walking around ("being suspicious" in Zimmermanese) are black kids. One is about a seven-year-old.

    96. Re:This is out of control by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      All the people he called in about for "acting suspicious" were black kids. One was seven to nine years old by his own estimate.

      http://motherjones.com/politics/2012/03/trayvon-shooters-911-calls-potholes-piles-trash-black-men
      http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/03/23/did-trayvon-shooter-abuse-911.html

    97. Re:This is out of control by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      This isn't Italy, where Courts have actually ruled that true statements can be defamatory, or the UK with notorious libel laws, it's the US with an absolute right to free speech. Which means that attorneys have to prove that a) a statement was false, b) the sayer knew that, and c) he said it anyway just to defame the target. Moreover none of this applies if the plaintiff is a 'public figure,' particularly if said public figure is being defamed for something he does as part of his job. Thus Obama can't sue anybody for obviously false claims that he wasn't born in the US.

      Zimmerman was neighborhood watch captain. As such he's a public figure in all actions he takes regarding the neighborhood watch, and he was pretty clearly being a neighborhood watchman when he called in Treyvon. You could make shit up about him that relates to his Neighborhood Watch Captaincy, admit that in Court, and still win the libel suit. Even if that doesn't apply, as a crime suspect he's a limited purpose public figure, which means the media can report just about anything relating to the crime it wants.

    98. Re:This is out of control by sandytaru · · Score: 1

      You mean, cover their head with the hood of a hoodie? It depends on how heavy the rain is - if you've ever lived in the South, you know that "rain" is a blanket term that covers a misting drizzle to a downpour so bad you need to stop even if you're in a car. Misting rain doesn't really need an umbrella, especially if it wasn't raining when he set out to the store to begin with.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    99. Re:This is out of control by kkaos · · Score: 1

      First of all, please provide links to where you acquired the above quotes; I'd like to read the articles containing those quotes for myself. If the above is true, it would be a travesty of justice if this man is convicted of any sort of murder. If the gun laws in Florida don't allow an armed person to shoot an unarmed person in self-defense and if the kid was truly unarmed, then, yes, Zimmerman doesn't stand a chance in court.

      But, hey, where's the evidence that Zimmerman attacked this kid? That's what I'm seeing and hearing a lot of in the media, that Zimmerman was the one who instigated the confrontation. If police can't find evidence of this and if self-defense with a gun against an unarmed person is not a crime in Florida, then Zimmerman should walk (unless there's a law that he broke that I neglected in my argument). If Zimmerman doesn't walk based on the previously stated condition, then I think it's fair to say that authorities will have convicted Zimmerman only to prevent possible rioting; they will have bowed to pressure from the black community, and our justice system will have failed miserably.

      "Where in here does it talk about him being a racist?" Simple. He's a racist because he's not black and shot and killed a black person. Also, as a previous poster pointed out, the media is trying to instigate a firestorm ALL for BIG RATINGS. I believe someone else has pointed out before that some of the media should be criminally charged if their warping of events leads to any rioting and violence that may ensue. Reform in the media has been long overdue.

    100. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe people argue the right to defend your life with a gun.

      You're obviously a simpleton, so I'll just point out for you that one of the main points at issue is *whether* his life was actually in danger.

    101. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      person trespassing the neighborhood

      How do you 'trespass a neighborhood'?

      Are you really saying that entering any neighborhood where you do not live is 'trespassing' even when you are *not* on private property?

      Maybe you would like a nice permit system where you are not allowed to go anywhere outside your home neighborhood and the commercial district without police permission? Complusory id cards, implanted gps trackers, should all work nicely.

      BTW, There are plenty of claims that he *was* invited, by his girlfriend.

    102. Re:This is out of control by cffrost · · Score: 1

      He called 911 46 times in 8 years.

      That's fucking crazy... I hypothesize that the police probably didn't want to arrest him because they couldn't stand to listen to any more of that man-child's lunatic cry-wolf bullshit. Who would've thought; calling 911 for years as a "cry for help." The "emergency" he was constantly calling about... that's right, it was himself.

      So, he was all: "Hire me! or arrest me! Just pay attention to me goddamnit, before somebody loses an eye!"

      Hm. I wonder if the police realized that Deputy Dipshit was running around with a real gun and live ammunition that whole time.

      --
      Thank you, Edward Snowden.

      "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    103. Re:This is out of control by ghostdoc · · Score: 1

      What I find weird is that everyone seems so eager to pre-judge this, and almost no-one seems to have any faith in the trial process.

      There's no-one here saying 'let's wait and see what the court decides after hearing the evidence', everyone presumes guilt or innocence based on whatever political position they favour.

      So...let's wait and see what the court decides after hearing the evidence. They get to examine all of it, with strict safeguards around bias, contamination by outside opinions, racial balance, everything.

      --
      Business/App ideas are like arseholes: everyone's got one, they're mostly shit, but very rarely they contain a diamond
    104. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny how liberals pick the ethnicity that suits their argument.

      Obama is from mixed race parents, but is referred to as black because he looks black.

      Zimmerman doesn't look Euro white, but it is convenient to emphasize his white parent when picking sides in this story.

      How does Obama typically refer to himself? How about Zimmerman?

      Zimmerman self identified as Hispanic on his voter registration card.

    105. Re:This is out of control by Cederic · · Score: 1

      If Trayvon initiated the use of force George was within his rights to shoot to defend himself

      So self defence isn't limited to reasonable force? Because in the UK, shooting someone that's unarmed isn't reasonable force and wouldn't be self-defence, even if they were attacking you.

    106. Re:This is out of control by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I can't believe people argue the right to defend your life with a gun.

      I'm struggling to understand how an unarmed teenager was a threat to the life of a man driving a car.

      should we all only be permitted to run away when someone is trying to kill us?

      So far there's only evidence of attempted homicide by one person - hint: it's not the fucking dead one.

    107. Re:This is out of control by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Yes, I am implying Trayvon is likely a criminal

      Wait, sorry what? That's an excuse to shoot him dead for walking down the street?

    108. Re:This is out of control by Cederic · · Score: 1

      If Martin knocked Zimmerman to the ground and caused injuries to his nose and head, as Zimmerman claims, then Martin was not "an innocent."

      Even if Martin did do that, that isn't necessarily a crime. It's quite possible to knock someone over without breaking the law.

      Shit, people defending Zimmerman are suggesting that shooting dead an unarmed teenager doesn't break the law, and you think knocking someone over immediately makes them guilty?

    109. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't Italy, where Courts have actually ruled that true statements can be defamatory, or the UK with notorious libel laws

      Im in the UK and libel laws stop 300 miles south of me. Libel only exists in England & Wales, not the UK.

    110. Re:This is out of control by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 1

      Where is this racism? I don't get it? Where is your damning proof that he's a racist? He helped and worked with the black people in his community, who trusted and respected him. Where is he obviously racist?

      You are cherry picking quotes. I can do that too, e.g.:

      Zimmerman went door-to-door asking residents to be on the lookout, specifically referring to young black men who appeared to be outsiders

      He came by here and talked about carrying guns and getting my wife more involved with guns,” he said. “He said I should have a weapon and that his wife took classes to learn how to use one.

      “I do have a weapon, but I don’t walk around the neighborhood with mine!”

      Actually, he does not walk around the neighborhood at all.

      “I fit the stereotype he emailed around,” he said. “Listen, you even hear me say it: ‘A black guy did this. A black guy did that.’ So I thought, ‘Let me sit in the house. I don’t want anyone chasing me.’”

      For walks, he goes downtown. A pregnant Quianna listened to her husband’s rationale, dropped her head, and cried.

      “That’s so sad,” she said. “I hope our child doesn’t have to go through that.”

      BTW, that second quote directly follows your fourth. Also, the high praise for George in your first quote comes from his own father.

    111. Re:This is out of control by jheath314 · · Score: 1

      I have witnessed violent crime before, and I fully support neighborhoods having programs like neighborhood watch (which, incidentally, tell their volunteers to call the police, not to confront suspects). I am also in favor of civilians owning firearms for self-defense (for cases like home invasion). However, I am absolutely against vigilantes trying to play cop, for the reasons that the Zimmerman case makes abundantly clear.

      It takes an awful lot of training to teach a person how to use a firearm responsibly, how to properly identify suspicious behavior, and how to take control of a situation without having to resort to lethal force. There's a reason why police go through years of training, and why there is a selection process to weed out people with mental issues, and even with all that, there are plenty of cases of police screwing up. Allowing anyone to play cop with no real training or selection is a recipe for disaster.

      Neighborhood watch programs explicitly forbid the watchmen from trying to confront suspects... they are instead supposed call the actual police, and alert neighbors to the possible threat.

      By the way, nice attempt to portray Martin as "trespassing the neighborhood"... he was staying with family members who lived there, you idiot.

      --
      Procrastination Man strikes again!
    112. Re:This is out of control by jimmifett · · Score: 0

      I lived in sanford. It doesn't mist, it pours. In florida, it always rains. You count on it. Also, the ominous rian clouds in the sky is a big give-away

    113. Re:This is out of control by jimmifett · · Score: 0

      Yes, when someone hops on top of you and starts wailing on you, yes, perfect justification for enhanced perforation.

      The kid could have kept walking himself. Didn't have to jump on a guy and beat on him. Thug got what thugs of any color deserve when they attack someone.

    114. Re:This is out of control by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Even if the 911 operator said, "You must get back in your car and go home, right now!!" it would not be a lawful order. It would be a command from someone on the other end of a phone line with all the authority of both jack and squat.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    115. Re:This is out of control by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      How many white or hispanic kids did he see walking around looking suspicious? Without something to compare it to, your "tendency" doesn't mean much.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    116. Re:This is out of control by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      It is more likely that the police and prosecution are bowing to political and public pressure

      Do you have any information to back this statement up? Because it sounds like purely speculative bullshit to me. If they were going to bow to pressure, they could have done it weeks ago.

      Unfortunately, this opens the doors to race riots if a proper conviction doesn't occur. You are assuming they have enough evidence to support prosecuting.

      Yes, and the only reason they might not have enough evidence is because the only other witness is dead. That's an awfully lucky position for Zimmerman to find himself in, considering that he stalked, provoked into a fight, and killed an unarmed person. If I'd been in Martin's position, I'd have likely "stood my ground" as well when some lunatic (with a criminal record, no less, though Martin obviously couldn't know this) started following me.

      I think the whole race thing is a red herring, and a distraction from the real problem: stand your ground laws are fucking stupid because they create situations precisely like this one.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    117. Re:This is out of control by Optic7 · · Score: 1

      Please. An unarmed man was shot to death by another man in an altercation. Regardless of any other circumstances, this needs to go to trial. Any prosecutor that doesn't take a case like this to trial should be fired.

    118. Re:This is out of control by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      By that standard any individual lynch mob participant can't be called a racist, because they only killed that one black guy, and it's impossible to prove that one black dude didn't deserve more then any white guy they've ever seen.

      What I can tell is that Sanford's only 30.5% black. Given that it is physically impossible for a teenager to walk in a non-suspicious manner, I'd have to say the odds that he never saw a white dude doing exactly what Trayvon Martin was doing are pretty low.

    119. Re:This is out of control by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      He shot a black guy therefore he must be racist. It makes a better story anyway and you know they don't like for facts to get in the way of a story.

    120. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The original prosecutor on the case was removed by the governor for not bringing charges. It's 100% political, mob justice. And juries have a strong bias towards conviction, in this case it will be close to 100% before the trial begins. Someone has to be held accountable when a boy dies...

      Guess what? The laws are there to protect and serve that 'mob' , not the interests of lawyers, governors, etc. *WE* the people saw an injustice and demanded it get fixed.

      Simple fix - don't be a vigilante, and let the POLICE do their jobs.

    121. Re:This is out of control by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Hell, even an old fat white guy like me has a hoodie. But then Geraldo likes to say stupid shit like that.

    122. Re:This is out of control by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      I get the feeling you've never been the victim of serious crime or witnessed death at the hands of violent teenagers before.

      Not death, but I do recall being rather traumatized by the actions of three teenagers, violently beating down and kicking another, in an arcade at the Coral Sky Mall in Coral Springs, FL, back around 1996 or so. I was playing a game, and recall having to step forward (somewhat into the game) as they passed by me, but they were not apparently attacking randomly, they had gotten their target and then scattered.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    123. Re:This is out of control by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      The police have been very careful to dot their i's and cross their t's because they cant afford a mis-step in large part due to the over-amped media attention to this.

      Interesting take; my take is, I wish they were always this careful.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    124. Re:This is out of control by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      The constant lies. "Zimmerman is white".

      He has a white name from his white father. He is a white Hispanic, with a Hispanic mother. "White" is not an incorrect moniker. Why are you the one pushing lies?

    125. Re:This is out of control by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Liberals use the ethnicity the person asks to be referred to as. The conservatives assign race based on what they want. George Zimmerman calls himself white (race) - Hispanic (ethnicity). Why are you telling a self-described white man that he's not white? Obama is black because he says he is. That's the only official requirement.

    126. Re:This is out of control by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      The media wants a circus. A race riot.

      Oh, baloney, they really don't. They're just pointing out that white Americans are all still racist. Of course voting for Obama again in November will prove that you're not. Unless you are, and then just go vote for Romney.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    127. Re:This is out of control by khallow · · Score: 1

      By that standard any individual lynch mob participant can't be called a racist, because they only killed that one black guy, and it's impossible to prove that one black dude didn't deserve more then any white guy they've ever seen.

      Exactly. Seriously, you hit the nail on the head here. Accusations of racism are supported by more than just the ethnicity of a small number of targets. Usually, one can find statements by the perpetrators to back up allegations of racism.

    128. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know whether Trayvon was innocent or not.

      What was the unarmed boy on his way home with junk food guilty of?

    129. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does self defense have to be a gun?

    130. Re:This is out of control by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Why does self defense have to be a gun?

      Guns are the main technology that equalizes capacity for violence. Old, young, male, female, tall or short, all are equal with a gun. Without guns, self defense is available mostly to large, strong men or those few with the time and dedication to become martial arts experts. Others are assigned compulsory victim status.

    131. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know that Zimmerman did confront Martin. The operator told him he didn't need to follow, and it's unclear what happened after that because of conflicting testimony. Considering how few real facts are known, the only reasonable response is to say that I have no idea whether Zimmerman's actions are acceptable or not. However, following someone is not usually illegal. Having a gun is not illegal. And, in Florida, shooting someone and killing them with a gun is not illegal under certain (very special) conditions which you may or may not agree with, although it is the law.
      I may have been reading just another piece of biased garbage, but an article I read just tonight indicated that the two men had their "scuffle" in a grassy area between some houses. I mean, let's think about this: Zimmerman had to get OUT of his fucking vehicle and chase/pursue Martin.

        (Or do you think that Martin somehow coaxed/forced him out of his vehicle?) Additionally, do you think that Zimmerman would have been so damned "brave" to chase down a potential hooligan if he wasn't packing heat? Maybe, say, if he was carrying some pepper spray? Probably not. Zimmerman seems to have appointed himself sheriff and injected himself and his firearm into a situation where it was far from necessary. Of course I welcome exposure to all the facts, but what we know so far doesn't sound so good for Zimmerman. I don't care if Martin DID make threats or shoot off his mouth or whatever. As for Zimmerman's wounds, it seems perfectly likely that Martin believed he was fighting for his life against some random crazy guy. And maybe he was.

      Zimmerman chased no one. He was going back to his truck when NO_LIMIT_NIGGA who was close to the house he was staying chose to go back over 200 feet to where Zimmerman was going back to his truck to go home because the police were going to deal with the situation and this young thug who was
      suspended from school for attacking a bus driver racially assaulted him.

      What we "know" comes from a racist media which employs the likes of Al Sharpton, Sanita Jackson and Piers Morgan who was fired in disgrace by the Daily Mirror over faked photos and the phone hacking scandal that is being investigated in London and some of that has been proven to be faked with a NBC producer resigning over the re-editing of the 911 call to make Zimmerman look bad.

      Was Zimmerman fighting for his life with a guy who attacked him who was out of his mind on E? It is a letter contained in SkittlEs and IcEd TEa.

    132. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, finally Florida is doing what they should have done earlier. There are enough disturbing aspects to this story that we need the truth of the encounter established in a court. That's what the papers and the people deserve and need, that's all. Florida's police, prosecutor (and the people who elect/pay for them) have only themselves to blame for the results of this delay.

    133. Re:This is out of control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A nice white guy shot an unarmed black teenager in a hoodie to death.
      A nice guy shot an unarmed teenager in a hoodie to death
      A nice guy shot an unarmed teenager to death
      A nice guy shot an unarmed person to death
      A guy shot an unarmed person to death

      No matter how you rewrite it, the whole thing still seems wrong somehow. Can't quite put my finger on it. Let's take that last sentence apart.

      A (article) guy (noun) shot (verb) an (article) unarmed (adjective) person (noun) to (preposition) death (noun, prepositional subject)

      I think I have it. It's that adjective - 'unarmed'.

      Let's try this:
      A guy shot a person to death.
      That seems better. That sounds almost as though the guy might have had a legitimate reason to shoot the person.

      One more try.
      A guy shot a person.
      Yes! That's it! That sounds like something you'd read on page 14 of the local paper, something you'd hear on the radio news at 1 am, something the local TV station might run just after the weather.
      A guy shot a person.
      Perfect. No blame, no inconvenient racial tension, no mention of he person being unarmed.
      A guy shot a person.
      Now let's add some of that back in:
      A nice guy shot a person.
      Wow. That really sings. That's the one right there.

      That sir is what you are doing. You pick and choose the facts to fit what you want.

      Here are the facts:

      Zimmerman shot Williams
      Williams did not have a gun
      Zimmerman was told by the police not to follow Williams

  27. Re:Talk about media bias by ClioCJS · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Let me explain how the news works, XPeter. When things work normal, it's not news. When things work abnormal, it's news. Plane crashes is typically {there's exceptions to everything I will say, but they are just that: exceptions} news. Plane lands is not. Cop arrests person and beats the hell out of them is news. Cop arrests person peacefully is not. Man bites dog is news. Dog bites man is not.

    There's 43 murders every day. Do you recall reading 43 stories? No. When things go normal, they are not national stories.

    So anyway, since you don't seem to have figured it out, the difference in the two cases is the police response. And that is the racial issue! When the situations are reversed, a black will be charged right away. A white will not always be. (Google Brandon Gotwalt. Almost the same situation, no charge. Now google Daniel Adkins. Big difference.)

    The black kids who set the white kid on fire were found right away and charged. Things are working as they should be. There are 100s of hate crimes every year, and only the most egregious situations make national news. What was egregious here was the government not applying the law evenly, and not even charging the guy. It's basically the same thing (not charging) that happened with the Danziger cops in New Orleans during Katrina: Kill a minority, no charge. Plus the cops do it all the time too -- but that's so [sadly] normal it doesn't rise to to the same volume as the Zimmerman case.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  28. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Plenty of people watch MSNBC. If you are liberal, you watch either MSNBC or CNN, and CNN is nowhere near as good, IMO. I usually watch BBC because I don't like a lot of spin in my news. American news sucks most of the time because it's less about the news and more about the sensationalism. I've been watching the BBC for news since the 80s when I was a teen.

    For me it's BBC first, followed by MSNBC. Fox is out of the question.

  29. Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am really curious to know what evidence they have to justify a second degree murder charge.

    1. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 2

      I am really curious to know what evidence they have to justify a second degree murder charge.

      He clearly precipitated the confrontation, and there is no question that subsequently he killed somone. Pretty cut and dry. Whether he will be found guilty remains to be seen.

    2. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Second degree murder charges can typically be supported by the intent to kill someone and the attempt to kill them. Using a deadly weapon -- in this case, a gun -- establishes prima facie that the intent was to kill. (Yes, that's the way the law works. You can say all day, "I only meant to wound him!" but using a weapon that often results in death on someone means that you intended to kill them, period.)

      So in this case, the fact that Zimmerman had a gun, pointed that gun at the victim, and pulled the trigger, is enough to support second degree murder. Now he gets to try to rebut that charge with the affirmative defense of Self-Defense.

    3. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      And if he was attacked by Martin first, Martin was only exerting his right to Stand His Ground, no?

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    4. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if he was attacked by Martin first, Martin was only exerting his right to Stand His Ground, no?

      Stand your ground!

      I am the Dread Pirate Roberts! There will be no survivors! Many are here, I am here, but soon you will not be here.

    5. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      No.

    6. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And if he was attacked by Martin first, Martin was only exerting his right to Stand His Ground, no?

      The first person to (reasonably) feel threatened with death or serious violence was justified in defending himself. The person who created that (reasonable) fear can not claim self defense, any more than a convenience store robber can shoot a clerk who pulls a revolver out of the cash drawer in "self defense".

    7. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was no threat... Other than a pissed off person with a gun trying to get back in a 6,000lb truck and maybe run you over.

    8. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      confrontation in what way? He did not start the physical confrontation. The big sticking point for this 2nd degree murder charge is determining whether it was treyvon or zimmerman that initiated the physical altercation. If someone follows you that is not necessarily a crime unless its is part of a pattern of stalking. Even asking someone what they are doing in "your" neighborhood does not constitute a crime if it is a one time thing. On top of all this none of those actions justifies a physical attack. I hope for your sake you dont start a fist fight with every chump that gives you a dirty look and/or runs his mouth at you. Being an asshole and/or racist is 100% legal in the US whereas assault is not. The only case that can be made here is that zimmerman negligently used a firearm in self-defense and is thus guilty of voluntary manslaughter. Any higher charge warranting the available evidence will be the justice system capitulating to the mob as will no charge.

    9. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by V-similitude · · Score: 1

      Is it possible to reasonably feel threatened without anyone reasonably intending to threaten? For instance, could Trayvon have reasonably perceived a threat of death simply by seeing Zimmerman approaching him with a (holstered) gun? Could then Zimmerman reasonably perceive a threat of death after Trayvon punched him (justifiably, due to his own perceived threat). In that case, each person reasonably felt a threat of death without any wrongdoing on the others' part. In that case, could either person successfully claim self-defense (or stand your ground, or whatever)? Or can an entirely reasonably, unintentionally threatening, action void future claims to self-defense? Either way, there seems to be a problem.

    10. Re:Based on the (actual) 911 transcript by asylumx · · Score: 1

      In that case, could either person successfully claim self-defense (or stand your ground, or whatever)?

      Well, Trayvon can't. He's dead, and therefore unable to speak.

  30. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by koan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There are a lot of angry people on both sides of the issue that's why, should give you insight into how the media effects issues and how stupid people can be.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  31. Come on slashdot!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I come here to get away from this kind of stuff. Can we Please get back to the geek stuff? Or maybe it's time I just found somewhere else to lurk.

  32. Re:Talk about media bias by jonnythan · · Score: 1

    It garnered (not garnished) national media attention because of the way the police and DA ignored it. Zimmerman was allowed to go home, with his weapon, and then the police and DA mostly forgot about it entirely.

    If Zimmerman was a black man and Trayvon a white teenager, do you think that would have happened?

  33. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He wasn't doing anything wrong when he was harassed by an unknown creep, and his killer had no knowledge of his parent's child rearing skills.

    Meanwhile, it was Zimmerman who was rolling around the neighborhood with a gun looking for trouble. Why don't you rant about his parents (his father was a judge, ffs) and his screwed up attitude?

  34. Re:Crazy world we live in. by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

    What if Trayvon had killed Zimmerman instead?

    He would be in jail already. And they might be trying him for first degree murder to boot. Of course, he probably knew not to wait around for that to happen.

  35. Re:Slashdot: Please fire samzenpus! by Beardo+the+Bearded · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, they both had a cell phone. Maybe this was the first casualty in the Android - iPhone war.

    Shit just got real.

    --

    ---
    ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
  36. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by koan · · Score: 1

    DId you forgive the man that shot your son? If so you get a pass on your comment.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  37. Stop posting this shit samzenpus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There should be a way to moderate asshats who insist on posting !news for nerds articles.

  38. Take this off of Slashdot please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This does not belong on Slashdot. Please take it off.

    - Nerd

    1. Re:Take this off of Slashdot please by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This does not belong on Slashdot. Please take it off.

      - Nerd

      My impression of you:

      Whiny, whiny, whine. Whiny, whine, whine, blubber.

      - Whiner

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    2. Re:Take this off of Slashdot please by Valacosa · · Score: 1

      I agree. If this didn't belong on Slashdot, why'd it get over 400 comments?

      --
      "Live as if you'll die tomorrow." Ridiculous. You could die later today.
    3. Re:Take this off of Slashdot please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because ~3/4 of the comments are stating that it does not belong on Slashdot? You might have a successful future career with NBC!

  39. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    where the fuck were you when that happen? sitting on your ass doing nothing. you seem to want others to fight your battles for you. jackass.

  40. Article NOT slashdot worthy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    This is not a slashdot worth story. I'd be really sad if I had to stop reading this site due to irrelevant articles.

    1. Re:Article NOT slashdot worthy by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Enough of all this whining about /. story selection already. Enough nerds were interested in the story to rate it in. If you don't want to click the story, then move on.

      You are creating a mini-Zim-situation: causing unnecessary contention by parking your squinting face here to bark up a storm instead of moving on and/or observing from a quiet distance.

  41. Re:Crazy world we live in. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In any other country Zimmerman would have been arrested on the spot.

    Shootign an unarmed kid in dubious circumstances is exactly why he should be arrested.

  42. Re:Talk about media bias by Cazekiel · · Score: 1

    When two black teens set a white kid on fire, a clear hate crime, it hardly gets a column in the local news.

    The reasons for stories like Trayvon's getting out as they do is that there's not just political intervention, but an angry village behind the push. I'm kind of tired of the argument that this is "way overblown", and tit-for-tat crap. When I posted in facebook about how I was going to the nearby Trayvon march, someone asked "Why are they having one here?" I told him that it was a nationwide event in many cities, to which he said it was "overblown" and that "there are issues that no on is doing anything about in the meantime."

    My response to him--and to you--is that if you feel passionately about a cause, then DO something about it. If you don't, you one of those nobodies who does nothing you're criticizing. So take your story there and start a petition, or organize a protest that gives the matter serious attention. Whether or not that works, you've done something about it, right?

    --
    You want to know how to help your kids? LEAVE THEM THE F*&K ALONE. --George Carlin
  43. Re:Not News for Nerds. by koan · · Score: 5, Funny

    Holy shit am I reading this right? Anonymous Coward just left /. I was getting tired of that guy.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  44. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so you're saying that because the media paid attention to the case, Zimmerman should not be arrested and tried in court? and that because Trayvon has pictures of him that show him in "scary black man" poses, he somehow deserved to die?

  45. In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Charley Manson was denied parole... I know...equally irrelevant to you pasty white nerds, but what the hell...

  46. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That one photo labeled fake isn't the only fake photo on there, and if you're disturbed or scared of someone flipping the camera the bird then you're awful sheltered and easily frightened. There's nothing in those pictures you posted, any of them, fake and not fake, that screams "I am a mean and vicious person." Your post and sentiment, however, screams "I'm afraid of black people, look how scummy this kid looks! The audacity of this kid!"

    ClintJCL explains it pretty well, you would do well to listen to him and also stop blaming a victim just because those pictures happen to frighten you.

  47. Not a crime to be an asshole by Tablizer · · Score: 0

    Zim was an asshole, but baring any new evidence of direct discrimination, he will probably walk. There are just not enough details on the confrontation for a conviction. We don't know who said what to who or who attacked first.

    I hope they can at least get a civil suit against him. Those have a lower burden of evidence.

    You can tell from the 911 recording he wanted to be Clint Eastwood and was itching for showdown, and he got one. Kick him in the wallet.

    1. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by nbauman · · Score: 0

      I hope they can at least get a civil suit against him. Those have a lower burden of evidence.

      Unfortunately that law drafted by the NRA and American Legislative Exchange Council also made it more difficult to bring a civil suit against somebody who shoots you.

      A lot of shooters lost civil suits around the country, so they tried to change the law to stop it.

    2. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 0

      Zim was an asshole, but baring any new evidence of direct discrimination, he will probably walk. There are just not enough details on the confrontation for a conviction. We don't know who said what to who or who attacked first.

      Well, given that one guy is dead and the other is barely hurt, the default assumption is pretty clear - unless there's some evidence to prove otherwise. You don't get to claim self defense without having to prove it.

    3. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, criminally I'm not sure - would need more facts. Sounds like possibly manslaughter.

      Civilly, he should be fucked. No matter what happened, it's clear he created the situation. His idiocy led to the death of that kid and he should pay for the rest of his life.

      But you don't understand human nature if you think he's going to walk. He won't walk, he will 100% be found guilty. It's simple human nature.

    4. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Uhh, ever heard the phrase "don't bring a knife to a gunfight"? Generally when guns are involved one person is shot (or dead) and the other relatively unscathed.

      Agreed Zimmerman has to prove self defense, then the prosecutor has to disprove any actual evidence he brings. Sounds like he has signs of a scuffle including possible injuries for evidence, that might actually be enough. Well, it would be if Zimmerman wasn't going to be railroaded regardless of what happened.

      I have mixed feelings about that. I hate the circus and the irrationality of it all, but Zimmerman seems a grade A moron and douchebag.

    5. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Uhh, ever heard the phrase "don't bring a knife to a gunfight"? Generally when guns are involved one person is shot (or dead) and the other relatively unscathed.

      It depends on the circumstances. In a typical self-defense situation, this would be true, because you start shooting as soon as you perceive a threat, which is usually evident before they get up close and personal. On the other hand, if you take the gun out and come up close to threaten someone with it, they just might get a swing at you before you manage to pull the trigger...

      Anyway, that's all conjecture. My gut feeling based on Zimmerman's attitude demonstrated during his 911 call is that he was too trigger-happy to be reasonable about assessing the need for self-defense, but of course I don't have all evidence, and neither does anyone in the public at large. That's why I'm glad it's down to a trial now; hopefully they'll do a thorough investigation such that, whatever the outcome is, it's got solid support.

    6. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      You don't get to claim self defense without having to prove it.

      I thought it was the government that had to prove their case of murder, so they wouldn't they have to prove beyond reasonable doubt that he was NOT defending himself?

    7. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can tell from the 911 recording he wanted to be Clint Eastwood and was itching for showdown, and he got one. Kick him in the wallet.

      Actually, you can tell no such thing. What a lie.

      Politely asking someone who looks VERY suspicious (aimlessly wondering in the rain), "What are you doing here?" is the complete opposite of, "Clint Eastwood", and, "itching for a showdown."

      See, that's the problem with this case, there are seemingly endless numbers of dipshits who read their own biases and opinion into the events and rish to make judgement. Your post is a classic example of biased stupidity which surrounds this case.

      Thankfully fucktards like you are now making it illegal to want to live in a safe neighborhood.

    8. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      I heard multiple aggressive statements, such as "these people always get away".

    9. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      That's not how it works. When you have a guy with a smoking gun and a dead body at his feet, that's all evidence that the slaying actually happened - which would make it manslaughter at best, and murder at worst. Self-defense (and "stand your ground") is an affirmative defense to such charges, meaning that the person being charged has to provide evidence to justify his claim.

      You're confusing this with a different situation where there is no "smoking gun" - then the government would have to prove that the person they charge with murder actually did slay the victim. That's where "beyond reasonable doubt" enters into equation. But it's not relevant here, since there's no doubt - not even Zimmerman himself denies that he had pulled the trigger. Now it's up to him to convincingly justify his actions.

    10. Re:Not a crime to be an asshole by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      That's not how it works.... You're confusing this with a different situation where there is no "smoking gun"

      It's not that I'm confused, that is how it works here in Australia. At least, it does if you're a woman shooting her husband with an illegal handgun.

      http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/queensland/susan-falls-not-guilty-of-murder-20100603-x2xv.html
      Justice Applegarth took several hours to sum up the case to the jury, beginning his address to them yesterday afternoon and continuing from 10am today.

      He told jurors Mrs Falls' defence lawyers did not have to prove she was acting in self defence when she shot and killed Rodney Falls, but rather the prosecution must prove she wasn't acting in self defence at the time.

  48. Re:Talk about media bias by XPeter · · Score: 1

    But the point is he isn't white, he's hispanic.

    --
    "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits" - Albert Einstein
  49. booooooooo hissssssssss! by quackPOT · · Score: 0

    This bullshit submission has zero merit for being on this site.

    A more relevant article would be a video of the submitter receiving 20 lashes from the Cat-5-O-Nine-tails!!

  50. Re:Talk about media bias by matunos · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wow. Can't help but feed the troll here. Where to start? Let's see... your link to a story that 'hardly gets a column in the local news' is a link to the NY Daily Post about an event in Kansas City. A simple google search shows various other coverage of the case. And a big difference in that case: the police were *actually looking to arrest the perpetrators* (whether they've caught them or not is not clear).

    The Trayvon Davis story blew up because of how it was mishandled between the police and the DA. If they had arrested Zimmerman from the start, even if he ended getting off on a self-defense claim, it wouldn't have been as big. It would be a footnote in the list of reasons why an overbroad "Stand Your Ground" law is a bad idea.

    And, even if the attack in KC was mishandled similarly, what's that have to do with the Davis case? Outrage would be warranted in both cases.

    But yeah, your recent photos of Trayvon (including one fake one) convince me. He flipped the bird at a web cam! And he's black! Death for the hoodlum! Wait, you know what? I need to see a photo of the suspect in a suit. If you can produce one of those, then I'll really be convinced.

    I'll give you this though: you really have provided clear support for that Einstein quote in your sig.

  51. Re:Crazy world we live in. by koan · · Score: 1

    If there are no witnesses but Zimmerman, then how do you know it was self defense? Last I heard the drug charge was for pot, not much of a charge when you can buy hard alcohol EVERYWHERE.

    There is also something you need to consider, if you fight a person then they say "I stop I don't want to fight any more" you're required by law to stop right then, if you hit them after that it's an A&B charge on you.
    The same applies to guns (obviously) you are not required to retreat in most states but if you continue aggression when the other person has stopped you become the criminal...Zimmerman was told not to follow but he did, then shot an unarmed boy.

    That much is fact because it was recorded in the 911 call, and it was determined Trayvon was not armed.

    Let the peopel that know what they are doing handle this and you go back to CoD... or WoW or whatever.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  52. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Zimmerman is as white as Obama. (They are both half white.)

  53. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Unlikely that even a Murder 2 conviction gets the SuperMax treatment. Unless it's keep him in protective custody so he doesn't get murdered.

  54. Why is this shit on Slashdot? by couchslug · · Score: 0

    Yes, we get general news online and there is no reason to put it here.

    Who the fuck would miss this item if it were NOT on Slashdot?

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    1. Re:Why is this shit on Slashdot? by MisterSquid · · Score: 1

      Who the fuck would miss this item if it were NOT on Slashdot?

      I would miss it, for one.

      I am a /. reader of mixed race. I have been watching this story unfold on /. very closely, noting the large number of /.ers who, in my opinion, seem enlightened about the effect of race as it plays out in this case and also noting the significant number of /.ers who seem to have a racial/racist stake in the affair.

      Like it or not, race is one of the most important subtexts for employment and achievement in the world of technology and given the underrepresentation of race in the coverage of technology (despite the high prevalence of Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Indian, and other races), the attitude, perceptions, and opinions of race on an issue like the Trayvon Martin case is important to nerds like me.

      I am glad to see what other /.ers have to say about this subject, and I have been carefully adding to my freaks and friends list based on some of the opinions I've seen expressed.

      --
      blog
    2. Re:Why is this shit on Slashdot? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Whoa, a single-issue Slashdot reader! ~

    3. Re:Why is this shit on Slashdot? by MisterSquid · · Score: 1

      Whoa, a single-issue Slashdot reader! ~

      That's pretty funny and if only that were true. I also friend and foe (usually friend) on other issues, too. Usually on what I consider to be expressions of great compassion and understanding not limited to issues of race.

      --
      blog
    4. Re:Why is this shit on Slashdot? by elgo · · Score: 1

      He is right though, it is alarming to see so many posts by people who are, let's say, openly white about this issue. C'est la Vie. Tribalism dies hard.

      --
      - elgo
  55. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 1

    No one's said it was justifiable. On the other hand no one's saying there's even a remote possibility that this guy shouldn't be lynched from a lightpole on national television either. So, good luck with that.

  56. Re:Talk about media bias by nbauman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Recent photos of Trayvon: http://i39.tinypic.com/1yvg5h.jpg

    So what's your point? If somebody looks like this, he somehow deserves to get shot?

  57. Re:Not News for Nerds. by couchslug · · Score: 1

    Google News with a green and white interface!

    Hooray.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  58. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 1, Interesting

    To say nothing of the reality that since we live in a culture of vengeance and celebrity, and near psychotic levels of bullying which are called civil discourse, I have zero faith that any jury would deliberate for more than 15 minutes before declaring Zimmerman guilty.

  59. The lack of justice is the real travesty. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If someone is shot and killed an investigation is necessary for the justice of the dead. Even if the dead kid was guilty of vicious assault and the shooter is found to be completely and unquestionably justified in his use of a firearm for self defense the lack of an investigation; the lack of an investigation is an injustice to the dead.

    It's clear that a combination of the PD's layzness, defacto/latent racism, and this "Stand your ground" law have lead to this complete circus. People are justifiably outraged because there was no investigation when there clearly should have been one. A proper investigation may have been able to clear Zimmerman's name.

    This is why "Stand your ground" laws are bad. Someone who uses a firearm in self defense may think they are being served, but in reality justice is being denied. Both for them, and for whoever takes the bullet. This case is proof.

    1. Re:The lack of justice is the real travesty. by Grimbleton · · Score: 0

      Trayvon Martin got all the justice he deserved, at a high velocity

  60. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If you find MSNBC worth watching you are a fucknut, to begin with. I've never seen anything further from reporting facts and closer to spewing hatred and bullshit. Even Fox which falls into that category can't hold a candle to the bias and vitriol on display at MSNBC. I'm afraid you invalidated your point when you championed them.

  61. Re:Not News For Nerds by couchslug · · Score: 1

    "Watch as this comment goes to -1, while any comments that say it is slashdot-worthy get modded up."

    It is Slashdot-worthy! Farkdot is no longer News For Nerds, it's Google News with a different interface.

    Fuck it, have some Kardashians while we are at it:

    http://tinyurl.com/chcppt2

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  62. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They would have to, general population would be a death sentence after this media circus.

  63. Re:Talk about media bias by jon3k · · Score: 1

    "Ignored" is completely inaccurate. Please try again.

  64. Re:Talk about media bias by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 1

    You might want to research the meaning of "hispanic". There are "hispanics" of all races (yes, all).

  65. Re:Slashdot: Please fire samzenpus! by couchslug · · Score: 1

    MOD PARENT UP for truthiness!

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  66. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Have you heard of the case? Yes? You're dismissed."

    It's not about whether you have "heard of the case". It's whether what you've heard has made you lean one way or the other.

    There have been plenty of high-profile cases that went to jury just fine.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  67. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Personally I don't care how it ends. I will be amused by the obligatory screaming and outrage either way. Another famous instance of an Al Sharpton lead 'protest' resulted, intentionally, some would say to the murder of Yankel Rosenbaum. And this was precisely the result Sharpton was looking for. Hell, people rioted at the Conrad Murray trial. They're going nuclear over this. It should be interesting to watch the flames.

  68. Zimmerman is an asshole by nbauman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    He's an asshole because he ignored the 911 operator's instructions to wait for the cops, and got out of his car with a gun to confront somebody.

    (Didn't he think it out? What did he intend to do after he confronted Martin? It had to turn out bad.)

    It seems harsh to send somebody to jail for a big part of his life because he's an asshole. I feel sorry for him.

    But somebody is dead because he's an asshole. I feel even more sorry for Martin, and Martin's friends and family.

    In America we do give people long prison sentences for killing somebody in a street fight.

    A lot of black people in Florida go to jail for less.

    What else can you do with Zimmerman?

    Yes, you do go to jail for being stupid.

    1. Re:Zimmerman is an asshole by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Except that you're reading a script prepared for you by the 'sympathy media'.

      Listen to the 911 call. http://www.orlandosentinel.com/videogallery/68871920/News/George-Zimmerman-911-call-reporting-Trayvon-Martin (not edited by NBC)
      There were a number of break-ins in the neighborhood.
      Neighborhood watch individual sees him, calls it in.
      Trayvon approaches guy calling him in.
      Trayvon moves out of sight.
      Zimmerman leaves car.
      Dispatcher tells him to get back into his car.
      Can't tell if he's getting back into his car, but the wind noise substantially decreases so it MAY be that he got back into his car.
      End of call.

      It doesn't sound like he ignored the operators instructions to me, so where did you hear that?

      SYG law is supposed to leave the benefit of the doubt with the person apparently defending himself. In this case, I suspect that the police determined there was no significant likelihood of conviction. They questioned Zimmerman for hours afterward. The physical evidence - his condition when the paramedics arrived, the location, grass stains, etc. - as well as witnesses corroborated his version of events. All the puzzle pieces fit, which is all police look for (they could still be wrong, but if they all fit, it's a tough road to convince a jury otherwise).

      I sincerely hope that with a trial, discovery, and conclusion, we'll wrap this up (I expect Zimmerman will be exonerated). But this looks terribly like the police and DA are caving to the threats of mob violence (more likely they are caving to pressure from the White House and Justice, who have both seemed to already taken a side in the issue, unfortunately).

      Coincidence: next story (if you just let that audio play out, it rolls to the next queued one) is about 2 black males holding a family at gunpoint in a home invasion.
      I wonder if either of them would have looked like Obama's son?

      --
      -Styopa
    2. Re:Zimmerman is an asshole by nbauman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If Zimmerman was following the dispatcher's instructions, then how did he wind up on the sidewalk with Martin?

      You left out Martin's girlfriend's account that Zimmerman caught up to him and Martin asked Zimmerman why he was following him.

      Why shouldn't Martin have believed that Zimmerman was a threat? If I was coming home at night from the store, and somebody was following me with a car, and then came out to follow me on the ground, I'd be worried. Especially if there were break-ins in the neighborhood.

      Zimmerman never should have left the car. There are rules for neighborhood watch groups, and he violated them. Now he's in a lot of trouble. Yeah, the prosecutor is under political pressure. Yeah, the newspapers are having a field day. Welcome to reality. Why shouldn't the White House put political pressure if they think the DA is going to drop the case (as they were going to)? There was a pattern of black people getting killed and cops doing nothing.

      The bottom line is that Zimmerman killed a guy who was going about his own law-abiding business. If you kill somebody, you're likely to get into a lot of trouble.

    3. Re:Zimmerman is an asshole by tyrione · · Score: 1

      He's not only an asshole by ignoring the Police Officer's order via 911, he'll be charged with it. He'll also be charged for felony stocking and a few other felony counts. This isn't a single 2nd Degree Murder charge. He'll be looking at 4 or more felony counts on his sheet.

  69. /. looks more like youtube, comments-wise by Cazekiel · · Score: 1

    Give me a break, guys. I just opened the main page. Before the page refreshes to show more stories on /., there were 14 stories, and 12 of them are entirely devoted to some form of nerdity. A couple sneak in, either political or a more "fun" angle, and everyone starts throwing toys of of their prams. I knew why this article had almost one hundred comments before stepping in, because everyone simply HAD to come in and get all Mr. and Mrs. McBabypants. I suppose I myself am catering to that mindset in complaining as well, but this happens in the science/astronomy/technology/etc. based stories all the time. "This isn't news", "Boring!", "Such-n-such is better than shitty-thingamabob, /. sucks!"... wtf do you want, people?

    I expect to be modded down for this, but whatever.

    --
    You want to know how to help your kids? LEAVE THEM THE F*&K ALONE. --George Carlin
  70. Slashdot is a Nerd Site, Not a News Site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This story, although on everyone's mind, is not a Slashdot type of story.

    BTW - They are only bringing charges, so he can be cleared of guilt in a formal process.

  71. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by matunos · · Score: 1

    There's lots of high-profile cases, yet somehow we find a way to truck on.

    If it makes you feel any better, my own mother (who doest watch much TV) didn't know anything about the case.

    Personally, I just thought it was pretty obvious the guy should have been arrested and charged, given the basics of the case. He pursued someone, which is not under dispute, and a short time later was engaged in an altercation with said person in which he shot them. Maybe it will turn out there's not enough evidence to convict him, but surely there was probable cause to arrest him, regardless of the "Stand Your Ground" law (persuit and confrontation is not standing one's ground).

  72. Posts saying "Take this off ofslashdot" are racist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Essentially the posters are saying that nerds aren't black so this is irrelevant to nerds.

    What did stormfront just blow in here?

  73. Re:Talk about media bias by eldepeche · · Score: 2

    OJ sure as fuck got charged with murder. Wanna try again? Or are you just listing all the black people you can think of?

    Also, Zimmerman didn't get charged with a hate crime, so nobody knows what the fuck you're talking about.

  74. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by fizzer06 · · Score: 2

    Also, don't forget the $10,000 bounty - dead or alive - posted on Zimmerman by the "New Black Panther Party".

  75. Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coupon by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    These "Stand Your Ground" Laws that we have thanks to ALEC and the NRA are meant only to protect white people who shoot blacks, Hispanics, Muslims, etc.

    Have a look at how "Stand Your Ground" is applied when it's the other way around.

    Funny, I didn't hear anything from the NRA and the right-wing media in that Georgia case. But I did hear a right-wing talker today talking about how the increasing American sense that race relations are deteriorating is Barack Obama's fault.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  76. Sliding down hill by Right1488 · · Score: 0

    Pretty soon police will be confined to being able to do nothing more than asking criminals to stop committing crimes. Ask too harshly and it will be a hate crime.

    1. Re:Sliding down hill by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 1

      Pretty soon police will be confined to being able to do nothing more than asking criminals to stop committing crimes. Ask too harshly and it will be a hate crime.

      You come to this conclusion based on the outcry over police doing too little?

  77. Re:Talk about media bias by eldepeche · · Score: 2

    Well if he's hispanic, then I don't know why it's a news story.

    Oh wait, it's because he shot a kid and got away with it.

    It became a news story after the 911 recordings were released, and it was revealed the dispatcher told him not to follow the kid; once journalists (presumably liberal) looked into it, they discovered that the police didn't canvass the neighborhood or collect Zimmerman's clothing, or really investigate at all. Zimmerman shot a kid, said "He attacked me first," and the police thought that sounded legit, so they sent him home.

  78. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jbeaupre · · Score: 1

    Who the hell is Casey Anthony? At least I've heard of OJ. I just gave my kids a glass of OJ. Should I be concerned?

    --
    The world is made by those who show up for the job.
  79. Re:Talk about media bias by XPeter · · Score: 1, Troll

    But why is the president going out and saying "If I had a son, he'd look like Trayvon"

    Or does Obama envision his kid getting kicked out of school and having gang-related tattoos?

    --
    "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits" - Albert Einstein
  80. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    DId you forgive the man that shot your son? If so you get a pass on your comment.

    If my son got shot because he started beating him and slamming his head into the pavement (a potentially lethal move) then there would be nothing to forgive. I would say the other guy acted reasonably. I would then feel ashamed to have raised a son like that and all the waste it represents.

    If you are asking me whether I am committed to my principles even in the face of a great deal of emotion, yes I am. It's called being an adult.

    This situation is just another young violent black thug-wannabe who finally picked the wrong guy to fuck with. That's all there is. I don't get shot at. You know why? Because I don't go around attacking people. If I think somebody is creepy or whatever I call the police, I don't walk up to the guy and start beating on him.

    You guys really cannot see the connection between attacking a stranger and getting shot? Jesus H Fucking Christ people can be so stupid when they badly want a situation to be different. Nobody really wants a 17 year old to get shot and killed. I get that. But to pretend like the way that 17 year old behaved had nothing to do with it? Madness.

    Course the media loves that kind of madness and how weak and stupid and blind and emotional everyone is acting. That's why they show photos of Trey when he was 12 years old, not when he was 17 and 6 foot 3 inches tall. That's why they try so badly to make this into a racial issue because immature fucks eat that shit up. Nevermind that Zimmerman tried to mentor black youth (why just the other day I saw the KKK doing that, no wait they'd never do that). The bullshit way all of this is being presented and all of you are being led around by your childish little heartstrings is so fucking pathetic. I am ashamed to be an American.

  81. News for People by tverbeek · · Score: 4, Funny

    Cue the folks who don't want the outside world intruding into their mothers' basements shrieking "This isn't news for nerds!"

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    1. Re:News for People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's check Google News. Yup, this is the top story. If you want you can check out all 5896 news sources they link to that are carrying it. Good thing Slashdot has the article or you might have missed it.

  82. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by SJHillman · · Score: 0

    If he's murdered, then the media will suddenly realize he's more hispanic than white (he identifies as hispanic and looks hispanic, therefore only his genes could really be considered half white) and keep the race issue going.

  83. The arresting officer(s) only heard one side. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There was no arrest that night because 1. The only (living) witness was Zimmerman. Evidence on the scene confirmed his testimony/statements. Unless he was caught in a lie while talking to the officers, the story looked like self-defense. 2. Without evidence people walk. It is better to let a guilty man free that to lock up an innocent man... every time. Remember Jules (arrested for the Atlanta Olympic bombings) he was arrested on FBI profiling and a proximity to the crime scene (tried in the public court) and then released without prejudice. However it ruined his life.... I think that prosecutor will have a hard time piecing enough evidence together to make the charges stick if the defendant pleads the 5th. I hope everyone lets due process happen and the evidence will speak for itself. Peace out

  84. panem et circenses by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Bread and circuses. Don't discuss anything important, especially if it's complex. Go after something visceral like this case or Kim Kardishiam's bra / toenail / latest sex change operation.

    Oh, we just invaded another country? Look! Over there! A breast!

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    1. Re:panem et circenses by IceNinjaNine · · Score: 1

      Look! Over there! A breast!

      Looks up from net pr0n..
      Wait, like a *real* in person one?

    2. Re:panem et circenses by omfgnosis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A person was killed, quite probably murdered. A police department refused to follow any sort of procedure to investigate the killing or the killer. The killer's background exhibits at the very least dangerous vigilante tendencies and mental health issues, and quite probably racial motivation for same. A whole segment of society erupted into an apologist frenzy on the killer's behalf, even further focusing on the racial elements of the case.

      Those are the facts of the case. Each one of those facts carries a lot of importance, in their own right. And while we're at it, any society that can't muster the maturity required to deal with a case like this—or to distinguish it from pop culture drama—is far from the maturity required to address something like "we just invaded another country".

    3. Re:panem et circenses by cold+fjord · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I guess we've heard from Bizarro world now. Cute how you inverted most things.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    4. Re:panem et circenses by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      Hey, I have a novel idea. Let's say you're right. Let's say everything I said was wrong. Those reversed facts would *still* make the case important, and it would *still* warrant a trial.

  85. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 0

    I'll say it: Zimmerman shouldn't be lynched. He was charged with a crime, and I think it's still possible for him to get a fair trial; as long as that happens, I'll be satisfied. If he's acquitted, there's at least a remote possibility that Florida should change their law, assuming his defense is based on the widely-publicized Stand Your Ground law.

    Way to bring up lynching though, it's totally germane, since a vigilante killed a black person.

    Wait-

  86. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "scare black man" pictures of Trayvon are of a different Trayvon. And the source of the original distribution in related to the Zimmerman shooting was the neonazi organization stormfront as a very clear bit of propaganda.

  87. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    The parent comment is chock-full of racist non sequiturs.

  88. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    A good lawyer would exclude anyone who's heard of it, not just someone who claims to be impartial about it. Self-reporting isn't accurate.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  89. Re:Talk about media bias by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    There is prior evidence that he was predisposed to think black people suspicious, in the 47 pages of 911 calls he made over the year(s) prior to shooting Marton, many of the calls were simply, "Someone is here. And he's black!." The real hate crime was committed by the police, not Zimmerman. I mean, altering the police report with a 2nd draft to say he had injuries? But then the paramedics didn't take him in, and there's not a drop on his shirt when the cops took him in afterward. Will be interesting when those paramedics go to witness stand.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  90. Maybe they'll change venue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad I live in a different county. I'm more than willing to vote not guilty unless there's some serious BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT evidence. Stand your ground exists because police are not private security. The police didn't protect George Zimmerman and they sure as hell didn't protect Treyvon Martin. Police arrive AFTER a crime is committed. They investigate, turn over evidence to the state attorney, and hope for a conviction.
    There are some police who don't like citizens defending themselves at all. Not only could it endanger the police officer, it makes people less reliant on their "services".
    Finally, the citizens give the police a badge and a gun (and a bunch of other equipment). If certain officers are too afraid of getting shot to do their job, they need to quit. We'll either find someone else or do without.

  91. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by TapeCutter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I will bet my left testicle that you have never personally raised a child to adulthood. Rebelion is not a parenting mistake, it's a job discription for young adults.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  92. It took long enough by msobkow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In Canada, the first thing the courts would do would call for a media black out until the judgement is rendered, and then likely another black out until sentencing. The idea is to prevent bias in the potential jury pool.

    Unfortunately, due to incompetence and delays in deciding to file charges and make an arrest, they're going to have one hell of a time finding a "jury of peers" that isn't tainted by public opinion and forced to recuse themselves from participating.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:It took long enough by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 1

      Gag orders are issued in the US as well, but the media frenzy over this started the day the incident occurred. The cat was already out of the bag and halfway down the block before the investigation even began, never mind any court proceedings. I don't know how you expect to get this in front of a judge fast enough to get a gag order. Even in Canada, you'd have to prove that the Section One limitations clause applies, and even if you do that, doing so that quickly will almost certainly raise conspiracy and cover up accusations. That's not healthy at all.

      My research suggests the police investigators do not believe it was self-defense, but that the prosecutors didn't think they had enough evidence to go to trial. That's not "incompetence" it's proprietorial discretion. There was no crime they could charge him with to get in front of a judge to get a gag order. Now, because of political and social pressure, they're going to go to trial anyway. Honestly, they have to because it looks so bad if they don't. Everybody from the Mayor of Sanford up to the Governor has to cover their ass and pass the buck to the courtroom or they'll get blamed and go down in flames just like the Sanford Chief of Police Bill Lee did.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    2. Re:It took long enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly my thoughts. The guy's life is already wrecked regardless, but I'm not sure how he can expect a fair trial when the President himself is gunning for him.

    3. Re:It took long enough by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      In Canada, the first thing the courts would do would call for a media black out until the judgement is rendered, and then likely another black out until sentencing.

      Hrrm, can't think of any way that could be abused. "You've being charged on these accounts." "Those are completely falsified, political in nature, and not even dealing with the evidence or reality. Nobody will stand that you can do this." "Sorry, media black out till after you are sentenced. Perhaps if you plead guilty first."

    4. Re:It took long enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a media black out

      Oh, but that sounds racist...

    5. Re:It took long enough by geoskd · · Score: 1

      In Canada, the first thing the courts would do would call for a media black out until the judgement is rendered, and then likely another black out until sentencing. The idea is to prevent bias in the potential jury pool.

      That would not work in the US. Canadian Free Speech is somewhat more limited than American Free Speech. In the US, freedom of expression is taken to an almost paranoid degree. The press can't be enjoined from presenting anything they like short of inciting a riot (which they've never been prosecuted for anyway), or publishing national security information. In Canada, the courts have more support in the law, and significantly more precedent to allow them to squash free speech rights for the sake of a fair trial.

      -=Geoskd

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    6. Re:It took long enough by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      The First Amendment means media blackouts are illegal in the US. Delays in charging Zimmerman might make jury selection a problem here, but not really.

      The US legal system is slow. If he'd been charged the day after the murder there wouldn't have been a national media circus, but neighborhood watch captain kills kid with Skittles was always gonna be a top local story. And juries are selected locally.

    7. Re:It took long enough by Cederic · · Score: 1

      In the UK the press would not be prevented from reporting on this matter. They would be prevented from reporting on it until after the court case has completed.

      That's not a denial of free speech, it's a promotion of justice and a fair trial. Which is every bit as important as free speech, and achieves both.

      I've posted several times in this thread with a general anti-Zimmerman stance, but I do want him to get a fair trial, and I just can't see that happening due to the media coverage.

    8. Re:It took long enough by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      There'll be no problem with finding untainted jurors. Either liars (I've been on a jury where a person lied to the judge to get on the jury, concealing a conflict), or ignorant idiots who don't read or own a TV.

  93. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by khipu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These "Stand Your Ground" Laws that we have thanks to ALEC and the NRA are meant only to protect white people who shoot blacks, Hispanics, Muslims, etc.

    "Meant only to protect white people"? What an inflammatory and completely unsupported thing to say. Like so many other people, when you can't actually find evidence for racism, you just fabricate claims of racism.

    Have a look at how "Stand Your Ground" is applied when it's the other way around.

    In the case you cite, the shooter, a black male, was not arrested and was not charged for an entire year. Eventually, under public pressure, the DA did charge the shooter and he was found guilty by a jury.

    I don't see how the cases are analogous either. Zimmerman claims to have been attacked by Martin from behind, while walking back to his car, and that's consistent with physical evidence. McNeil seems to have provoked a confrontation. Even if McNeil should have been found innocent, how does one injustice justify another one? Would racially based injustice against black men mean that we need to dismantle our legal system altogether, just to justify the mob?

  94. no other choice at this point by khipu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At this point, the only way to settle this is for it to go to trial. The facts need to be laid out in court, experts need to testify, and a jury needs to decide.

    I think there's a good chance that a jury will find Zimmerman "not guilty". The DA's original assessment was that there wasn't even enough evidence to win a conviction, and that's consistent with the evidence that has come out since.

    1. Re:no other choice at this point by Mitreya · · Score: 1

      The DA's original assessment was that there wasn't even enough evidence to win a conviction, and that's consistent with the evidence that has come out since.

      Well, this article makes think that there is enough evidence to at least try to get a convocation. Unless we don't actually live in a "post-racial" America?

    2. Re:no other choice at this point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to see how "stand your ground" applies to ignoring police advice to stay in your car, then getting out of the car and confronting someone.

    3. Re:no other choice at this point by Talderas · · Score: 1

      That's an article posted after it had been announced that there was going to be a charge. It's also not uncommon to find situations in the US where the prosecution doesn't have evidence for the reasonable charge and will elevate it in order to bring pressure down on the defendant to accept a lesser charge in a plea bargain.

      The old DA probably didn't think he had the evidence to go after a Manslaughter charge. The new DA probably agrees that she can't guarantee a conviction for manslaughter, let alone 2nd degree. Additionally, the higher charge can make juries inclined towards lowering a judgment to a lesser charge even if the prosecution didn't adequately prove their case.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    4. Re:no other choice at this point by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

      The biggest problem with that line of is the accusation that the DA's judgment was tainted by the fact that Zimmerman's father was a judge who may have used his influence to convince the DA not to prosecute. And since Zimmerman has previously had charges reduced or quashed, this seems a reasonable accusation. And since those previous charge would have prevented him from possessing concealed handgun license, it is possible that Zimmerman's father is morally - if not legally - culpable in Trayvon's death.

      --
      who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
    5. Re:no other choice at this point by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I don't know the lethal force rules for FL, but he left a location of safety to approach a "suspicious" person, then shot and killed them. They may not have a duty to retreat, but this would mean it's legal for a gay to go in a biker bar, flirt with bikers, annoying them until they threatened violence until he feared for his life, then take out a gun and shoot everyone. Zimmerman has followed and approached others, and was a criminal justice student. He's a cop wannabe who fits the profile of someone who would go hunting, have some idea of what he should be able to get away with, then try to skirt the line. That makes him innocent of the charge, but guilty of premeditated capital murder.

    6. Re:no other choice at this point by khipu · · Score: 1

      They may not have a duty to retreat, but this would mean it's legal for a gay to go in a biker bar, flirt with bikers, annoying them until they threatened violence until he feared for his life, then take out a gun and shoot everyone.

      I sure hope that's legal: offensive speech and behavior are protected by the Constitution. It may not be prudent to enter a homophobic group and display your homosexuality, but the legal and moral responsibility is entirely with whoever starts the physical violence.

      (That's also a bad example because bikers tend not to be particularly homophobic.)

      He's a cop wannabe who fits the profile of someone who would go hunting, have some idea of what he should be able to get away with, then try to skirt the line. That makes him innocent of the charge, but guilty of premeditated capital murder.

      I don't know what he is, but I sure know that you are: your thinking is driven by stereotypes and prejudices. If you had been born in the South 100 years ago, you'd be the guy wearing the white sheet and going out for a lynching, and if you had been born in Germany 100 years ago, you'd be cheering on the Nazis. People like you are reprehensible.

    7. Re:no other choice at this point by khipu · · Score: 1

      I don't see any "problem". My prediction isn't an exoneration, it's just that: a prediction. The final outcome will depend on the facts as presented in court and how the jury weighs them.

    8. Re:no other choice at this point by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      your thinking is driven by stereotypes and prejudices

      No, it's not. Your perceptions are as wrong as your opinions.

      I sure hope that's legal: offensive speech and behavior are protected by the Constitution.

      Harassing someone with speech and behavior until they get agitated, then killing them should be legal? I'm proud and honored to be on the "wrong" side of an argument with you.

    9. Re:no other choice at this point by khipu · · Score: 1

      Harassing someone with speech and behavior until they get agitated, then killing them should be legal?

      You just keep demonstrating your dishonesty by changing words; we weren't talking about "harassing" and "becoming agitated", we were talking about "flirting" and "threatening violence".

      Yes, gay men go to public places and flirt and behave in ways offensive to homophobes like you, just like blacks used to use the wrong water fountains and sit in the wrong seats and generally behaved in ways offensive to racists. And if you threaten them with violence, they will defend themselves. Offending intolerant people is an inevitable part of realizing one's civil rights.

      Sorry, but you'll just have to deal with it and learn to control your homophobia and your violent impulses, because the law is on their side, not yours.

    10. Re:no other choice at this point by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You are not addressing my words, but instead lying by making up what you think would be easier to "disprove". I'm not a homophobe. I'm just a realist. I know homosexuals are attacked for who they are sometimes. Or are you asserting that I'm a homophobe because I'm acknowledging homophobia exists? And "threatening violence" can be no more than an aggressive stance, and if you kill the person that you find threatening, then there'll never be any disagreement about what happened.

    11. Re:no other choice at this point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no point arguing with a liar and bigot like you. You are reprehensible. There really is nothing more to say.

  95. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    I hope you have warned your children about moose attacks.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  96. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by DaveV1.0 · · Score: 2

    It's whether what you've heard has made you lean one way or the other.

    There goes ever single black person I know and most, if not all, of the white people I know.

    --
    There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
  97. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by BasilBrush · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    No, the normal procedure would have been to keep a killer in custody until they decided whether to charge him with murder or not.

  98. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    he's more hispanic than white

    You're confusing ethnicity and race. Hispanics can be black white, brown, yellow or any other colour a human can be.

  99. In the meantime, re Mr. Zimmerman's whereabouts: by Bill+Evans · · Score: 1
    --
    Oh, this Beta, it is not so good.
  100. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Then that's an issue with the police and the DA but somehow they're going to skate. Which is unfortunate.

  101. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    The parent comment is chock-full of racist non sequiturs.

    What part of GP was racist? While the author sounds immature, and was ranting and exaggerating in places (I agree about some non sequiturs), where does racism enter into it? [S]he didn't even make reference to any race. Is that your shortcut for smearing a debate opponent without the pesky nuissance of having to refute their arguments? So to be more specific, and just guessing here, do you see the phrase "thug culture" as a distinctively black thing? If so, maybe that says something about you more than about GP.

  102. Re:Talk about media bias by stephanruby · · Score: 1

    This entire case is a crock of bullshit. When two black teens set a white kid on fire, a clear hate crime, it hardly gets a column in the local news.

    May be, it's because the cops didn't start defending the two kids who did this to him, just like the sheriff did with Zimmerman.

    Also, the fact that he was told "white boy" by his assaillants didn't come out until a couple of days later (according to the mom herself). The victim had already been interviewed by the police and the mom had already made her statements to the press, but it's only a few days later in the hospital room that the kid told his mother that they had said "white boy".

    But when a hispanic guy kills a black teen it garnishes national media attention?

    The guy wasn't just hispanic. He was the son of a former judge. He was hoping to become a police officer himself. And the sheriff clearly knew him and liked him already. That's at least one of the reasons the Sheriff jumped in to defend Zimmerman right away.

    Did Obama come out and say "If I had a son, he'd look like Coon"?

    Why would Obama need to intervene? Third parties should only intervene when the local police isn't doing its job. Why are you jumping to the conclusion that the police isn't doing its job in this case?

  103. Re:Talk about media bias by XPeter · · Score: 0

    Did he serve a sentence for murder? no.

    The point is that a crime is a crime, no matter someones race. You think he's going to get a fair trial now that everyone and their mother thinks he shot a poor defenseless black kid?

    I know Slashdot is liberal, but c'mon, you can't be that naive.

    --
    "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has it's limits" - Albert Einstein
  104. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suggest you review the way Florida handled this, there wasn't anything "unusual" with what they did.

  105. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's is wrong with you?
    A 17 year old died.
    Now Zimmerman will stand in trial. That doesn't mean he's guilty of anything, he's is innocent until proven guilty.
    The infuriating thing about this case is how everybody managed to turn the distraction into the main event.
    A 17 year old died.
    I'm a father and I can't even begin (or don't want to) understand the pain that such loss involves. It's unfathomable that in a civilized society all that it takes is for the shooter to say is "Well, I was standing my own ground".
    Standing your own ground has nothing to do with self defense. It's giving, anyone, the right to decide whether you should live or die.
    Traffic altercation, the other guy comes out of his car. bang.
    You're pissed drunk in a bar talking to someone else's wife, when he starts walking towards you, bang.
    Yes, that's the sort of society we're striving for.
    A 17 year old died the least we should do it's check out the facts, thoroughly. Let's not take 6 weeks and major shit storm to do so.
    I read /. for the insightful comments, but every time there's something about this case this turns ridiculous political (conservative || liberal) talking points.
    Get a grip

  106. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by scot4875 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I have zero faith that any jury would deliberate for more than 15 minutes before declaring Zimmerman guilty.

    Seriously? Have you not seen the vitriol spewing forth from both sides of this issue? Do you honestly think that Zimmerman's lawyers will be so completely incompetent that the prosecution will be able to completely stack the jury?

    --Jeremy

    --
    Jesus was a liberal
  107. where is the evidence? by khipu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He's an asshole because he ignored the 911 operator's instructions to wait for the cops, and got out of his car with a gun to confront somebody.

    The 911 operator told him that he didn't "need to" follow Martin and Zimmerman said "OK" and was going to wait by his car for police. Zimmerman testified that he was returning to his car and it was Martin who confronted him and then punched him. Witnesses saw Zimmerman on the ground, with Martin on top, and Zimmerman's injuries and dirty clothing support that.

    I don't know of any actual evidence that support the idea that Zimmerman ignored the 911 operator's suggestion and followed and attacked Martin. Maybe you can share what evidence you think there is?

    (Didn't he think it out? What did he intend to do after he confronted Martin? It had to turn out bad.)

    There is no evidence that Zimmerman confronted Martin.

    A lot of black people in Florida go to jail for less.

    I don't know whether that's true or not, but if racism causes the justice system to be unreasonably harsh towards black people, then we need to fix that, instead of destroying our justice system for everybody.

    1. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 2

      I don't know of any actual evidence that support the idea that Zimmerman ignored the 911 operator's suggestion and followed and attacked Martin. Maybe you can share what evidence you think there is?

      There is no evidence that Zimmerman confronted Martin.

      http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/11/opinion/hostin-trayvon-martin-jury/index.html

      Zimmerman sees Martin, deems him "suspicious" and calls the police. Zimmerman tells the dispatcher he is following Martin. The dispatcher tells Zimmerman "we don't need you to do that." Martin notices Zimmerman is following him and tells his girlfriend, Dee Dee, with whom he is on the phone. She tells him to run, and he agrees to walk quickly.

    2. Re:where is the evidence? by sandytaru · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why did he even leave his car in the first place, if he thought that Martin was dangerous? Your car is the safest place to be - you have a 2,000 pound vehicle with the strength of a hundred horses, and the guy on the sidewalk doesn't. Stand Your Ground ceased to apply the moment he left his vehicle.

      --
      Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
    3. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Zimmerman testified that he was returning to his car and it was Martin who confronted him and then punched him.

      ZIMMERMAN testified. This is a guy who's potentially in a lot of trouble because he very definitely did pull the trigger and end Trayvon Martin's life. His story might be true, but it also might be a self-serving lie.

      Witnesses saw Zimmerman on the ground, with Martin on top, and Zimmerman's injuries and dirty clothing support that.

      Correction: some witnesses saw that. Others reported something else.

      Human memory is extremely fallible, subject to all kinds of biases, and shockingly easy to alter after the fact. As such, eyewitness testimony, particularly indirect testimony as in this case (Martin was shot before any of the so-called "eyewitnesses" saw a thing) isn't worth nearly as much as most people think. Less so the more the witnesses hear outside opinions and other witness stories, which will bias them and influence what they think they remember.

      One of the things which came out was that Sanford PD investigators spent little time interviewing witnesses and may have had a pro-Zimmerman bias while doing so (i.e. everything they asked was slanted towards establishing Zimmerman shot in self defense). That's a massively bad thing. Proper witness handling means isolating witnesses and carefully interviewing each one with as much neutrality as possible so that the authority figure doing the questioning does not influence memories of the event (which, in the case of an indirectly witnessed violent event, will be confused and easy to modify).

      I don't know of any actual evidence that support the idea that Zimmerman ignored the 911 operator's suggestion and followed and attacked Martin. Maybe you can share what evidence you think there is?

      The incident started with Martin on foot, Zimmerman following in a vehicle. While in the car and talking to 911, Zimmerman started talking himself up into being a hero, and was told by the 911 operator to back off, observe, wait for the cops, and not get directly involved. The fact that he voluntarily left the car (even if you accept his "self defense" narrative) is pretty good evidence that he ignored this advice.

      There is no evidence that Zimmerman confronted Martin.

      The entire incident could not have happened without Zimmerman behaving in an extremely confrontational manner, even if you believe his self-serving story.

      Put yourself in Martin's shoes for a moment. You're walking home on foot, carrying candy and tea for you and your family. Some guy in a car starts following you for no obvious reason. That was the start of the confrontation. If I were Martin in that situation, I would be creeped the hell out.

      I don't know whether that's true or not, but if racism causes the justice system to be unreasonably harsh towards black people, then we need to fix that, instead of destroying our justice system for everybody.

      On what planet is arresting Zimmerman and properly investigating the event the 'destruction of our justice system for everybody'?

    4. Re:where is the evidence? by khipu · · Score: 2

      That may all be true. But the question is how the story continues. Zimmerman states that he lost sight of Martin and was returning to his car when Martin attacked him. That would make Martin the attacker. The physical evidence and witness statements seem to support Zimmerman's story. That would make Martin the attacker. The fact that Zimmerman followed him initially is irrelevant at that point.

    5. Re:where is the evidence? by khipu · · Score: 1

      Why did he even leave his car in the first place, if he thought that Martin was dangerous?

      Burglars usually aren't dangerous, they are in it for the money: they just run away when they are spotted or confronted. And doubtlessly, carrying a weapon gave Zimmerman a false sense of security.

      I agree it would have been prudent for him not to have left the car. I also think "stand your ground" and concealed weapons are questionable. None of that amounts to a crime, though. Whether Zimmerman committed a crime or not hinges on proving beyond a reasonable doubt that Zimmerman actually attacked Martin.

    6. Re:where is the evidence? by khipu · · Score: 1

      One of the things which came out was that Sanford PD investigators spent little time interviewing witnesses and may have had a pro-Zimmerman bias while doing so (i.e. everything they asked was slanted towards establishing Zimmerman shot in self defense).

      Incorrect. It was the police who wanted to charge Zimmerman and the DA overrode them because he thought there was insufficient evidence for a conviction. Since the police wanted to charge Zimmerman, it stands to reason that if they had any biases, they would have been against Zimmerman, not for him.

      Correction: some witnesses saw that. Others reported something else

      Really? Which witness reported Zimmerman being on top? What actual evidence is there that Zimmerman attacked Martin, or that Zimmerman was physically threatening to Martin?

      Human memory is extremely fallible, subject to all kinds of biases, and shockingly easy to alter after the fact

      The state needs to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. If these witnesses are as unreliable and easily influenced as you say, then Zimmerman probably can't be convicted at all.

      The entire incident could not have happened without Zimmerman behaving in an extremely confrontational manner, even if you believe his self-serving story.

      How is following a stranger at a distance in your own gated community "extremely confrontational"? Even according to Martin's own girlfriend, it was Martin, not Zimmerman, who initiated the actual confrontation, consistent with Zimmerman's own testimony.

      On what planet is arresting Zimmerman and properly investigating the event the 'destruction of our justice system for everybody'?

      On what planet do you live? People aren't just calling for a proper investigation (and there is no evidence that the initial investigation was improper), they are calling for the conviction of Zimmerman and indictments of the police and prosecutors for alleged racial bias and improper conduct.

      My prediction is that Zimmerman will be found "not guilty"; Unless there is evidence that hasn't been revealed yet, I simply can't see how the state can prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he did not act in self defense or that he even initiated the confrontation. And I suspect that there will be riots as a consequence because people will simply be unwilling to accept this verdict.

    7. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In the dispatcher's tape, Zimmerman said he was following Martin. In Martin's girlfriend's account, Martin was worried and quickly walking away, when the phone went dead and she couldn't call him back. I would call that a confrontation.

      In Zimmerman's story, he was returning to the car. when Martin attacked him. We don't know whether that's true or not. It's not consistent with the girlfriend's story, which sounds like Martin was running away when Zimmerman caught up to him. According to the girlfriend, Martin said, "Why are you following me?" Zimmerman said, "What are you doing here?" They each repeated those lines. Then the phone went dead. Martin might have attacked Zimmerman at that point. Zimmerman might have threatened or pushed Martin first. We don't know. (Under Florida law, Martin only had to reasonably believe he was in danger. He didn't have to back down.)

      We don't know what all the physical evidence and witness statements are, because the DA hasn't released that information. One of the witnesses said she gave an account to the police, and the police changed her account.

      I'd like to see an investigation in which all the witnesses are subpoenaed to testify under oath. I'd like to see them cross-examined by lawyers. We'll never know what happened with certainty, but that's the way to get as close to the truth as possible.

      There's a very thin difference in a case like this between justifiable homicide and a barroom-brawl type murder. I don't think Zimmerman's life was in danger when he was getting beaten up. When I was a kid in Brooklyn, it was fairly standard practice in a street fight to pound the other kid's head against the pavement. It happened to me, and I lived. In hindsight, it doesn't look to me like a justified killing. Zimmerman's life wasn't in danger. Nobody wants to get their head bashed against the sidewalk, but you don't kill somebody for that.

      It would have been best if Zimmerman hadn't gotten into that situation in the first place. If Zimmerman thought Martin was a dangerous intruder, he should never have gotten out of his car. He never should have tried to follow Martin on foot. After all, Martin might have been legally carrying a gun. Even cops wouldn't approach a potentially dangerous suspect alone. The rules for neighborhood watches tell you not to do that. 911 told him not to do that. That's why, based on the facts that have been made public, Zimmerman is an asshole.

      Whether he's guilty of murder, whether he gets convicted of murder, and whether he loses a civil suit, are separate questions.

    8. Re:where is the evidence? by khipu · · Score: 1

      In the dispatcher's tape, Zimmerman said he was following Martin.

      Yes, until the dispatcher told him not to. What happened next? Zimmerman then said that Martin ran, and that Zimmerman was going to meet the police at his truck. There is nothing on the police tape that suggests that Zimmerman continued to follow Martin or confronted him.

      In Martin's girlfriend's account, Martin was worried and quickly walking away, when the phone went dead and she couldn't call him back.

      In Martin's girlfriend's account, Martin talked to Zimmerman first and said "Why are you following me?" (at that point, Zimmerman was apparently already returning to his truck). Zimmerman responded with "What are you doing here?". Then the line went dead. That means Martin confronted Zimmerman.

      Even cops wouldn't approach a potentially dangerous suspect alone. The rules for neighborhood watches tell you not to do that. 911 told him not to do that. That's why, based on the facts that have been made public, Zimmerman is an asshole.

      And, again, there is no evidence that Zimmerman approached Martin. According to Zimmerman, according to the dialog with the dispatcher, and according to Martin's girlfriend, Martin approached Zimmerman as he was heading back towards his truck.

      I don't think Zimmerman's life was in danger when he was getting beaten up. When I was a kid in Brooklyn, it was fairly standard practice in a street fight to pound the other kid's head against the pavement. It happened to me, and I lived. In hindsight, it doesn't look to me like a justified killing.

      Well, he may not have had the "benefit" of your experience; I would certainly be concerned for my life and health if I got punched, thrown to the ground, and had my head banged against the pavement. Furthermore, it wasn't just that, he said he felt Martin going for his gun.

      If Zimmerman thought Martin was a dangerous intruder, he should never have gotten out of his car

      Zimmerman thought Martin was a burglar. Burglars, as a rule, tend not to be all that dangerous.

      It would have been best if Zimmerman hadn't gotten into that situation in the first place.

      Agreed. But lack of good judgment isn't the same as murder. And if Martin approached Zimmerman, as seems likely, the confrontation is Martin's fault, not Zimmerman's.

      Again, I'm open to the possibility that Zimmerman started something if there is evidence for it, but I simply haven't seen any evidence in the public record so far.

    9. Re:where is the evidence? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      because he wanted to feel like a big man pushing around who he thought was a crack addict teenager pushover.

      Anyhow.. how does this stand your ground thing work actually if there's a fight between two persons, say a drunk fight in front of a bar? the winner of the fight gets a get out of jail free card? seems like it wasn't really thought out that well.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    10. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 1

      In Martin's girlfriend's account, Martin talked to Zimmerman first and said "Why are you following me?" (at that point, Zimmerman was apparently already returning to his truck).

      "Apparently"? You're assuming too much. I'll wait until the evidence comes out at the trial.

    11. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it is you who is assuming to much. There is no evidence whatsoever that Zimmerman was following Martin after talking to the dispatcher, yet you keep talking about it as if that were a fact.

      I'm glad you finally realize that you have been jumping to conclusions.

    12. Re:where is the evidence? by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And doubtlessly, carrying a weapon gave Zimmerman a false sense of security.

      I don't think his sense of security was false. Of course -- and this is a point I make strongly and repeatedly to my concealed carry students -- if you're carrying a gun you really should try even harder than when you're not to avoid situations where you might feel you have to use it, because by being armed you've raised the stakes, and may have to deal with the legal, financial, emotional and social effects of shooting someone.

      But there isn't any falsity about the sense of increased security you have when you're armed. The gun does give you significantly greater ability to protect yourself or others.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    13. Re:where is the evidence? by StormyWeather · · Score: 1

      To go look at the street sign to tell the operator his location, which she asked. His biggest stupidity here was not having a smart phone with google maps.

      Exactly how does a vehicle have anything to do with the stand your ground law? Would it also apply if I was in a golf cart, or four wheeler? How about a scooter, or a motorcycle. Can I only expect to not get the crap beat out of me if I'm on wheels?

    14. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But there isn't any falsity about the sense of increased security you have when you're armed. The gun does give you significantly greater ability to protect yourself or others.

      That's only in a very narrow sense of "protect". As the Zimmerman case shows, if you carry a gun, you are at risk of someone trying to grab it from you. Furthermore, the cost of using it may be higher than the cost of the injuries you might have sustained without a gun.

    15. Re:where is the evidence? by _8553454222834292266 · · Score: 1

      Nobody wants to get their head bashed against the sidewalk, but you don't kill somebody for that.

      What, really? I would 100% of the time. I'd rather be in jail than brain damaged or dead. Bashing someone's head into a sidewalk can be considered attempted murder.

    16. Re:where is the evidence? by _8553454222834292266 · · Score: 1

      He lived there and obsessively patrolled the streets. I can't believe he needed to get out of his vehicle to know what street he was on.

    17. Re:where is the evidence? by rujholla · · Score: 1

      Zimmerman's life wasn't in danger. Nobody wants to get their head bashed against the sidewalk, but you don't kill somebody for that.

      Whatever, if I am having my head beat against the pavement by someone as big as Mr Martin, and I have a gun I shoot, if I have a knife I stab him, failing that I find a rock and bash him upside the head.

    18. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the same could be said for leaving your house? After all you have all those hardened walls protecting you from them. Maybe next we shouldn't leave our rooms since that is an additional door between you and them for ultimate protection.

    19. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 1

      I know a lot of people who got their heads bashed against the sidewalk, and I don't know anybody who was brain damaged or killed.

      That's the problem with the "reasonably fears" law. The Florida law says that somebody can use lethal force when he "reasonably fears" death or serious injury.

      If I provoke some big black guy, and he starts kicking my ass, should I reasonably fear that I'm in danger of death or serious injury? I don't think most gun owners whose asses are being kicked are able to make a split-second decision about that, nor are they're going to call a lawyer in time. If the gun owner makes the wrong split-second decision, he can go to jail for a long time. That's what most homicide cases are about.

      If I were on the jury, I wouldn't think Zimmerman was in reasonable fear of death or serious injury. His jury may decide otherwise.

      If you go around ignoring police advice and confronting people at night, as Zimmerman did, you're an asshole. If once in the while you get your ass kicked, that's the price of being an asshole. If you additionally carry a handgun, you're an even bigger asshole. If you use that gun, you're liable to go to jail if the cops and the jury disagree with your assessment of "reasonable."

      That's the risk of carrying a gun.

    20. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 1

      Whatever. If you kill him, and the jury decides it wasn't reasonable force, you'll go to jail.

    21. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was a kid in Brooklyn, it was fairly standard practice in a street fight to pound the other kid's head against the pavement. It happened to me, and I lived. In hindsight, it doesn't look to me like a justified killing. Zimmerman's life wasn't in danger. Nobody wants to get their head bashed against the sidewalk, but you don't kill somebody for that

      You got lucky if you lived through it. Good thing you could trust that your attacker was kind and smart enough to know how hard and how many times he could pound your skill into the pavement without killing you. I personally wouldn't trust my attacker to have that medical knowledge or kindness in their heart. In my opinion, repeatedly slamming someones head into pavement is attempted murder if you live. Regardless, I don't think its illogical to fear for your life when your head is repeatedly being pounded into the pavement and you can't stop it (without a gun). Is he supposed to ask nicely first before stopping it with a gun? Is it OK to shoot if the attacker doesn't stop after being asked nicely to stop? After you're unconscious and your brains are coming out, is it OK then?

      I can't tell what actually happened, so I'm not saying Zimmerman is in the clear or not. But IF TM approached him, and started beating him and pounding his head into pavement, I think he should have shot him. I would have. IIf that isn't how it went down....then yes, straight to jail, must not pass go. But the underlying question as to whether or not skull pounding into pavement is reason to fear for your life....I think you're crazy if you answer no, and lucky to have survived it. If that is unfair to the attacker...maybe they couldn't get in the altercation, or stop prior to committing such dangerous acts during the altercation.

      Another thing to think about. Pounding a skull into pavement, stabbing someone, and shooting someone. None of these acts necessarily kill people when committed. But you have to ask what is the likelihood it will lead to death? Yes, a gun shot is likely more "deadly" than pavement/skull pounding, but it is reasonable when committing each action the result can be death. There are factors, how hard, how long, how many bullets, etc, but those can only be answered after the fact. During the altercation, the victim can't answer those questions, and thus, should fear for his life.

    22. Re:where is the evidence? by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      You can die from getting you skull bashed against the concrete, and if that was the case then I would say if the guy was armed, a shooting would be justified.

      Who knows if this is the case or not however, and at this point it is so political it barely matters what the facts are anymore I would bet.

    23. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 1

      I don't know anybody who died getting his skull bashed against the concrete in a fight like that.

      If you're going to go around alone at night confronting black guys (who have a perfect right to be there and are minding their own business), stay out of Brooklyn.

    24. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know of any actual evidence that support the idea that Zimmerman ignored the 911 operator's suggestion and followed and attacked Martin. Maybe you can share what evidence you think there is?

      None of this would have happened if Zimmerman hadn't imposed himself to be the 'neighborhood watch' and followed Trayvon to the point of confrontation, period. You cannot dispute that fact. The evidence that he ignored the 911 operator's advice ("We don't need you to do that") and followed Trayvon anyway proves that his intent was to be the 'good guy' here and play vigilante. He could have waited for police. He could have stayed in his vehicle. He chose not to, and that choice led to this happening. Those are facts, and not matter what your interpretation of the end result is, those cannot be disputed.

      The fact is too that someone just walking down the street has the right not to be followed and/or confronted because of the suspicions of an untrained individual. The proper response is to call the police and allow them to handle it. Zimmerman has neither the training, education, or ability to determine what 'proper use of force' are in a crime situation, and should not have interspersed himself into it.

      Additionally, Zimmerman's right to police his neighborhood ends at his driveway. he might have the right to carry a gun and even use it in self-defense. It does not give him the right to go looking for trouble because he enjoys being a hero. If he likes that so much, he should join the police department.

      Did Trayvon jump him and attack him? Possibly. Does that change the fact that Zimmerman alone instigated this confrontation due to his choices? Not at all. If GZ had the 'right' to defend himself, then Trayvon sure as hell had the right to be concerned and confront a strange man who was following him for minutes at least, first in a car and then on foot. Was that a bad choice? Sure.

      Ultimately, of the two, George bears of the burden of responsibility here. His bad choices led up to this, from start to finish. It was his choice to be a vigilante that even allowed Trayvon to confront him at all. He should be held responsible for his actions, which were and still are, illegal. If it takes a 'mob' of public action to get that to happen, so be it. He antagonized an unarmed, underage person into a conflict and then killed him. If it was in self-defense as he claims, it was still only self-defense due to HIS CHOICES.

      Responsibility is a bitch, folks, and it works both ways.

    25. Re:where is the evidence? by swillden · · Score: 1

      But there isn't any falsity about the sense of increased security you have when you're armed. The gun does give you significantly greater ability to protect yourself or others.

      That's only in a very narrow sense of "protect". As the Zimmerman case shows, if you carry a gun, you are at risk of someone trying to grab it from you. Furthermore, the cost of using it may be higher than the cost of the injuries you might have sustained without a gun.

      Your points are correct, but I disagree that they make the sense of "protection" unusefully narrow.

      On the first point, yes, if you bring a gun into a situation, you are at risk of having it taken from you and used against you. In practice, this really doesn't happen very often, but it's something you have to consider. There are multiple implications of this fact. Some of the implications I cover in my class are: First, if you're carrying a gun you should not get into a fist fight, because your gun may become exposed (it shouldn't fall -- if there's any danger of that you need a better holster). If that happens, your opponent may take it and use it on you -- even worse, he may do so because he suddenly realizes you have a gun and fears you're going to use it on him. Second, you should not expose or draw your gun until you've determined that you have to shoot. Third, you should learn and practice handgun retention techniques, and how to shoot from retention. It's not hard to defeat a gun grab if you know how.

      On the second, you're absolutely right that the cost of using your gun may be very high. That's why I teach that you should always assume that if you draw your gun and shoot someone you will be financially ruined and will spend years in prison. If what will happen if you don't shoot is worse than that, then shoot.

      The purpose of carrying a gun is to be able to defend yourself or others against deadly threats. For anything else... just talk your way out of it or run away. But for those deadly dangerous situations, having a gun does make you much more likely to survive.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    26. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know anybody who died getting his skull bashed against the concrete in a fight like that.

      Maybe they missed all your friends vital spots. Maybe nobody ever dies from head trauma in your world. Furthermore consider that you are being beaten and overpowered by someone who you asked a reasonable question of and are in fear that your gun will be taken and used against you.

      If you're going to go around alone at night confronting black guys (who have a perfect right to be there and are minding their own business), stay out of Brooklyn.

      Is asking a stranger in a gated community while acting as part of a neighborhood watch enough to provoke someone into attacking you? Or does it only matter if they're black. (You brought up skin color in the above statement).

      You can argue all you want that Zimmerman was an asshole. Perhaps he was. It seems to me that someone took things too far that night. Zimmerman seems fairly calm and collected during his 911 call. It doesn't sound like he was looking for a fight to me. I find it hard to believe he went from asking Martin what he was doing there to attacking him physically or even brandishing his gun let alone shooting him.

      The more I study this case, the more I am finding myself side with Zimmerman - at the very least I don't believe there is enough to convict him of 2nd degree murder even if it's plausible that's what he is in fact guilty of. Then again, I haven't heard all the witness testimony and AFAIK the police have not released that. One witness who called 911 reportedly saw a scuffle but could not determine who was on top of who.

      So, either the special prosecutor has information that we don't have or is bringing charges for political reasons.

    27. Re:where is the evidence? by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      You really don't think someone pounding your head against the pavement could kill you? Ludicrous! I wouldn't hesitate to shoot someone doing that if I was the victim. If I was a bystander, the dude doing the pounding would get one verbal warning, and if he pounded the victim's head again, I would shoot him.

      That said, Zimmerman was a damn fool for playing wanna be cop. Found guilty or not, he is going to pay a huge price for his foolishness. Such is the price of ill-considered action.

      Of course the real criminals in this story are the local police in that town, and all across the US for that matter. Our police spend nearly all their time on law enforcement theater, and almost none on meaningful crime prevention.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    28. Re:where is the evidence? by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      When will America finally have enough guns that she and all her citizens are safe? What a happy day that shall be.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    29. Re:where is the evidence? by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      People die from getting "head stomped" all the time. How do you think most people die in fights? It isn't getting punched in the face. Its when the person falls and hits their head, or when someone intentionally stomps your head into the pavement, or has someone ram it there. (excluding someone pulling a weapon and bashing their head with it, a knife and getting stabbed multiple times, or a gun and getting shot... as in this case)

      Hey I agree if the guy is going around confronting people he is an idiot, but this was apparently in his neighborhood, so it at least it has a thin veneer of reasonableness. However idiot or not, objectionable or not, any judge just about anywhere I think is going to agree that simply "confronting" someone does not give the right to do violence to them, including bashing ones head into things. That's called talking the law into your own hands. If it is otherwise you live in a pretty horrible place.

      So if it played out where Zimmerman followed this guy because he was "suspicious" (legitimately or not I don't think it makes a difference, the guy could be a raging racist, it doesn't matter), and then confronted the guy as to why he was walking through his neighborhood. If Trayvon got upset/angry/indignant (legitimately so, and likely felt like he was being targeted), and escalated that confrontation to the point of violence, to the point which Zimmerman defended himself, well many people that were outraged for the non-arrest may be very unhappy with the eventual decision.

      To me, the prosecutors unless they can prove that it was Zimmerman's intent the whole time to stalk this poor guy and kill him (and seeing as they didn't charge him with 1st degree murder they don't think they can), then they pretty much have to prove that Trayvon did not pose an imminent physical threat of violence at that time, or that Zimmerman's response was disproportionate (a potential head slap, rather than head bash for example).

      In any case it doesn't seem to me that they have a whole lot of evidence either way, most of it would be Zimmerman's VS Trayvon word, and unfortunately, the court is really only going to hear one side of it, at least pertaining to this particular incident (I'm sure all sorts of historical stuff will come up). This has also gotten so political, it seems like one of the bigger trials in my American experience.

    30. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 1

      You really don't think someone pounding your head against the pavement could kill you? Ludicrous!

      In science, we base our conclusions on data, not intuition. I used to work on auto engineering safety studies, and went over a few studies of tests on cadavers to see how much impact the human skull could take, so I know a little bit about the physics. A minor auto collision will give much more of an impact than an adversary could give in a fight. Falling over from a standing position and hitting your head would give more impact. Falling from a bicycle is often fatal. And I've had my head pounded against the pavement myself when I was a teenager. But I've never heard of anybody actually being killed by having his head pounded against the pavement, and I couldn't find one with a quick Google search. If you can find such a case, I'll change my mind.

      I wouldn't hesitate to shoot someone doing that if I was the victim. If I was a bystander, the dude doing the pounding would get one verbal warning, and if he pounded the victim's head again, I would shoot him.

      That's the problem with handguns. They escalate a fight to a killing -- and often, according to the Florida newspapers, the killer is the one who started the fight. You start a fight, you get your ass kicked, and you kill the guy.

      If everybody followed your scenario, we'd have a lot more killings.

      If you killed somebody in those scenarios, you would be convicted of murder if the jury agreed with me that the risk of death or serious injury wasn't that great, wasn't reasonable, and that you used disproportionate force.

      The other problem with handguns is that you don't usually have time to call a lawyer to find out whether you're justified in using deadly force in that particular situation.

      That "One verbal warning" doesn't mean anything if the dude doesn't speak English (which is often the case). And bystanders often don't know what the situation is, which was a problem in the Gabby Giffords shooting. Suppose it turned out that the guy being pounded had tried to rob the other guy.

      That said, Zimmerman was a damn fool for playing wanna be cop. Found guilty or not, he is going to pay a huge price for his foolishness. Such is the price of ill-considered action.

      Well, I agree with that. I think carrying a handgun was part of his foolishness.

      But I also blame the NRA-sponsored gun laws which encourage people to respond to an assault by escalating it to a killing.

    31. Re:where is the evidence? by RatherBeAnonymous · · Score: 1

      .... Whether Zimmerman committed a crime or not hinges on proving beyond a reasonable doubt that Zimmerman actually attacked Martin.

      No, I don't think it does.

      If a person provokes another into a fight and then kills that person, they are guilty of non-justifiable homicide. Whether it is first or second degree homicide or voluntary or involuntary manslaughter is up to the courts to decide. But, it is NOT self defense, and Florida's stand your ground laws don't change that. The only thing that stand your ground laws change is the presumption of guilt. Without stand your ground laws, you must attempt to flee, or else you are presumed guilty, and the rest of the facts of a self-defense case are irrelevant.

      In this case, Zimmerman provoked Martin by following him. He may have caught up to Martin and said more to provoke him. Martin may not have intended to start a fight, but by following and apparently attempting to confront Martin, Zimmerman knew that a fight was possible, and he knew he had a gun backing him up. If this had turned out differently and Zimmerman was dead, "stand your ground" would have been there to protect Martin. I mean, Martin clearly had reason to believe his life was in danger.

    32. Re:where is the evidence? by swillden · · Score: 1

      When will America finally have enough guns that she and all her citizens are safe? What a happy day that shall be.

      There is no such thing as safety until there are no people with evil intent, which means there is no such thing as safety.

      Any perception of safety, anywhere, is an illusion caused mostly by not paying attention. That doesn't mean danger is omnipresent, either, nor that the vast majority of people can't live out their whole lives without being threatened by death or maiming, but there's basically nowhere that it's impossible.

      Guns are a great equalizer, which give a 90 year-old woman some hope of fending off violence from a 20 year-old martial artist, and allow a person to defend themselves at a distance, but they're only tools, they don't address the fundamental problem. However, neither are the tools the fundamental problem... if criminals cannot obtain firearms they will use knives, bats, fists, etc. See the example of Great Britain, which has had some success at making handguns hard to obtain, only to witness a wave of knife violence that causes people to talk semi-seriously about banning knives with points.

      Violence is caused by people, not by the tools they use. In the presence of aggressive, unlawful violence, the only effective response is defensive, lawful violence and a handgun is the most effective defensive tool we've yet invented -- though a good pepper spray or taser is a close second in effectiveness. Perhaps someday we'll invent the Star Trek phaser with its stun setting. Of course, even with that Captain Kirk occasionally felt the need to set his to kill.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    33. Re:where is the evidence? by Vicarius · · Score: 1

      Under Florida law, he didn't have to believe his live was in danger to be able to use deadly force. If it was reasonable to believe that he was in at a risk of "great bodily harm" or that he was preventing "imminent commission of a forcible felony", then use of a deadly force was legal.

      Florida's Stand Your Ground Law

      2011 Florida Statutes CHAPTER 776 JUSTIFIABLE USE OF FORCE

      776.012.Use of force in defense of person.—A person is justified in using force, except deadly force, against another when and to the extent that the person reasonably believes that such conduct is necessary to defend himself or herself or another against the other’s imminent use of unlawful force. However, a person is justified in the use of deadly force and does not have a duty to retreat if:

      (1)He or she reasonably believes that such force is necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the imminent commission of a forcible felony; or
      (2)Under those circumstances permitted pursuant to s. 776.013.

    34. Re:where is the evidence? by nbauman · · Score: 1

      (1)He or she reasonably believes that such force is necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the imminent commission of a forcible felony;

      "Reasonably."

    35. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know of any actual evidence that support the idea that Zimmerman ignored the 911 operator's suggestion and followed and attacked Martin. Maybe you can share what evidence you think there is?

      There is no evidence that Zimmerman confronted Martin.

      http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/11/opinion/hostin-trayvon-martin-jury/index.html

      Zimmerman sees Martin, deems him "suspicious" and calls the police. Zimmerman tells the dispatcher he is following Martin. The dispatcher tells Zimmerman "we don't need you to do that." Martin notices Zimmerman is following him and tells his girlfriend, Dee Dee, with whom he is on the phone. She tells him to run, and he agrees to walk quickly.

      But NO_LIMIT_NIGGA is a natural afleet if he got to within 100 feet of his house he could have make it the rest of the way because Zimmerman was given in the press as 250lbs so how come the violent racist thug came across Zimmerman and punched him from behind 200 feet away where he was eventually shot whn Zimmerman defended himself from a racist assault?

    36. Re:where is the evidence? by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Utter bilgi, I live in the UK, homicide rate involving knives is about steady at about 200-220 a year in a population of rough 64,000,000. The number of shooting deaths per year in the USA as far as I can see was over 11,000 in 2004. So you are way more likely to be shot in America than stabbed in the UK.

      Regardless, people occasionally want to hurt each other for lots of stupid reasons, the less well armed they are when they attempt it, the better.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    37. Re:where is the evidence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was a kid in Brooklyn, it was fairly standard practice in a street fight to pound the other kid's head against the pavement. It happened to me, and I lived. In hindsight, it doesn't look to me like a justified killing. Zimmerman's life wasn't in danger. Nobody wants to get their head bashed against the sidewalk, but you don't kill somebody for that.

      You've been watching too many movies if you think you can't die from that: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_impact_syndrome

  108. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 3, Insightful

    With that fair and balanced recitation of events you won't make it into the jury pool.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  109. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by scot4875 · · Score: 2

    If my son got shot because he started beating him and slamming his head into the pavement

    Allegedly.

    Unfortunately, the 'beater' in this case is dead and we only get to hear one side of the story. Anyone with two brain cells to rub together could have predicted this exact outcome from these idiotic "stand your ground" laws that absolve killers as long as they felt *really really* scared at the time they did their killing.

    --Jeremy

    --
    Jesus was a liberal
  110. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jnaujok · · Score: 2

    They raised that to $1,000,000 after three days.

    --
    Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
  111. Idiot interviewee by Quila · · Score: 1

    There is so much misinformation about such laws, and the media is perfectly happy to repeat it without checking facts. Or they just make it up.

    Par for the course when it comes to gun-related topics.

  112. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So two wrongs make a right? We need to star to stand up to injustice no mater what form, a society that allows degenerates to run rampant and not make sure justice is serves the people i remember pledging allegiance to the flag and at the end saying "justice for all". You know if this kid who got shot was white the same thing would had transpired the tragedy may have been worse since there would be no fuss. We are all people it is time we make sure we all get justice, and you know what next time I see some injustice on a white or black or what ever the panthers should be called they know how to make a fuss and make sure we get the justice that our land needs. In the biblical days when injustices occurred the land would be defiled and bad things would occur so why not begin acting like a civilized society and making sure we all are free not just some that belong to some secret sects.

  113. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Sperbels · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When you have a son and he starts thinking that gangsta thug culture is GREAT, that all the rap and hip-hop about how awesome it is to be a career criminal is something more than entertainment, that's your cue to ACT LIKE A PARENT and straighten his ass out before he gets either jailed or shot in the streets.

    You know, "acting like a parent" isn't just some magic thing you do and instantly your kid is wearing polo shirts and khakis and has perfect grammar.

  114. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by FrankSchwab · · Score: 1

    I haven't been following the recent reporting on this case; did somebody find some evidence between the time (as his girlfriend reported) this:
    “He said this man was watching him, so he put his hoodie on,” she said. “He said he lost the man. I asked Trayvon to run, and he said he was going to walk fast. I told him to run but he said he was not going to run. Trayvon said, ‘What, are you following me for.’ And the man said, ‘What are you doing here.’ "

    happened, and when Mr. Martin got shot?

    I guess I have a hard time understanding how

    This situation is just another young violent black thug-wannabe who finally picked the wrong guy to fuck with.

    I guess I got trolled...

    --
    And the worms ate into his brain.
  115. Why is this here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is on slashdot because.....?????

  116. The Black Panther Party wants him dead by Quila · · Score: 0

    They're talking about a bloody race war, they're talking about a price on Zimmerman's head, making the "cracker" pay. They're pissed the blacks in that area of Florida are supposedly too scared of the police to rise up and start killing people. This is all in a recorded phone call.

    Remember, "Kill a cracker for Trayvon." No kidding, that's a quote.

    Crickets from Obama's Department of Justice of course, not going to do anything against Holder's "people."

    1. Re:The Black Panther Party wants him dead by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

      Hardly a mention of the kid who was covered in gas and lit on fire in retaliation, nor the beating of a 78 year old man.

      --
      Bring back the old version of slashdot.
  117. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you just quote the NBC doctored recording they aired to make him sound racist?
    Talk about complete fail on making your point.

  118. Re:Talk about media bias by khipu · · Score: 1

    What was egregious here was the government not applying the law evenly, and not even charging the guy.

    You're confusing fact and perception. This case could be presented as if the government wasn't applying the law evenly, but whether that was actually the case or not now remains for the courts to determine.

  119. Re:Talk about media bias by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    So apparently it's not easy to railroad somebody, even if he appears obviously guilty. And OJ even killed white people!

  120. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by ftobin · · Score: 1

    Zimmerman claims to have been attacked by Martin from behind, while walking back to his car, and that's consistent with physical evidence. McNeil seems to have provoked a confrontation

    I'm not sure what from the article would even hint that McNeil provoked the confrontation. Epp was in McNeil's son's backyard, ran towards McNeil, and had a knife in his pocket after threatening McNeil's son with the knife.

  121. Z fscked up by Freddybear · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He went into hiding, probably depressed. Didn't stay in touch with his lawyers.
    Then, worst mistake, he called the DA and talked to them without a lawyer present.
    He's screwed.

    1. Re:Z fscked up by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

      Oh, yes; that's the bit when he fscked up. Not when he shot an unarmed black kid.

      Just like the abject hatred of Obama masked as anything but racism, not much has changed in the US since 1860.

    2. Re:Z fscked up by StormyWeather · · Score: 1

      Yea, unless he had different council, that probably fucked him. You don't EVER talk to the cops. EVER EVER EVER. Especially if you are innocent. The police can legally lie to you, and ask you leading questions to get you to admit guilt even if there is none, then use that in court. Even things said in error, or if you are scared into saying them will be used against you. That's why his lawyers quit, they knew he probably hung himself in an unsupervised call, even if he was innocent. In fact there's a chance that he woudln't have been charged till he talked with them, and they baited evidence out of him enough to try for a conviction.

    3. Re:Z fscked up by cffrost · · Score: 1

      He went into hiding, probably depressed. Didn't stay in touch with his lawyers.
      Then, worst mistake, he called the DA and talked to them without a lawyer present.
      He's screwed.

      My god, he's even an asshole when dealing with his own damn self! This guy just doesn't know when to quit.

      --
      Thank you, Edward Snowden.

      "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    4. Re:Z fscked up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, talk about paranoid delusions. You can blather all you want to the cops and then later say you only said it because of the pressure, and it becomes really easy for the lawyers to get the confession dropped because you didn't have appropriate counsel. The cops WANT you to have a lawyer. That way they can say that everything you told them was all on the up and up, and it makes it a lot harder for the defense if you happen to blurt something out before you can be shushed.

      Protip: Lawyers can and will quit if you don't take their advice, and they can and will quit if you stop talking to them.

  122. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    "gangsta thug culture"
    "all the rap and hip-hop about how awesome it is to be a career criminal"
    "being a gangsta thug is not a s glorious as MTV makes it look"
    "THUG LIFE YO!"

    Reminds me of the time Newt Gingrich called Obama a "food stamp president." No reference to race, but somehow all the racists understand exactly what he's talking about. Look up "dogwhistle" for me.

  123. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Is it remotely possible in any of your minds that the police made the call they felt was right(and not necessarily because they're racist) given the information they had at the time? Everyone has decided that the only possible way Zimmerman could have gone uncharged is if everyone involved was a racist. That is possible. It is also possible that there was not sufficient cause to believe that this was much other than a dude being pounded and defending himself with his firearm. All of the nonsense from Eric Holder and Obama and Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson and Anderson Cooper and NBC's tape doctoring... it's all just sensational / opportunist bullshit. Right down to the lovely special prosecutor gloating about how she prayed with Trayvon's "sweet parents." It is a sickening lack of objectivity on display here. Bring the dude to trial, fine, and let a jury weigh the evidence and let's get on with it. The rest of this is just a circus. If this ignites violent race riots, most of us will know that the media and some political figures will be largely responsible for inflaming this situation in the absence of clear facts. Even if this is how it looks, it doesn't need to be a national race-riot inducing episode. Black people are killing each other and white people in droves, too, and nobody is trying to incite a riot.
        I am most disgusted by Eric Holder's DoJ ignoring calls to bloody revolution and a bounty being placed on Zimmerman's head by the New Black Panthers. That is TWO strikes against Holder regarding the NBP alone. If you factor in the Fast and Furious gun running, that guy should have been part of the unemployment line a LONG time ago. He's a disgrace to his office.

  124. in related news by nimbius · · Score: 4, Funny

    duke energy has dropped its plans for a new power plant in Atlanta citing the rotational velocity of the late Dr. Martin Luther King Junior has decreased exponentially as of recent.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:in related news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in other related news, nimbus is a douche bag :-o

  125. Special prosecutor Angela Corey announced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the charges but would not discuss how she arrived at them

    Guess they don't want a riot on their hands.

    1. Re:Special prosecutor Angela Corey announced by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I heard her speaking 'live' at the press conference, answering media questions. Her refusal to answer several questions was explained as necessary under Florida law to assure a fair trial.

      I'd far rather the DA requests that people wait for evidence to come out in court than blab about it beforehand to the media, so she has my backing on that.

  126. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jedidiah · · Score: 0, Troll

    The 911 dispatcher told him the back off and let the real professionals handle it.

    That is an established fact.

    These "stand your ground" laws work both ways. Zimmerman saw Trayvon as a perp and Trayvon probably saw Zimmerman as a sexual predator.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  127. Why.... by firesyde424 · · Score: 1

    is this here? seriously, how is this tech news at all?

  128. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Charcharodon · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "Meanwhile, it was Zimmerman who was rolling around the neighborhood with a gun looking for trouble."

    LOL what exactly do you think "Neighborhood watch" is?

    Let's see first you need a neighborhood. Check. Next you need to roll around and look for trouble. Check. The gun was just a bonus.

    Of course if he hadn't had it all we would have heard about some teenager asaulting a neighborhood watch captain, and really wouldn't have put much thought to him spending time in jail.

  129. Re:Not News for Nerds. by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    Don't get your hopes up, . . . he'll be back. He always comes back.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  130. Re:Talk about media bias by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    It garnered (not garnished) national media attention because of the way the police and DA ignored it. Zimmerman was allowed to go home, with his weapon, and then the police and DA mostly forgot about it entirely.

    It was actually worse than that. Zimmerman's dad, a former state judge, was present when they had him at the police station. The police recommended prosecution, but higher-ups said no.

    It reeked very strongly of a miscarriage of justice. No, an abortion of justice.

    Yeah, there's been *way* to much spin regarding guilt or innocence in the press, blogs, legislatures, etc. But we should expect the norms of legal procedure to be followed, without regard to skin color, background, or family connections.

    And he isn't convicted: he's indicted. Looks to me like the legal system has merely gotten back on the rails. Hopefully no more funny business, or appearances of funny business.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  131. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by mike1214 · · Score: 0

    These "Stand Your Ground" Laws that we have thanks to ALEC and the NRA are meant only to protect white people who shoot blacks, Hispanics, Muslims, etc.

    Look, I understand that you want white people to be murdered before they're allowed to defend themselves against blacks, but you do realize that Zimmerman is half Hispanic, don't you?

    I guess that pretty much blows your entire narrative up in your face, doesn't it?

  132. Expected by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In any other juristiction in the civilized world, he would have been arrested about 12 hours after the incident, and at least where I live, would have seen a judge at least once (even if its just a pre-trial hearing). He might have also had a psychological assessment. If he wasn't able to afford a lawyer, he would have had a court appointed lawyer and perhaps some other legal services. But that's where I live. Florida is a long way from where I live.

  133. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    If I were in Zimmerman's position, I would expect to be arrested and not see the outside world again until I was able to make bail.

    An adult gunned down an unarmed minor in the street.

    Can't even make the usual pretense about self-defense. Although it doesn't stop some people from trying.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  134. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but you are the only person in this conversation who is claiming that all those things are distinctives of black people. I see the "gangsta thug culture" thing as a trend that transcends race. I think it generally stinks, though I disagree with the hyperbole in the original GP's rants.

    So let's talk about your problem a little more and maybe I can help you work through it. How long have you felt like thug culture was specifically a black racial thing? Were you influenced by events in your childhood? Probably if you get out and meet a variety of people (including both some gangsta thug Caucasians and also some perfectly sane and sensibly behaving persons of color) you may be able to get over some of your prejudices. Give it a try, dude; you really should.

  135. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by narcc · · Score: 1

    Casey Anthony was a woman accused of murdering her 2-year-old daughter.

    She was found to be innocent by a jury of her peers. (Though she was found guilty of lying to a police officer.)

    There wasn't much controversy, just public outrage. Almost everyone who knew about the case wanted to see her convinced -- or lynched, failing that. Probably because she is an absolutely horrible person. Really. She makes Mephistopheles look like a paragon of virtue.

  136. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is strong bias in most people's understanding of the undisputable facts in this case. Mostly what we know with certainty is that George eventually shot Trayvon with his gun. Almost everything else is through the eyes of the media which has been spinning and doctoring. Let the facts come out and stop feeding the racists and the race-baiting before we have a LA-riot style breakdown. The President ought to be ashamed for jumping in AGAIN before he knows the facts and making this a political stunt for his campaign. Eric Holder ought to be ashamed for allowing the New Black Panthers to issue a bounty in the United States of America and silently ignoring it. Unbelievable. If I didn't know any better, I might think that the New Black Panthers might be able to do anything they please, because repeatedly they are involved in illegal activity, this time right on camera in very public display and the DoJ is eerily silent. What kind of message is this sending to the citizens of this country? Am I now allowed to issue bounties on peoples' heads or will the DoJ come down on me selectively while NBP is permitted to make death threats, call for revolution requiring a "Red Sea of Blood" while the legal system sits passively to the side and smirks?

  137. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damned liberal lies!!!

  138. Are you a Grand Father? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're not interested, old timer, why are you in this discussion? /. has changed over the years. The whole internet has. Live with it. If you're not interested in an article, don't read it and then bitch because you don't like the topic. /. Today's /. is not your grandfather's /. - Oh, wait! Looking at your number you ARE the grouchy old grandfather. You want us to get off of your lawn, perhaps?

  139. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    Please perform the following searches:
    "barack obama" thug
    "eric holder" thug
    "al sharpton" thug

    "george bush" thug
    "alberto gonzalez" thug
    "rush limbaugh" thug

    Let me know if you see any patterns.

  140. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    If my son got shot because he started beating him and slamming his head into the pavement (a potentially lethal move)

    That is not an established fact yet, and I seriously doubt that Trayvon's mother, of all people, believes it to be true.

  141. Is slashdot buying a yacht or something? by Dr+Herbert+West · · Score: 1

    First we have the over-the-top slashvertisement with the Plan****tronix thing last week, and now this not-news-for-nerds news story. I go to other news sources when I want straight-up national, international, or pop-culture news, and I like it that way. Don't get peas in my carrots!

    Is slashdot getting this desperate for ad clicks?

  142. I'm confused by viperidaenz · · Score: 0

    How is this news for nerds?

  143. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Renraku · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Stand your Ground laws need to be appended a bit. Here's why. Suppose you get in a random fight at a bar. Most bar fights end pretty quickly when the two realize that getting punched sucks, or when they get ejected. However, with Stand your Ground laws the way they are, you have no duty to retreat and can simply pull out your gun and shoot them as soon as they get the upper hand over you, saying that you fear for your life. Similarly, when you pull your gun, they'll pull their gun, saying they fear for their life. So what you have is both combatants standing their ground and the fight won't end until someone (or both of them) is dead.

    It also leads to situations where you could go pick a fight with someone and then shoot them before they even get to you because you feared for your life because you thought they had a weapon.

    There's going to be a lot of people using Stand your Ground laws as an excuse to escalate a run of the mill fight into a deadly situation that wouldn't otherwise have turned deadly. Some things might be justified, like if someone is car jacking you or trying to force their way into your home, but other things wouldn't..like someone catching you in bed with their wife and ending up dead because you feared for your life and had no duty to retreat from their home.

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  144. Stand Your Ground by Cruciform · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So some people have made reference to Trayvon assaulting Zimmerman, then Zimmerman "stood his ground" justifying the act under Florida law.
    Yet I've seen no one say that Trayvon was standing HIS ground under that same law when Zimmerman shot him.
    After all, Zimmerman stalked Trayvon. Whether Trayvon took a swing at him first is not relevant if he felt threatened, at least by the above reasoning.

    1. Re:Stand Your Ground by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Stalking someone is not justified.
      Swinging at someone just because they are following you is not justified, and is rightfully illegal.
      Shooting someone because they swing at you is not justified, and is also illegal.

      There are a lot of things that went wrong here, plenty of blame to go around. The legal system will figure that out; but the distorting of truth we've seen from the media is disgusting and is an issue that won't be fixed, no matter who gets convicted in the case.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Stand Your Ground by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Swinging at someone just because they are following you is not justified, and is rightfully illegal.

      So now there's video? I thought there was only audio.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Stand Your Ground by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      Aside from the fact that you've apparently not read the law, sure.

      Whether Trayvon took a swing at him first is ENTIRELY relevant.

      Looking at it your way, Trayvon would have been entitled to swing if:
      "..He or she reasonably believes that such force is necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the imminent commission of a forcible felony;.."
      Someone looking at you, talking on a cellphone, even getting out of their car and walking up to you (which isn't what happened, according to witnesses, but we'll go there) wouldn't meet ANY court's standard of threat of imminent harm, barring the brandishing of a weapon.

      --
      -Styopa
    4. Re:Stand Your Ground by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I didn't say there was video. I said my hate of the media has grown from this incident.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:Stand Your Ground by schlachter · · Score: 1

      This is what happens when we all stand our ground...until the end. A pointless law.

      --
      My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
    6. Re:Stand Your Ground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if he felt threatened, he could have left. But he decided to attack.

      Last mistake he ever made.

    7. Re:Stand Your Ground by broken_chaos · · Score: 3, Insightful

      barring the brandishing of a weapon

      Considering Martin was shot by Zimmerman, this condition may have been met before any altercation started. But we can only speculate.

      Overall, I think the entire thing has been badly mishandled by the police, the prosecutors, the media, and the public. It has been blown out of proportion by the media, the public reacted with mob justice in mind as a result, and the police/prosecutors appear to have not done anything resembling due diligence in investigating the death of a teenager (as, whether or not it would have led to an arrest, it seems there was essentially no investigation to begin with).

    8. Re:Stand Your Ground by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I didn't say there was video. I said my hate of the media has grown from this incident.

      Your statement implies you know what happened there in a way that can only be discerned from having been there or seen a video of the incident, so I was wondering.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:Stand Your Ground by swillden · · Score: 1

      Swinging at someone just because they are following you is not justified, and is rightfully illegal.

      So now there's video? I thought there was only audio.

      Cruciform tried to argue that Martin was justified in assaulting Zimmerman, based on the "Stand Your Ground" law and the fact that Zimmerman was "stalking" him. phantomfive pointed out that if Martin did attack Zimmerman in response to being stalked, that would not be justified by the Stand Your Ground law and would be a crime.

      Try to keep up. Nowhere was there a claim of video, or of any knowledge of whether or not Martin swung at Zimmerman.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    10. Re:Stand Your Ground by qwertyatwork · · Score: 1

      Zimmerman is being charged with a felony crime, Trayvon isn't.

    11. Re:Stand Your Ground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet I've seen no one say that Trayvon was standing HIS ground under that same law when Zimmerman shot him.
      After all, Zimmerman stalked Trayvon. Whether Trayvon took a swing at him first is not relevant if he felt threatened, at least by the above reasoning.

      Stand Your Ground doesn't allow you to attack someone because you "felt threatened". That's a huge misconception that the media seems to be negligently perpetuating. Zimmerman's claim of self-defense is predicated on an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm (which does generally allow lethal self-defense under Florida law) because his head was allegedly being bashed against the sidewalk at the time.

    12. Re:Stand Your Ground by Talderas · · Score: 1

      barring the brandishing of a weapon

      Considering Martin was shot by Zimmerman, this condition may have been met before any altercation started.

      Having a gun in a holster is not brandishing a weapon. There's not been anything released that suggested that Zimmerman had the weapon out prior to the confrontation.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    13. Re:Stand Your Ground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So some people have made reference to Trayvon assaulting Zimmerman, then Zimmerman "stood his ground" justifying the act under Florida law.
      Yet I've seen no one say that Trayvon was standing HIS ground under that same law when Zimmerman shot him.
      After all, Zimmerman stalked Trayvon. Whether Trayvon took a swing at him first is not relevant if he felt threatened, at least by the above reasoning.

      You are not standing your ground if you walk up to the person walking away and assault them regardless if they were following you or not.

      For a website that is supposed to be for nerds a.k.a. people with brains, there seem to be a lot of morons out there.

    14. Re:Stand Your Ground by Cruciform · · Score: 1

      I'm not actually arguing that Martin was justified in taking a swing if, indeed, he did. It just seems that the application of this kind of situation seems to benefit the survivor of an altercation.

    15. Re:Stand Your Ground by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Oh, I have no clue what was happening. I don't even know if he was stalking him.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    16. Re:Stand Your Ground by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      Someone looking at you, talking on a cellphone, even getting out of their car and walking up to you (which isn't what happened, according to witnesses, but we'll go there) wouldn't meet ANY court's standard of threat of imminent harm, barring the brandishing of a weapon.

      So you're claiming that the evidence proves Zimmerman wasn't holding his gun in his hand when he shot Martin?

      That's kind of the problem with this law. If Martin's GF is telling the truth it's entirely possible Zimmerman said something ominous, such as "Don't mess with my neighborhood," while carrying the weapon, and walking towards Martin. In that case Martin has every right to attack Zimmerman.

      If Zimmerman's telling the truth then he had every right to kill Martin.

      Figuring out which is virtually impossible. The evidence released to the public just seems to show a confrontation happened, and that the dude screaming wasn't Zimmerman, which certainly makes Zimmerman's story less credible but is also not proof beyond a reasonable doubt.

    17. Re:Stand Your Ground by swillden · · Score: 1

      I'm not actually arguing that Martin was justified in taking a swing if, indeed, he did. It just seems that the application of this kind of situation seems to benefit the survivor of an altercation.

      Without witnesses, the survivor always has an upper hand, because his is the only version of the story. As long as he can come up with something plausible that fits the physical evidence and casts his actions within the law (whatever it may be), he's in good shape. The nature of the law doesn't change that much. On the other hand, states that require you to attempt to retreat often convict people who were faced with the option of either killing unlawfully or being killed as they tried to run away.

      No matter how you structure the law, there will be cases in which its application could be unjust, especially if one party or the other is twisting the facts. That being the case, I favor laws like Florida's which build in the assumption of innocence unless guilt can be proven.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    18. Re:Stand Your Ground by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      history is written by the winners....

  145. Newsworthy Non-Tsunami by QuincyDurant · · Score: 2

    http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/the-monitors-view/2012/0411/A-tsunami-warning-system-makes-waves

    I'd have expected to see something in slashdot about the huge earthquakes near Indonesia and their results. Why do undersea earthquakes sometimes cause catastrophe and sometimes do not?

    The Zimmerman arrest poses no such nerdish question.

    1. Re:Newsworthy Non-Tsunami by rtb61 · · Score: 2

      However his arrest does pose interesting discussion points like; what impact did the internet have in spreading the message and, would corporate main stream media have buried a story about a right wing retired judges son killing a nobody.

      How valid are some of those interpretive laws that can be readily manipulated by skilled people that know people.

      So now there at least will be a trial after mounting pressure but will it be a inverse show trial, where people skilled in the system will simply manipulate that system to their advantage.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    2. Re:Newsworthy Non-Tsunami by BenJCarter · · Score: 1

      The only corporate media reference to George Zimmerman's father I can find using 30 seconds of Google activity, is that the LA Times saying ...his father, Robert, a retired magistrate judge.... A magistrate judge, according to wikipedia, "In the United States federal courts, magistrate judges are appointed to assist United States district court judges in the performance of their duties." Sorry i can't Google more, but I'm afraid the ADD will wear off and I'll have to go to bed...

      Pops being a judge definitely adds a wrinkle.

      Speaking of politics, has anyone noticed the price of gas lately?!

      --
      For in politics, as in religion, it is equally absurd to aim at making proselytes by fire and sword. - Publius
    3. Re:Newsworthy Non-Tsunami by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      If the sea bed goes up and down (vertically) a fair distance over a large area you get a big tsunami. If the sea bed move back and forth (horizontally) you don't get a big tsunami. Obviously a lot more water is displaced with an up and down movement.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    4. Re:Newsworthy Non-Tsunami by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      I'll bet he will have assured his son there will be no problem in twisting the letter of the law around in order to achieve a innocent verdict. Tricky stuff like the final approach. Although Zimmerman was following his victim whilst armed, it can still be argued who made the final approach and initiated confrontation and who stood their ground. That Zimmerman was fearful can be demonstrated by his current state of mind as an indication of his behaviour at that time. Next argument, who was the more physically capable and physically able to cause significant harm and even kill the other if both are unarmed. If Zimmerman were unarmed would he have had to flee for fear of life and limb?

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  146. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by IceNinjaNine · · Score: 1

    These "stand your ground" laws work both ways. Zimmerman saw Trayvon as a perp and Trayvon probably saw Zimmerman as a sexual predator.

    Bravo! Somebody gets it!
    Everybody blames "stand your ground" while conveniently overlooking the fact that Zimmerman was basically stalking this kid, and explicitly told to cease by the dispatcher!

  147. Re:Not News for Nerds. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I tried, but I just couldn't stay away.

  148. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by matunos · · Score: 1

    Well, the police chief has stepped down "temporarily", which may become permanent, and the governor appointed a special prosecutor. I wouldn't exactly say the police and DA are skating, although the worst they may face is a tarnished reputation.

  149. Good luck Prosecution. by Lumpy · · Score: 0

    They have to prove that he did not shoot in self defense. So unless he get's a complete tool for a lawyer they will not convict him.

    Please cue all the "ZOMG RACIST!" comments directed toward me for daring to suggest that he actually fired in self defense and did not hunt and gun down the black kid in a hoodie because he was on a racial murder hunt like the radicalized minority groups want everyone to believe.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  150. I read "Zimmerman" as "Zuckerberg". by thisisauniqueid · · Score: 2

    My brain read "Zimmerman" as "Zuckerberg". How alarming.

    1. Re:I read "Zimmerman" as "Zuckerberg". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My brain read "Zuckerburg" as "Zoidburg". How amusing.

    2. Re:I read "Zimmerman" as "Zuckerberg". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah me too. That's the only reason I clicked the link!

  151. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by matunos · · Score: 1

    In my experience with CNN, you don't have to be liberal or conservative, just old and/or moronic. Seriously, they are worse and worse every day, with their segments of reading random tweets on air, or trying to package stories of little note up into cute branded segments.

    Jon Stewart's criticisms of CNN, ever since he took on their refitted (and dumbed-down) Crossfire, have never missed. In many ways, it's a sadder state of affairs than anything that happens on Fox News.

  152. Re:Talk about media bias by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

    Obama, who orders the deaths suspiciously-looking teenagers every single day. It's OK because they aren't black enough.

  153. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 4, Informative

    Of course if he hadn't had it all we would have heard about some teenager asaulting a neighborhood watch captain, and really wouldn't have put much thought to him spending time in jail.

    Assuming, of course, that Martin attacked Zimmerman. We only have Zimmerman's word that that's what happened. That's why arrests are generally made in these situations.

  154. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    Sorry, investigations, including possible arrests. Got distracted.

  155. Re:Talk about media bias by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

    What does an Australian Aboriginal Hispanic look like?

  156. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 1

    Zimmerman broke the rules of the Neighborhood Watch set by the Sanford Police Department training that you do not approach a stranger you suspect of wrongdoing and you do not carry weapons.

  157. Re:Talk about media bias by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    Every cop in america thinks that way, including black cops. I know several and talk to them regularly. One is a detroit police officer and is black. He will tell you to your face that a black kid walking in a neighborhood in the middle of the night is up to no good.

    All the cops already feel that way, It is not right, but it is what they see day in and day out.

    Why? Because blacks have a higher level of poverty than the whites do. Much higher. Couple that with living in shithole neighborhoods where landlords do not take care of the property and you get a higher proportion of blacks suspected of crime. and guess what, Poverty breeds crime. Your $900 iPad will get them $150 at a pawn shop, and that is a buttload of money to a poor person.

    Blacks are also more susceptible to Gangs because it's a form of community that they just dont have. Eeeew poor people! make hem go away! Plus, I dont see police outreach to the poor communities. Cops should be forced to walk their beat, talk to he people in their patrolled neighborhoods. Instead of sitting in the car with the windows up staring and eating doughnuts, or harassing the kids playing in the street.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  158. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by sjames · · Score: 1

    They are MEANT to protect anyone who stands their ground. They are horribly mis-used to racist ends far too often, but that is not what was meant.

  159. This story is pretty nerdy alright... by Heretic2 · · Score: 0

    Not. I don't come here to read about shit posted everywhere else.

  160. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Darinbob · · Score: 2

    You can't exclude everyone. Not sure about Florida but generally you only get a limited number of dismissals you can make without giving a reason or having it rejected. Beyond that you need a solid reason to give and opposing counsel can object and the judge has to agree.

  161. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

    Wait, what the fuck? I'm extremely skeptical the guy is anything but a murderer, but fuck no he shouldn't be lynched. If he's found guilty, he should go to jail, but even if you think the death sentence is cool torture should be no part of it. Revenge has absolutely no place in a justice system, not ever.

    --
    <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
  162. Re:Talk about media bias by matunos · · Score: 1

    I can't speak for the President. What I interpreted his remarks to mean is that, based on the 911 call, Zimmerman judged Davis as a menace based on his appearance, which may have included his skin color, especially since other reports say Zimmerman specifically warned about blacks to his neighbors.

    I don't know how to tell if someone was kicked out of school from their appearance. Technically, Davis was suspended, not kicked out. And yeah that probably wouldn't happen to a child of Obama's because, like most upper-class families, if a child of Obama's was caught with trace amounts of marijuana, nobody would care (now that Andrew Breitbart is dead, that is).

    As for "gang-related tattoos", you're a more perceptive man than I. Which gang is that apparent tattoo related to? Anyway, I don't remember Zimmerman mentioning any gang-related tattoos to the dispatcher. Maybe that's because it was raining and Davis had a hoodie on, meaning he wouldn't have seen any if they were there. I guess you are a proponent of shoot-first, check for gang-related tattoos and school records later, then? After all, you never know when someone might shoot you with a skittle.

  163. Re:Crazy world we live in. by __aaqvdr516 · · Score: 1

    It's funny how we can both listen to the same audio, yet arrive at different conclusions.

    When I listen to the audio and the dispatcher says "we don't need you to do that", I don't hear "stop following". Assertive and Passive wording is something that is taught to police. To me it sounds more like a suggestion, instead of an order. If he felt in control of the situation (which he obviously did) he could feel free to ignore the dispatchers suggestion.

    If you follow the reasoning that the dispatcher's words were a suggestion, then Zimmerman was not chasing anyone. He was simply doing what he thought was safe enough at the time.

    He may still be guilty of 2nd degree murder though, even with that distinction.

  164. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Elder+Entropist · · Score: 1

    If my son got shot because he started beating him and slamming his head into the pavement (a potentially lethal move) then there would be nothing to forgive.

    Even assuming this testimony is true - which is a leap, Zimmerman did not go to the hospital so the damage was hardly significant let alone life threatening. At least this evidence should have been documented, which it was not.

  165. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile, the surveys always show it's the Fox News viewers who are the most misinformed.

    Actually, the most recent surveys show MSNBC viewers are just as misinformed on many issues, while the best informed are people who watch Sunday morning talk shows and listen talk radio.

    Not to mention many of those surveys reach conclusions based on a completely biased view of what "opinions" people should have. Seriously, check out the details in those "surveys" for once. They are not based on what facts people may know, but whether or not they hold some prevailing opinion. For instance, one survey asked "Do you think now that the American economy is (a) starting to recover, or (b) still getting worse?" and based the "correct" answer -- that the economy has begun to recover -- on the widely accepted judgment of when the last recession ended, as well as gross domestic product estimates and statistics for personal income. But those premises weren't presented as part of the questioning.

    --
    "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
    --- Jerry Garcia
  166. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure where you get the idea that this situation was completely instigated by Martin (or if you're just trolling). According to Martin's girlfriend, who heard the beginning of the interaction between Martin and Zimmerman, Z confronted M, and the cell phone was on the ground, lending credence to the idea that M was defending himself. You seem to trust Z's word, since M smoked pot and flipped off a webcam; I don't believe Z, because I think that there's generally something wrong with someone who drives around his neighborhood with a gun calling 911 all the time.

  167. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Darinbob · · Score: 0

    Basically a person whom CNN's Nancy Grace did not like and went on a jihad against, presuming guilt without examining the evidence. It was a story to milk for a couple of years until it ran dry. To the general public the logic went like this: "she didn't do what I would do under that situation, therefore she's as guilty as hell yeeehaw!!" Of course most intelligent people didn't know much about the case since they change the channel instantly when they saw the story on the air.

  168. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by fishingmachine · · Score: 2

    zimmermans lawyers have jumped ship actually, and in such a high profile case that is in no way a good sign

  169. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Surt · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up. There is no way this doesn't come out hung jury. It just takes one white supremacist to find his way onto that jury. And how many of those do you imagine are exactly the types who have a hard time avoiding jury duty?

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  170. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    Which they certainly don't have. The New Black Panther Party is approximately as dangerous as (and not as well-organized as) the Hutaree Militia (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hutaree#Michigan_Militia_and_the_Hutaree)

  171. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    They didn't test the shooter for alcohol or narcotics, they didn't collect his clothing as evidence, they didn't look up the call records on the cell phone found at the scene...

  172. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

    It took time to work out that he could be convicted, this is normal procedure, liek the prosecutor said "we don't prosecute by petition" and that's hwo we want it.

    But this time, they did. This prosecution occurred for no other reason than the protests and petitions. Period. For the prosecutor to claim otherwise is a bald-faced lie.

    --
    "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
    --- Jerry Garcia
  173. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    I did the searches, but I'm afraid you're going to have to spell it out for me if you want me to follow your thought process here. I'm not even sure what you're aiming to demonstrate.

  174. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually quite a lot of neighborhood watch people don't "roll around looking for trouble". They just keep their eye out while on the normal business of the day instead of strutting around like a militia member.

  175. Re:Talk about media bias by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    I didn't click the link, assuming it leads to goat, the cameraman deserves to be shot, as do you.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  176. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Darinbob · · Score: 1

    Second degree murder does not get you life. Well, could be wrong since this is Florida after all...

  177. Re:Crazy world we live in. by koan · · Score: 1

    What the dispatcher said and what is law are 2 different things.

    I could be entirely wrong in my assumption about what happened because I wasn't there to see it.
    I am sure about one thing though, Zimmerman is going to suffer at lot, and Trayvon never gets to grow up, never gets to have children, never gets to see another sunrise or eat ice cream, and what a fucking waste for the both of them.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  178. Re:Racism/ to kill a black guy, any black guy by blackest_k · · Score: 1

    Are you 100% sure this isn't first degree murder?

    1) wanted to kill someone

    lets say yes to this and see where it goes

    2) The number one problem if you want to kill someone, anyone is that you generally get arrested locked up and depending on where optionally executed. how do you avoid these consequences?
    How about what Zimmerman actually did?
    His victim was largely irrelevant as long as they matched the profile of somebody who could be "lawfully" killed. little old lady walking her dog wouldn't do obviously.
    provoke an assault and then

    3) carry out the plan.

    Yes that bit was done too, he had a window between informing the 911 dispatcher of a "situation" and the Police arriving in which to kill his victim.

    so yes murder 1 , but proving murder1 is going to be difficult without witnesses. Maybe he researched the relevant case law online or something.

     

  179. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see you've been fooled by the inflammatory media images of Trayvon's boyish face, taken five years ago when he was only 12. The man who was shot was 17, with tattoos and an attitude. While the killing is tragic, characterizing him as the frightened victim of an apparent pedo is ridiculous.

  180. how can people be angry on botrh sides, by malbosher · · Score: 1

    A grown ass man shoots a kid. What a piece of shit.

  181. Re:Crazy world we live in. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is also something you need to consider, if you fight a person then they say "I stop I don't want to fight any more" you're required by law to stop right then, if you hit them after that it's an A&B charge on you.

    Really? You make it sound like fights are consensual. If someone attacks you, you get the upper hand, you're supposed to stop fighting when the guy says "uncle"? Really? How would I know if the guy is sincere? If I've got the upper hand on someone who's just attacked me, I'll let up when he gets away or I no longer feel threatened. Sure as hell not letting up before then. Pretty sure that is self defense 101, if you can't avoid the situation, do your best to not be a victim.

  182. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Your source is cherry picking. There are multiple surveys all showing Fox News viewers to be more misinformed than other news channels. And they are asking points of fact.

    Even that cherry you picked was a question of fact, though it's true some people might have interpreted it as a call for an opinion. But that was one question out of many, from one survey out of many.

    Accept it. Either Fox News misinforms its viewers. Or stupid people watch Fox News.

  183. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by fishingmachine · · Score: 1

    by the way, zimmermans head is quite clean for being slammed into pavement, his nose is "broken" but miraculously shows no signs of blood, according to zimmerman he shot treyvon while he was on top of him. all of this went on and somehow he got NO BLOOD AT ALL on ANY of his clothing. that or the police allowed him to change clothes in the back of their squad car. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRXhw9Vim7A

  184. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by coredog64 · · Score: 1

    I'd assume that the parent post was focused on his safety. Bounties have already been offered on Zimmerman, including at least one "dead or alive". Wouldn't take much for someone already facing life to shank Zimmerman if it came down to it.

  185. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The police report states that Zimmerman was treated at the scene by the FD for bleeding from his nose and the back of his head.

    Trayvon's mother, and father, may never think poorly of their son's behavior despite any evidence. It is a common failing among parents.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  186. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    It is documented in the police report that he was treated on the scene by the FD for bleeding from his nose and the back of his head despite your assertion to the contrary.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  187. Re:Talk about media bias by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    The Trayvon Davis story blew up because of how it was mishandled between the police and the DA. If they had arrested Zimmerman from the start,

    The number of people who keep saying, "they should have arrested him immediately" shows how depressingly few people understand the legal system. If you think police always arrest people immediately, then you need to stop commenting on this story and go learn something because you're spewing ignorance.

    It can take years from the time a murder happens until the murderer is arrested. During that time, the police will often say that the perpetrator is not a suspect, even though they are nearly certain he/she is guilty. Think of the Hans Reiser case, were you also complaining they didn't arrest him immediately?

    That is what happens. If the person is not a flight risk, you don't need to arrest them immediately. It is not a sign of police incompetence.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  188. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

    Not really. It makes for a good talking point, but it's much subtler than that. PolitiFact as a pretty good analysis.

    The impression is that some ideology is the driver, when that's demonstrably untrue, given a thorough view of the survey results. But Fox News has by far the highest viewership of the cable news channels (in key demographics, they have a higher viewership than all other cable news channels combined). They also have pretty anchors that wear short skirts, and they keep things moving along to retain the interest of those with even the shortest of attention spans.

    I despise the bias of the reporting on Fox News as much as anyone, but these surveys say more about the viewership and entertainment value of mainstream media than the efficacy of information from any particular source.

    --
    "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
    --- Jerry Garcia
  189. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Mitreya · · Score: 2

    idiotic "stand your ground" laws that absolve killers

    Bullshit. The problem here is that police assumed that "stand your ground" law applies to someone who precipitated the confrontation. It really doesn't. (whether the law is good or bad is a different discussion)
    If anything, "stand your ground" law should have applied if Trayvon killed Zimmerman. Then we could have had the debate on law's merit.

  190. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of the time Newt Gingrich called Obama a "food stamp president." No reference to race, but somehow all the racists understand exactly what he's talking about. Look up "dogwhistle" for me.

    More white people are on food stamps than black people, as Gingrich pointed out when he made the comment. The economy has gotten worse for people of every color under Obama (hence requiring more people on food stamps.) So Gingrich was accusing Obama of being bad for the econo-...

    Oh, wait. When you said "racist" you meant "anyone who doesn't agree with your crazy world view." Sorry about that.

    Asshole.

  191. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jmac_the_man · · Score: 1

    Anyone can call anyone else a thug on the internet, thug or not. Some people on the list are clearly thugs. (Sharpton starts race riots. Holder sells assault weapons to narco-terroists.) Others are clearly not. (Are Bush or Gonzalez thugs? Why?) All six people have tons of references to them being thugs, despite whether they're actually thugs.

  192. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sycodon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, I've pretty much only have seen the vitriol spewing forth with idiocy from the usual race baiting crowd. Most reasonable, thinking people have remained silent on the issue, waiting for the wheels to turn.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  193. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I suggest you review the way Florida handles other shootings. Specifically, look up the incident involving Trevor Dooley and David James. It has many similarities.

    Dooley confronted James. Dooley had a gun, but did not pull it out. James initiated a physical altercation to take the gun away from Dooley. James was shot in the process.

    Dooley was 69, with fused discs in his neck. James was 41, six inches taller, seventy pounds heavier, and had been in the Air Force. Dooley claims he feared for his life - a claim I find reasonable, given the disparity between the two (much more reasonable than a 28-year old man armed with a gun fearing for his life at the hands of a teenager armed with skittles and iced tea). Eye witnesses saw James go for Dooley's gun, while acknowledging that Dooley initiated the verbal confrontation.

    There are, however, two significant differences. The first is that Trevor Dooley was arrested merely two days after the shooting. The second is that Dooley is black and his victim, James, was white.

    So yes...declining to file charges that the lead investigator recommended is unusual. The state attorney driving 50 miles on a Sunday night to discuss the incident is unusual. Taking the shooter's word for it that his record was clean is unusual. Making no attempt to notify the parents of a dead teenager and instead waiting for them to file a missing person's report is unusual.

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  194. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    Never rely on 911 to save you from imminent danger by another person or group of people. It can take anywhere from a few minutes to 30 minutes for a police officer to arrive. All it takes is less than 5 seconds for someone to end your life with a weapon. Perhaps shorter.

    911 good for medical emergencies and walk-throughs. That's about it.

    Take it from someone whom has been chased in a car and shot at with a bolt action rifle. The guy was on PCP (verified later on). Stopping to say "time out" like a child only to call 911 only puts you in danger.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  195. Re:Crazy world we live in. by cold+fjord · · Score: 1
    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  196. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by slapout · · Score: 3, Informative

    Zimmerman's Hispanic. Why would a white supremacist cause a hung jury?

    --
    Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
  197. Since people are bound to get the facts wrong.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://reason.com/archives/2012/04/04/shooting-in-the-dark

    This gives an interesting perspective... and it's not MSNBC, FOX, or the Black Panthers....

    It's time to stop and think before this all goes to hell.

  198. Re:Talk about media bias by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

    The lead investigator initially wanted to file manslaughter charges. The state attorney drove fifty miles on a Sunday night to over-rule the lead investigator.

    As far as the New Black Panthers, if you can point out what law they broke, go for it. Just remember there's that first amendment and all. Trust me, if any NBP had kidnapped or killed George Zimmerman, there would be charges.

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  199. Needs to be stated again by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What made this case national news is NOT because a light-skinned guy killed a black guy, or that he was 17 years old, or that he was only holding candy. What made this story news is that the local police dropped the investigation like a hot potato (possibly because of Zimmerman's parents job titles), held onto the body without informing the parents when they had ID and his phone (which family and friends called BTW), then announced that there wouldn't be charges based on spurious coverage under their stand-your-ground law.

    All of the false equivalence citations to coverage of other cases where a black guy killed a white guy, how black kids dress, or how Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson are "uppity troublemakers" is totally IRRELEVANT!

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  200. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by ThurstonMoore · · Score: 0

    This situation is just another young violent black thug-wannabe who finally picked the wrong guy to fuck with

    WTF, I think Zimmerman was fucking with him. If Zimmerman would have minded his own business nothing would have happened.

  201. Re:Talk about media bias by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

    It can take years from the time a murder happens until the murderer is arrested. During that time, the police will often say that the perpetrator is not a suspect, even though they are nearly certain he/she is guilty. Think of the Hans Reiser case, were you also complaining they didn't arrest him immediately?

    You should review the case of Trevor Dooley and David James. James went for Dooley's gun and got shot in the altercation. James was much bigger than Dooley, who was elderly. Dooley also claims he feared for his life, and the shooting was in Florida in September 2010 so Stand Your Ground is his defense.

    Dooley was arrested two days after the shooting, despite eye witnesses who say that James went for Dooley's gun.

    But Dooley was black and James was white, so I guess that may have had something to do with it.

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  202. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Yeah that's not the vibe I'm getting. He's been tried convicted sentenced and terminated already. The Judge and the prosecutor aren't going to risk mass mayhem.

  203. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 1

    No one will remember their names in 2 weeks. And they'll get new jobs no problem.

  204. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The "The enemy of my enemy is my friend" sort of thinking?

  205. If you ask me, and nobody ever does... by Grimbleton · · Score: 1

    Trayvon Martin got all the justice he deserved, at a high velocity.

  206. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 4, Informative

    And this is relevant how? Zimmerman was on the phone with 911 well BEFORE the confrontation. He was told to stop stalking Martin. He continued to do so anyway.

  207. this is the end of right to self preservation. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, this is completely disturbing and downright scary that a citizen's natural right to self preservation is casually being tossed aside as a result of social ignorance, reverse discrimination not to mention pure hatred.

    Where the hell is the public outcry for the Baltimore hate beating victim?????

    WTF is wrong with this country?????

  208. Not Phil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My first thought on seeing the article title was that we have another Hans Reiser. After all on a News for Nerds site, what other zimmerman whould they be talking about.

  209. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Wain13001 · · Score: 0

    and if you pull a gun on me and start threatening me with it after clearly following me around the neighborhood I *may* attack you and start trying to pummel your head into the ground.

    See the thing is you don't *know* anymore than the rest of us what happened. Quit making up your own preferred version of the story.

  210. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 2

    How do you know he continued stalking Martin? The reports i have heard say he tried to return to his vehicle.

  211. RZ a judge? SInce when? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Personally I'm convinced his status as 'Judges son' has everything to do with how his case was handled."

    I've seen this said before. Do you have any reputable -- hell semi-reputable reference that his father was a judge? Meaning no comments on web sites, Huffington Post, Daily Kos etc. What court did he serve on?

    Everything I've googled can't find a reference to his being a judge. I would suspect that his name would be someplace on the courts website, even if he is retired.

    1. Re:RZ a judge? SInce when? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      http://www.abcactionnews.com/dpp/news/crime/zimmerman-dad-worked-as-magistrate

      Apparently a Virginia magistrate (not a judge).

      ABC was the most reliable source I could find. Not very, I know. Still better then NBC.

      Which raises the question. Status as magistrate is not in keeping with the narrative the media wants told, why?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  212. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Doesn't matter. He doesnt work for the Sanford police dept. Besides, what kind of idiot would patrol for crime unarmed? He is allowed to walk his own neighborhood and carry a gun. Unless they have evidence that Zimmermans story isn't true he is going to walk.

  213. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    This does not preclude Zimmerman pulling the gun first. In fact, I see the following sequence of events to be quite likely:

    1. Zimmerman finally decides that Trayvon really is up to no good, and confronts him verbally with a gun in his hand.
    2. Trayvon sees the gun, assumes he is being mugged or something, and charges Zimmerman with his fists, managing to knock him back.
    3. Zimmerman, believing himself to be assaulted, fires the gun while falling or from the ground.

    In which case Trayvon would be the one who have acted in reasonable self-defense, while Zimmerman would be charged with brandishing followed by second degree murder.

    Do I know for certain that it happened that way? No, of course not. But neither do you know if your suggested sequence of events is factual, so don't act like it is.

  214. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 1

    Self defense laws wont' protect you if you start the confrontation, that's why the key to this case is whether Martin did what Zimmerman says.

  215. Re:Talk about media bias by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    OK, I am trying to be nicer on slashdot and not call people names, but you just went full-on idiot mode there, because you jumped to conclusions and showed your lack of understanding about how the world works.

    Let me try to follow your logic. In one case, a man was not arrested for many days. In another case, a man was arrested two days later. Therefore, you conclude that it was because of the man's race.

    Really? Of all the many reasons the police could delay arresting someone, you pick the one that supports your preconceived ideas? Do you not see a problem with this?

    I'll repeat this for those of you who are a bit slower around here: sometimes the police take a long time arrest the perpetrator. This is not in and of itself a sign of police incompetence, nor is it an indication of racism, and jumping to that conclusion only makes you look like an idiot. Yes, your comment does make you look like an idiot. Go think about your life and stop jumping to conclusions.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  216. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 1

    how do you know the evidence wasn't documented? Do you really think the police are giving everything they have to the media? It doesn't matter whether the damage was significant. Attempting to smash someones head against the pavement is sufficient grounds to use deadly force.

  217. Zimmerman vs Martin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you're picking at the detail with your own bias.

    It was Zimmerman's gun, Zimmerman followed Martin, which means Zimmerman didn't fear Martin and had a negative view of him.

    Was the negative view racially motivated? IT DOES NOT MATTER. Murder is murder, it makes no difference if Zimmerman followed a black man or white man then shot him.

    At the end of the day, it could be *you* whose dead in the gutter due to Zimmerman, would you want him convicted of murder then?

    Just to remind you, once more, it was Zimmerman who shot Martin with Zimmerman's own gun, after following him despite being told not to by the police.

    It's for the courts to try him for 2nd degree murder which is the correct charge for this case, and it's for the jury to decide based on the evidence.

    1. Re:Zimmerman vs Martin by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      It was Zimmerman's neighborhood, and anyone is allowed to walk the streets. He saw someone he didn't recognize. They had already had a significant amount of crime in the neighborhood. He wasn't told not to follow by police. It was a 911 operator who has as much authority to tell you what to do as I do. You're claiming murder, when you have nothing to support it.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  218. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 1

    Good comparison! :) Both are a bunch of asshats.

  219. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by khipu · · Score: 1

    As I read the case, McNeil admitted to taking out his weapon and choosing not to retreat. Am I not reading that correctly? Zimmerman, in contrast, claims to have been attacked by Martin, pinned to the ground and beaten, and that it was Martin who was reaching for his weapon.

    I'm not stating an opinion about McNeil's guilt or innocence, simply that the two cases are quite different from one another. Furthermore, keep in mind that McNeil was not charged until a year after the incident, calling into question claims that Zimmerman would have been arrested immediately if he had been black.

  220. Re:Talk about media bias by dunezone · · Score: 1

    Did he serve a sentence for murder? no.

    He didn't serve a sentence for murder because he was found not guilty. There were so many mistakes made by the police and the forensics team that the defense used the credibility of the investigation against the prosecution. There were also major issues with the DNA which was relatively new and unheard of, the prosecution did a piss poor job of having DNA explained, some of jurors were so confused that they mixed up DNA with blood type. What was thought to be a open and shut case turned into a nightmare for the prosecution.

    This is why the OJ Simpson case is such an important case. So many mistakes were made that they use it in classroom exercises.

  221. Beyond a reasonable doubt? by tacokill · · Score: 1

    I haven't seen this mentioned yet but in the US, the standard for conviction on criminal charges of any kind is "beyond a reasonable doubt" as established by a jury of your peers.
    Does ANYONE honestly believe there is no reasonable doubt here? Of course there is. And that is why I think he will be found not guilty.

    I don't have a dog in the hunt so I don't have to pick a side. I just call it like I see it and by any measure, it's going to be hard to prove murder 2nd degree "beyond a reasonable doubt".

  222. KelTec by daninaustin · · Score: 2

    seriously? KelTec's are butt ugly but they are not unreliable. huge numbers of people carry the P3AT or other small light pistols from KelTec.

  223. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by skywire · · Score: 1

    You would deny the legitimacy of any criticism of anything self-destructive if you associate it with African-Americans? Yours is a particularly harmful brand of racial stereotyping.

    --
    Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
  224. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So pointing the new black panthers stuff and the bit about NBC edited a tape to make it more racist is race baiting? or are you supporting the sites you linked for exposing it though i doubt it but figured I'd asked

  225. You must br new here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where else are the basement dwellers going to express their outrage?

  226. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by meglon · · Score: 1, Redundant

    He may have the right to walk around his own neighborhood with a gun, he doesn't have the right to kill someone with it. I am amazed by the idiots that will defend a murder purely because they think a gun is THE ULTIMATE RIGHT IN THE FUCKING WORLD.

    He WAS working with the neighborhood watch. He WAS NOT ALLOWED to carry a weapon while working for them. He WAS NOT ALLOWED to approach someone he was suspected of doing something. He WAS supposed to report things to the police (THE ONLY THING HE DID DO RIGHT). He WAS TOLD TO STOP FOLLOWING THE INDIVIDUAL; HE DIDN'T. Then.. he killed someone.

    Anyone who defends that is a sociopathic son of a bitch that needs to put in jail, because they are clearly a threat to society.

    --
    Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
  227. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by tacokill · · Score: 1

    So you are suggesting that the guy who throws the first punch risks death? Good! Most of us don't go around getting into random bar fights. In fact, we actively try to avoid fighting at almost all cost unless absolutely necessary (defense only).

    There's a lot of tough guys around and the stand your ground law is aimed at those idiots for a reason. Tough guys should rightfully be fearful of getting shot if they decide to throw that random punch in a bar and start some shit.

    However, I will also add that guns and bars don't mix. Period, no exceptions. That's why it's illegal to have a gun in a bar. Even in Texas.

  228. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 5, Informative

    The 911 dispatcher told him the back off and let the real professionals handle it.

    That is an established fact.

    I think you have just established you aren't competent using many of the words in your statements. Lets review what was said,

    Dispatcher: Which entrance is that he's heading towards?
    Zimmerman: The back entrance.
    Dispatches: Are you following him?
    Zimmerman: Yea
    Dispatcher: We don't need you to do that.
    Zimmerman: OK

    So, is that a command to "back off" and "let the real professionals handle it" by the civilian dispatcher who has no authority? No
    So, is it an "established fact"? No

    These "stand your ground" laws work both ways.

    Snark masquerading as "established fact." Something that is more interesting:
    More on the Irrelevance of 'Stand Your Ground' to the Trayvon Martin Case

    Zimmerman saw Trayvon as a perp and Trayvon probably saw Zimmerman as a sexual predator.

    Interesting take. If that is so, why didn't Marin call the police for help? Maybe some hints in the bottom half of this?

    Trayvon Martin case heading towards the political abyss

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  229. The results will differ based on the verdict by Quila · · Score: 1

    Guilty: Bunch of people bitching about a lynching

    Not Guilty: This is where you get your flames, literally, during the murderous riot that will ensue.

  230. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

    See the thing is you don't *know* anymore than the rest of us what happened.

    Hmmm, I'm not sure that is true, at least in your case. I actually read from the police report, did you? I think you are going pretty far out on a limb to say the police weren't sure that they saw the FD treating Zimmerman on the scene.

    Quit making up your own preferred version of the story.

    I made a simple, factual statement. You are the one engaging in flights of fancy.

    and if you pull a gun on me and start threatening me with it after clearly following me around the neighborhood I *may* attack you and start trying to pummel your head into the ground.

    Instead of using the cell phone, which Martin had, to call the police for help? Of course I'm impressed in some way that you think you would be faster than a bullet if the gun was already out and pointed at you.

    Tell you what, why don't you get a few more facts under your belt? The call. Some interesting background.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  231. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by DaneM · · Score: 2

    Even as a white supremacist would get this jury hung (probably by way of arguing against an innocent verdict, against any reason, I think), it's just as likely that what I'll term a "non-white supremacist" will do the same thing. In fact, given the current political climate, I think it's much more likely. I'm sure it's utterly socially/politically incorrect to claim that a person of color can be just as racist as a KKK member (perhaps with less leverage in the lynching department, but with more leverage in the getting-hired-without-credentials department), but in my experience, it's extremely common; they just have less sway among traditionalists, and more among non-traditionalists. I really hate that this sounds like I'm agreeing with hate-mongering jerks like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, but monkeys speaking into a microphone will eventually say something intelligent--if only by (semi-)random chance.

    It's really tempting to post this as Anonymous Coward, but for now, I choose to delude myself into thinking that most people will respect my ticking-off extremists from both "sides of the isle."

    Anyway, while I'm certain that Zimmerman does, in fact, need to be tried for murder (of some degree), I see this, like some of you seem to, as the start of the next OJ Simpson trial. Hopefully this'll be shorter and a little less idiotic.

    *runs for cover*

  232. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I draw my gun, you won't have time to attack me. I draw my gun to use it, not to wave around. I don't draw my gun unless I have made the decision to fire. I don't draw my gun to wave around.

  233. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kind of like how the left-wing media played blame Bush (and still does so occasionally, even now that he has been out of office for 3 years)?

    Face it, if you buy in to most anything that mainstream media reports, you are going to get some form of bias with that story. Even stories without noticeable bias are reported on while others go without mention; that is another form of bias. Anything that you believe needs to be checked and cross referenced by several sources. Most of the crap that comes out is slanted in some way or another to get ratings or to piss of group X on this day, and group Y the next day. It is what gets viewers hooked. That is why I do not watch mainstream news, if I had to do that, I would feel obligated to try to find facts about details that are left out of the stories so that I can develop an unbiased as possible opinion.

    Another reason I like this site... but stories like this get posted on a tech site. That is another point though. I guess what I am saying is, wake up and stop being a sheep to what you see on Fox, CNN, NBC, etc.

  234. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by omfgnosis · · Score: 2

    do you see the phrase "thug culture" as a distinctively black thing?

    It's called "code", and the comment in question is peppered with it: "gangsta thug culture"; "rap and hip-hop about how awesome it is to be a career criminal"; "high-crime area"; "gangsta thug"; "thug"; "THUG LIFE YO!"; "violent teenager". The whole scope of the comment is a dismally stereotypical picture of "black" urban life and culture, and to make matters worse, to the extent any of it is true it's completely irrelevant to the case. You're right, though. It doesn't say "nigger", so it can't possibly be racist.

    Attention, liberal America: the fascists figured out how to employ innuendo and abstract thought to much success a long time ago, it's time you catch up.

    And let me emphasize, this really, really isn't anything new. That's how Jim fucking Crow worked.

    But keep on accusing people of racism for calling out racism*. It's a really convenient ignorance indicator.

    * Then again, when you said "maybe that says something about you more than about GP", maybe you meant something else.

  235. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 1, Informative

    It's nice how you have convicted him of murder already. Neighborhood watches are voluntary. They may tell you not to carry a gun but it has zero legal weight. As for not being "allowed" to approach someone he suspected of doing something wrong, it's the same deal. He doesn't lose his rights to go wherever he wants in his neighborhood just because he's a member of the neighborhood watch. You don't know whether he continued to follow Martin after the 911 operator told him not to. There are reports that he tried to go back to his car after they told him not to follow, but we don't know whether that is true or not. Nice jump from him following Martin to killing him. You forgot the part where Martin jumps him, breaks his nose and smashes his head against the ground (how convenient for your argument.) Maybe it would be better to wait for the court to decide his guilt or innocence. I suspect that when it is over there will not be sufficient evidence to convict him. I know that may piss you off, but tough shit.

  236. In most cases by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

    They'll kill you first, and never be charged.

  237. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was told ( from the 911 tape ): "You don't have to do that." That is a far cry from being told to stop.

  238. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by schlachter · · Score: 1

    ahhh...hedging your bets...are you? ...bet you won't bet both testicals...will ya?

    --
    My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
  239. Normally I ignore the blatantly racist rants but by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

    previously all white country

    I think you're very, very confused.

  240. Re:Racism/ to kill a black guy, any black guy by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

    Conspiracy much?

    I normally hesitate to respond in such a way.. but... are you smoking crack?

    Your point one presumption is a bloody huge presumption with exactly no evidence to back it up. As to your second point, are you really trying to say that Zimmerman intentionally set out to kill someone and then just hope that he could stand behind the non-existent shield of "Hold your ground"? That is a mind numbing huge gamble, wouldn't you say? Contrary to what some people of limited knowledge and intelligence on the subject say, you can't just shoot a person and then throw up your hands and yell "He was coming right at me!" Nor could you provoke a minor assault and "carry out the plan". No one is going to buy that you were in serious danger of death or grievous injury absent non-trivial wounds to yourself or at the least arms on the part of the other person.

    This also fails Occam's Razor.

    Which is more likely and simpler?
    A) That Zimmerman hatched a complicated plan to allow himself to "legally" kill someone at great risk of serious physical injury and/or jail time.
    or
    B) Under what could likely be called questionable judgement he decided to follow Martin around the neighborhood, and then for currently unknown/uncertain reasons got out of his car and followed an undetermined distance on foot. At which point either Martin or Zimmerman (facts in dispute) started a physical altercation, of which Zimmerman was getting the worse of. Fearing for his life Zimmerman shot Martin.

    At no point am I addressing whether following Martin around was a good idea, what his motivations were beyond being suspicious of him or any of the rest. The fact is, we don't know any of that so anything any of us say is speculation at best. Either way, your scenario is silly and braindead and even if point B isn't the way it went down it damned sure wasn't point A.

    Murder Two at best/worst and even that only if it can be proven that Zimmerman attacked Martin and was in no serious danger himself.

    --
    I was raised on the command line, bitch

    "Nemo me impune lacesset"

  241. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 2

    This has nothing to do with guns being "the ultimate right in the fucking world." It's all about one thing: Did Martin attack Zimmerman as was described the night of the attack. If he did then Zimmerman was within his rights to shoot him. If not, then Zimmerman will be off to prison. >> I am amazed by the idiots that will defend a murder purely because they think a gun is THE ULTIMATE RIGHT IN THE FUCKING WORLD.

  242. you will probably get your wish by daninaustin · · Score: 1

    It's kind of sick that you would wish for him being murdered in court or that there is a race riot, but i think you will probably get your wish. I expect that he will get off and that there will be riots so enjoy. I don't expect the riots to follow the same progression as those from the Rodney King. It will be a lot more violent and a lot more rioters will be shot.

  243. It's a shame when people work hard to ignore facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Zimmerman was never told to stop. He was told " You don't have to do that." Zimmerman wasn't even stalking him. He stayed in the vehicle until martin went around the "conservatory"(???) then he went up to the conservatory to see what he was doing. When he got there Martin ran away. Zimmerman then started to go his vehicle to meet police at "the mailboxes". This is all from the 911 tape.

    At that point it is hard to see how Zimmerman "engaged" Martin. It almost had to be Matin "engaging" ZImmerman after contact was broken.

  244. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Poverty. Nice excuse! I lived in extreme poverty in a poor country until my 20th. Never went on a crime spree. Maybe this has more to do with culture than money.

  245. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    Having a debate on "Stand your ground" isn't really going to work if you don't understand the issues.

    More on the Irrelevance of 'Stand Your Ground' to the Trayvon Martin Case

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  246. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "It was actually worse than that. Zimmerman's dad, a former state judge."

    Do you have a source for that? What court was he on?

  247. Re:How many niggers read this website anyway? by pankkake · · Score: 0

    > How many niggers read this website anyway?

    A lot, and I heard most of them are gay.

    --
    Kill all hipsters.
  248. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    But keep on accusing people of racism for calling out racism

    Thanks, I will; at least when I feel justified in doing so, as in this case.

    I don't feel sorry for calling somebody a racist who automatically thinks "hey, that means black people" when they hear the phrase "gangsta thug culture" without any explicit mention or implication of race, and when they furthermore don't even know the race of the speaker. By pigeonholing all issues into neat little liberal categories, including defining other people's words according to their own preconceived "code", such racism-accusers are simply being arrogant jerks. That's my opinion. :p

  249. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    According to the police report, Zimmerman was treated at the scene by the FD for bleeding from the back of his head and from his nose. Simple fact.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  250. Magistrate Judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technically magistrate judges are real judges, but AFAIK they don't hear cases. What they basically do is rule on routine motions in cases to take the load off District Court Judges. They basically rule on routine motions like discovery motions, addmisability motions etc.

  251. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

    ah, i see. So you're saying that looking "threatening" is enough to blow your childs or your friends head off, cause i was "threatened". Is that it?

    --
    CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
  252. There's also the issue by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Of no grand jury indictment. Why not? Getting a grand jury indictment is not hard, the standard for it is pretty low and the grand jury knows the prosecutor. However they are there for a reason: To try and keep the real bullshit cases out of court. So it worries me that they didn't get an indictment. They really should in this case, the 5th amendment stars out with "No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury." This would seem to qualify to me.

    The concern I really have is if they don't think they could even get an indictment then the trial will be nothing but a show trial, one that will further drag shit out. If they could have gotten one, they should have, as I imagine they do in most felony cases.

  253. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by slamb · · Score: 4, Informative

    Mod parent up. There is no way this doesn't come out hung jury. It just takes one white supremacist to find his way onto that jury.

    The facts of the case as I understand them are that Martin was walking along, Zimmerman thought Martin was up to no good, called 911, pursued Martin against the 911 operator's advice with a gun, and stupidly created a situation where one person attacked the other (conflicting reports on who attacked who), and felt he had to use his gun. Does that match your understanding / what you expect an honest jury to find?

    Assuming so, I think the jury will just say he's not guilty of second-degree murder. (Presumably the hypothetical white supremacist would go along with that.) They would have been a lot more likely to find him guilty of voluntary manslaughter due to "imperfect self-defense":

    Imperfect self-defense: Allowed only in a limited number of jurisdictions in the United States, self-defense is a complete defense to murder.[clarification needed (see talk page)] However, a person who acted in self defense with an honest but unreasonable belief that deadly force was necessary to do so could still be convicted of voluntary manslaughter or deliberate homicide committed without criminal malice. Malice is found if a person killed intentionally and without legal excuse or mitigation.

    "An honest but unreasonable belief that deadly force was necessary" is as good a description of the situation as any. It seems like the prosecutor was overcorrecting the lack of action until now and overreached in going for second-degree murder instead of voluntary manslaughter.

  254. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by elgo · · Score: 1

    Yes, exactly. All the pro-Zimmerman posts (stretching from the top of the page all the way down) and now the anti-McNeil post make me wonder if Khipu is a member of Zimmerman's family.

    --
    - elgo
  255. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    This is exactly why Zimmerman will be found guilty no matter the facts. What juror wants to be labeled racist by a nation full of stupid cunts like you?

  256. Re:Talk about media bias by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    Do you have a source for that? What court was he on?

    Google for zimmerman magistrate and you'll get lots of hits. (Including some irrelevant ones, such as a judge with that name in California.)

    I had read that he had been on the state supreme court, but a look at the first few hits on the above search yields claims all over the map, from Federal judge, to Virginia supreme court judge, to Florida county judge, to ...

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  257. That was news even for nerds outside of the USA by dbIII · · Score: 1

    I disagree - Santorum was of international interest to those interested in science and technology due to his stand against science. I'm not even in the USA and care little about Republican (or Democrat) blind tribalism but found him of interest.
    There were articles like that and this one way back in the first year of Slashdot anyway.

  258. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by toetagger · · Score: 1

    Interesting take. If that is so, why didn't Marin call the police for help? Maybe some hints in the bottom half of this?

    Maybe because he was on the phone with someone already (his girlfriend) at the time, and thought he had better chances to run than to call the police that may show up in 15 minutes, when its too late?

  259. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the position of the body doesn't match that, nor doesn't what he said on record on the phone.

    it was his story after the shooting that he was returning to his car. it never occurred to zimmerman that someone in the community might have a black teenager as a guest.. and neither did the police think of that as possible. as far as they were concerned just looking like a gangsta and being in the area was confronting zimmerman.. the official captain of the unofficial, unregistered, neighborhood nazi patrol.

  260. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

    What is the guy who throws the first punch is defending himself? Let's say the other guy is threatening to shoot him, but gets close enough for the first person to hit them.
    Does shooting still count as self defense?

  261. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

    If Martin should have called the police, what about Zimmerman? Shouldn't he have called the police again after Martin started beating him up?
    What is a bigger and more immediate threat to your safety? Someone hitting you, or someone pointing a gun at you?

  262. Et tu, Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to take comfort in the fact that I could come to Slashdot and find sanctuary from the whatever media feeding frenzy was currently grabbing headlines... Now Slashdot doesnt even provide that service.

    So on top of Slashvertising, dupes, terrible and often inaccurate summaries.. What makes Slashdot any different than the mainstream press websites? I think its time to take a hiatus from here and reintroduce myself to Arstechnica

  263. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by xenobyte · · Score: 5, Interesting

    White supremacist?

    This implies that we're talking about something premeditated and primarily racially motivated. This is not the case. As far as we know, it's a matter of someone (Zimmerman) feeling threatened on 'his' property, engaging the intruder and ends up using deadly force which he feels authorized by the "Stand Your Ground" legislation.

    The case has the following important issues that needs both a public debate and court evaluation:

    1) The "Stand Your Ground" law. It was meant to remove any concerns relating to the defense of your home or property. If there's an intruder and you feel threatened you should be able to use any means, including deadly force without fearing the legal consequences. Does the necessary threat need to be more clearly defined?

    2) The signals that appearance sends. Many people from non-ghetto environments feels uneasy or threatened by youths wearing 'gangsta-wear', i.e. hoodies, reversed or askew baseball caps and similar. If you dress like that in areas where it might cause concern, are you essentially 'asking for it'?

    3) The behaviour and actions of the intruder. Did he act in ways to make him more suspicious or threatening?

    4) The race angle. Would Zimmerman have acted differently if the intruder has been hispanic or white? Does a black youth in a hoodie appear more scary than a similary dressed white or hispanic youth?

    5) The possible abuse of the racism angle. Closely connected to 4 but still a separate issue. Every single time someone from one ethnic group harms someone from another ethnic group, racism is immediately claimed. If a hispanic man shoots a black youth, it's without doubt racism it seems. This abuse completely destroys any relevant racism angle by flooding the issue. It doesn't mean it wasn't racially motivated or aggravated but playing the race card all the time not only clouds the real motivation and cause, it also invalidates relevant racism claims because if you always hide behind (and possible is protected by) a claim of racism, people stop taking it seriously. Already, a racist white cop can get away with targeting black drivers simply because black drivers immediately claim racism when they are pulled over (even when the cop is black!), no matter how obvious it is that the cop had plenty of reasons to do so without any knowledge of the occupants of the car.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  264. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    F*cking ugly

  265. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by xenobyte · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There have been plenty of high-profile cases that went to jury just fine.

    The O.J. Simpson case for instance.

    There was some doubt as to motive and the excessive violence used which normally calls for a crime of passion or a psychopath, a profile that doesn't fit OJ Simpson.

    But the core issue that caused the acquittal was the bumbling efforts of the LAPD in this matter, possibly related to the truly bad actions by self-proclaimed racist Mark Fuhrman that wanted to force a conviction and managed to do the exact opposite. But not only did Mark Fuhrman mess things up, the LAPD failed to follow procedure again and again, both at the crime scene and in the lab, losing and contaminating evidence in the process. There was so much doubt that reasonable doubt was inevitable and he was acquitted, exactly as intended to protect the innocent from being railroaded.

    Basically we still don't know if he did it. There was countless stab wounds and blood everywhere (the LAPD managed to both step in it and make bloody footprints all over the house and grounds), yet no blood was ever found on OJ Simpson and only two pinhead-sized drops on the white Bronco which could have been deposited a long time prior to the murders. No blood stained clothes were ever found, nor the murder weapon. OJ had no time to wash and dispose of the bloody clothing as he was at the airport only hours later (and transport time from Brentwood to LAX was at least an hour due to congestion). Everything was searched and rewards offered but still nothing. This makes sense if the murderer was someone else as claimed, as only locations relevant to the possible paths OJ could have taken was searched.

    No, I personally don't think he did it. Too much doesn't fit or make sense.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  266. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by actiondan · · Score: 1

    Interesting that you refer to 'the intruder' - in this case, the guy who got killed was walking to a house where he was a guest - he wasn't on or even approaching the other guys property.

    I don't think this case is clear cut - there are all kinds of grey areas about what happened - but muddying the water with words like 'intruder' doesn't help.

    I think it would be fair to say 'supposed intruder', as it does seem that Zimmerman mistakenly believed this to be the case.

  267. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Gaerek · · Score: 1

    Reading Comprehension > You He said nothing about being threatened. He said being attacked. Its fucktards like you, that can twist every last detail without an objective view that have Zimmerman convicted before he stands trial in front of an impartial jury of his peers. Whatever happened to presumption of innocence? Oh right, it was gone the day the news realized sensational stories sell ads. If its found that Zimmerman was the original aggressor, then he deserves whatever the law can throw at him. But we don't know everything that happened, so quit listening to your emotions, look at this situation objectively and realize there's a reason that you are presumed innocent.

  268. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by xenobyte · · Score: 2

    The Casey Anthony case was a perfect example of a proper case with the proper outcome. No direct evidence was provided, only circumstantial hints, and the acquittal was the correct verdict.

    Sure, she didn't behave as must people would, but that is completely irrelevant. If she didn't kill her daughter (or pay someone to do it), an acquittal is the only valid verdict. It doesn't matter if she wanted the daughter dead or that she was happy that she was gone. That makes her a horrible mother but not a murderer. And absolutely nothing - except her cold pre- and post-behavior - indicated any connection with the crime.

    So not a murderer, only an absolutely horrible person/mother.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  269. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by xenobyte · · Score: 1

    Mod parent down! - It's either trolling or the ramblings of a mentally disturbed loser.

    Zimmerman didn't go hunting for blacks to shoot! Martin came to Zimmermans neighborhood looking like a gangsta and behaving like one to some extent. Zimmerman didn't pick up the gun when he saw the color of the intruders skin; he was already carrying. Whether the color of Martins skin had any influence on what happened is yet to be seen, as is whether it is relevant in any way.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  270. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    Interesting take. If that is so, why didn't Marin call the police for help? Maybe some hints in the bottom half of this?

    because he wasn't used to calling 911 for every suspicious dude like a bitch and by the time his phone was on the ground it was too late.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  271. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that you watch Fox says it all.

  272. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by narcc · · Score: 1

    So not a murderer, only an absolutely horrible person/mother.

    Yup. That's what I was trying to get across.

  273. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so EVERYONE in your country acts as you do? What is this beautiful gattica?

    Or are you a special case?

    So tell us, you never saw any crime where you grew up.... Please tell us this fairy tale.

  274. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    calling 911 for every suspicious dude like a bitch

    THUG LIFE YO.

  275. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cartman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, is that a command to "back off" and "let the real professionals handle it" by the civilian dispatcher who has no authority? No
    So, is it an "established fact"? No

    Yes, it is an established fact. You're being way too literal and are misinterpreting the intent and meaning behind the dispatcher's sentence.

    In standard English there is a kind of understatement which is very common and universally understood. For example, I encountered a friendly but unintelligent young woman earlier today and mentioned to a friend that "she's not the smartest person in the world". This did not mean that she had an IQ of 215 which would place her just shy of the smartest person. It meant she was dumb. It was a kind of understatement which is understood by everyone.

    Similarly, the statement "we don't need you to do that" is a friendly way of saying "don't do it." For example, if my boss observes someone at work doing something pointless or a waste of time, he might say "we don't need you to do that" because it's more polite than outright commanding them to stop. The meaning would be understood by everyone because that kind of understatement is part of standard conversational English.

  276. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Deviate_X · · Score: 1

    This implies that we're talking about something premeditated and primarily racially motivated. This is not the case. As far as we know, it's a matter of someone (Zimmerman) feeling threatened on 'his' property,

    Where exactly was Trayvon Martin shot, was it actually on Zimmerman's property? From my reading Zimmerman had been stalking Trayvon for a period before shooting him how does this law apply if you shoot someone not actually on "your" property?

  277. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Trecares · · Score: 1

    Generally people should follow the instructions of the dispatcher. When the dispatcher said "we", the dispatcher was clearly referring to the police themselves, along with the message to stop following him, implying that they would handle it.

    If you were in the dispatcher's shoes, would you trust some individual without the proper training to essentially pursue a suspect or would you want a real LEO to do it instead?

    So, yes, it is an established fact that the dispatcher told him to back off and let them handle it.

    Zimmerman, being part of the neighborhood watch had instructions to contact the police if he sees anything suspicious and to ALLOW them to handle it. That is his role. Trayvon on the other hand had no requirement to do so. Most men in general do not pull out their phones and call the cops whenever they think someone is following them. Such behavior makes them appear weak, and the typical masculine reaction is to confront their stalker or alternatively, running away to avoid trouble. Trayvon was on the phone with his girlfriend at the time also btw.

  278. For a second I was scared.... by Coeurderoy · · Score: 1

    I could have been Phil, that would have been a news for hackers/nerds/geeks

  279. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Poverty breeds crime.

    You have it exactly backwards: crime breeds poverty. Street crime doesn't provide the steady, life supporting income that having a job does and stupid criminals, those most likely to be caught, make just as many stupid decisions about spending their money as they do about how they conduct their criminal activity. The "poverty breeds crime" slogan is just used to excuse criminals from personal responsibility.

    Caveat: we are not talking about a desperate person stealing loaves of bread to feed his starving family; we are talking about violent crimes and property crimes both of which are committed at much, much higher rates by blacks in American than by any other racial or ethnic group.

    The problem is not genetics and it is not poverty. The problem is culture, the culture created by fatherless welfare dependency and decades of excusing the misbehavior of blacks because their ancestors were "oppressed".

  280. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cartman · · Score: 1

    Martin came to Zimmermans neighborhood looking like a gangsta and behaving like one to some extent.

    Looking like a gangsta? Do you mean "black"? He was wearing a hoodie, like about 25% of young people at any given time.

    Also, how was he behaving like a gangsta? He walked away rapidly from a confrontation ("I won't run but I'll walk real fast").

    Zimmerman didn't pick up the gun when he saw the color of the intruders skin; he was already carrying.

    Zimmerman had the gun in his car and was driving to Target. He saw Trayvon, then called the cops and said "[Trayvon] looks like he's on drugs or something" after just looking at the kid from a distance. Then he got the gun from his car, put it in his belt, and chased down the kid.

    There is no way to tell if someone is on drugs by just looking at them from a distance. I have extensive experience with hard drug addicts and I could never tell if someone was on drugs before talking to them. I've known about 10+ severe addicts quite well who held down jobs and worked while doing drugs, and who managed to conceal their addiction from everyone. The only exception is if someone has done alot of meth, in which case they become twitchy, which is obvious from afar. Even in that case, however, the average meth addict is not particularly aggressive and is far less dangerous than the average drunk person.

    I think Zimmerman was acting under the influence of stereotypes.

  281. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't forget to yell "He's comin' right for us!" before firing.

  282. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by StormyWeather · · Score: 1

    Really? A fact ? You have talked to the eyewitnesses then? Zimmerman's claim is that he lost sight of the guy and walked to a street corner to get the location for the police, something they did ask him for when trevan who was physically superior to Zimmerman jumped him and started beating the shit out of him. This is backed up by several eyewitness.
    Getting second degree will be tough here unless there is evidence NOT ALREADY IN THE PUBLIC REALM. They might have had a shot at manslaughter.
    You do have a constitutional right to fight for self survival and use arms as the means, so unless a jury thinks that Zimmerman with a busted nose and head was in no danger of being killed or further injured through physical means or with his own legally carried sidearm it will be a steep hill for the prosecution.

  283. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by StormyWeather · · Score: 1

    So if someone follows you and you confront them and ask if they want trouble and they say no and walk away is cool to jump on them then and start beating their head against the pavement? Is it cool to kill them at that point? Do you think if trevan hadn't escalated to physical violence he would have been shot? If someone jumped on you because they thought you were following them and broke your nose and bashed in your head, then got up and turned around to come back and beat you some more would you think that was cool?

  284. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You obviously have no idea what Stand Your Ground laws nor Concealed Carry laws entail. Your bar fight example has the shooter already in violation of the law before the confrontation even starts because he is carrying inside a bar, which is a major no no. While there are bad apples with concealed carry permits, the vast majority of people willing to pay the money and sit through the classes to legally carry, are law abiding citizens.

  285. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by fishingmachine · · Score: 1

    the same police that did not even give him a breathalyzer?

  286. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Fox News does have the highest viewing numbers. Which just goes to demonstrate there's no shortage of idiots.

  287. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    A good lawyer would exclude anyone who's heard of it, not just someone who claims to be impartial about it. Self-reporting isn't accurate.
    --

    You don't get an endless number of exclusions, though. Now if they can't get an impartial person, then there's a problem. Self-reporting is not accurate, but until we have accurate lie detection it's what we've got.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  288. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Zimmerman is black!? are you colour blind or perhaps just ignorant!?

  289. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    In the case you cite, the shooter, a black male, was not arrested and was not charged for an entire year. Eventually, under public pressure, the DA did charge the shooter and he was found guilty by a jury.

    That's the point, genius. The law is supposed to protect a guy who is defending himself. It didn't defend the black guy who was clearly defending himself.

    Would racially based injustice against black men mean that we need to dismantle our legal system altogether

    You are fucking-A right it means that. If this system is based on "equal protection under the law" but it has not worked out that way, then it's time to get out pencils and paper, know what I mean?

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  290. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by StormyWeather · · Score: 1

    Which is why when my son who is a dark Hispanic decided to start wearing baggy pants I went into his room and replaced them all with proper fitting pants. Then I told him that if he wants to be a slum rat he can do it after he supports himself. Until then he can dress like someone who might be worth something. That was the end of that. But many parents are too lazy or scared to have even this SMALL confrontation with their kid. This is why black fathers have -got- to step it up for their kids. Kids need a dad to tell them how its gonna be till they are self supporting.

    Of course I may have gone too far. Now my son is dressing like Tosh and parroting "high fashion" lol.

  291. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Look, I understand that you want white people to be murdered before they're allowed to defend themselves against blacks,

    I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess that you're going to be voting for Mitt Romney in November, yes?

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  292. What's the crime? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He just killed a nigger that attacked him. He should be getting an award, not a murder charge.

  293. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No they aren't

    http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/riptide/2012/03/trayvon_martin_no_thats_not_hi.php

  294. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    They are MEANT to protect anyone who stands their ground. They are horribly mis-used to racist ends far too often, but that is not what was meant.

    And how do you know what was MEANT when ALEC and the NRA cocked up these laws? Since this is the same outfit that is pushing minority voter suppression laws, and school privatization laws, and anti-minimum wage laws, I think you've got the burden of proof for what they MEANT to do with this law.

    The fact that so many "Stand Your Ground" laws appear in Southern states, is further reason to doubt what the law MEANT.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  295. Re:Crazy world we live in. by kcbnac · · Score: 1

    911 operators commands are not law, they are mere suggestions. (I've never seen a law making their commands punishable if not followed) He (Zimmerman) had returned to his truck near the end of the call, having lost Martin, and was awaiting the arrival of the officers that were on their way. After the end of the call the two of them (Zimmerman and Martin) met and had a confrontation, who started it is the big question no one can answer. The evidence (at the scene) seemed to back Zimmerman's story enough that he was released without charges (at the time).

  296. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking any case this public is going to have more exclusions allowed than usual.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  297. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by StormyWeather · · Score: 1, Interesting

    And how exactly do you know this? The confrontation wasn't over at the back entrance. His claim is that he did stop following him, and was walking to a street sign to get the street name for the operator, something they did ask for, and then was confronted. And where did the operator say "stalking"? Is following someone with the intent to provide information to police, or to question them an aggressive act?

    If Martin was being stalked why didn't he use his cell phone to call the police?

  298. Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who F@#king cares. It serves no purpose on this website

  299. Re:Talk about media bias by ClioCJS · · Score: 1

    Wow. You're a fucking puppet.

    --
    -Clio
    Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
    Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
  300. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by hubang · · Score: 1

    No, it was the truth. The protests and petitions didn't get them to change their minds.

    The US Attorney General implying "Arrest and charge Zimmerman, or we'll arrest and charge the lot of you," was what really got them to move.

    Zimmerman's daddy was a judge, and got his kid out of most of his troubles, but this is a national issue in an election year.

  301. Re:Racism/ to kill a black guy, any black guy by blackest_k · · Score: 1

    Are you on crack?

    An armed man goes looking for trouble in his neighbourhood streets, what was going to happen once he found it?

    If he had no intent on killing someone then why carry the gun in the first place?
    He was armed and dangerous and looking for trouble, the facts speak for themselves he killed the boy!

    Even if he had been found holding the boy at gunpoint would the Police have said good job Zimmerman thats one more scumbag off the streets or arrested Zimmerman?

    When it comes to determining premeditated murder you need hard evidence to convict but as the evidence largely exists in the head of Zimmerman it is unlikely he will admit to it so murder 2 is likely to be the maximum he can reasonably be convicted of. Just because the evidence available is insufficient to gain a conviction doesn't mean the motivation and planning wasn't there.

    25 to life is a pretty hefty sentence , murder 1 would only add eventual state sponsored euthanasia assuming you can get the death penalty in florida.

  302. Re:Talk about media bias by cffrost · · Score: 1

    Right, because OJ got what he deserved /sarcasm

    I'm not sure. What sort of top was the vic wearing?

    --
    Thank you, Edward Snowden.

    "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
  303. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by j33px0r · · Score: 1

    I will bet my left testicle that you have never personally raised a child to adulthood.

    As you've raised a child to adulthood, I'm a bit surprised that you didn't double down on that bet.

  304. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

    He was "tailing", not "stalking". It was a mistake, but so was calling the police. As we can see from the media coverage, socialism has gone mainstream, so there is no "neighborhood" anymore, only the "Big Society" collective, and it's every man for himself on the individual level. Install bars on your windows and eat popcorn while watching your neighbors' houses being looted!

  305. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

    When you have a son and he starts thinking that gangsta thug culture is GREAT, that all the rap and hip-hop about how awesome it is to be a career criminal is something more than entertainment, that's your cue to ACT LIKE A PARENT and straighten his ass out before he gets either jailed or shot in the streets. Of course, not deciding to start and raise a family in a high-crime area is a nice touch too.

    Do we have any evidence that this describes Treyvon Martin?

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  306. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Talderas · · Score: 1

    Contrary to what you may think, it is not possible for someone to accurately assess the damage one has received as well as practically impossible to accurately assess what damage one will receive in the future. Self defense is usually based on the latter.

    --
    "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
  307. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

    So to follow up, is it also your opinion that Jim Crow laws which didn't mention race were not, in fact, racist?

  308. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

    Really? I can just kill everyone who takes a swing at me?

    --
    <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
  309. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

    It doesn't seem to be working like that in Florida, but if it were, people would think twice about getting into a bar fight or marrying a slut. We already have widespread abuse of "protective orders" for the defense of women, but their strong right to defense against "bad men" promises to have the positive effect of encouraging men to stay away from crazy bitches.

  310. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by crazyjj · · Score: 2

    It really doesn't matter at this point whether he's innocent or guilty, or even if he's found innocent or guilty by a jury. Regardless, he's already been tried in the court of media and public opinion, found guilty, and sentenced to a life sentence (or the death penalty if a lynch mob gets to him). All the rest is just for show, really.

    --
    What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
  311. Re:Talk about media bias by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Traynor was suspended from school over drugs, he's not a little kid out and about getting "candy". He was in a private neighborhood snooping around in the dark, which was why 911 was called in the first place. Drugs + snooping in the rear of property = ?

    It's pretty obvious he was looking for a quick snatch to sell on to feed his habit.

    That's not to say he should have been shot over it. I'd wager you've never been in a gheto or seen a real confrontation from your mom's basement.

  312. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    We know the intent in the case of the Jim Crow laws, because we know who wrote them and why they were written. But you are not entitled to assume just because you see somebody complaining about "gangsta thug culture" that they are specifically targeting another race. You don't know the writer's motives.

    I don't think either one of us knows the OP that started this discussion. But since I am fairly knowledgeable about me, let me provide a new specimen:

    Gangsta thug culture is a negative influence on our society.

    There. That is my true and honest opinion, and I don't think I have exaggerated or used non sequiturs like the OP did. Am I a racist for expressing this view? Is the very phrase "gangsta thug culture" somehow a racially black concept? I'm still bewildered that you seem to think so, given the antics of Eminem and a host of disaffected, youthful Caucasian wannabes.

  313. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone who defends the NRA attacks Martin. EVERY. SINGLE. COMMENT.

    The racism isn't fabricated.

  314. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by daninaustin · · Score: 1

    no, but if they have you down on the ground and are smashing your head against the concrete you probably can.

  315. Re:Not News for Nerds. by micahjc · · Score: 1

    He'll be back.

  316. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the officer has no reason to believe that someone is drunk they usually *don't* use the breathalyzer. Given that there is *no* information out there suggesting that Zimmerman was intoxicated or otherwise chemically impaired, why would you find it unusual that the police "did not even give him a breathalyzer"?

  317. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by pigwiggle · · Score: 2

    I don't know exactly what Dooley's arrest tells us. It might tell us that black people will be arrested more quickly under similar circumstances in Florida. Or, it just may tell us that Trevor Dooley was arrested more quickly under similar circumstances. We don't - well I don't anyway - know how long it typically takes Florida law enforcement to arrest someone under these kinds of circumstances, relative to the race of the killer and killed. As far as I know no one has gone to the trouble of compiling and publishing that information. It may not even be that meaningful if they did. There have been around 40 justified killing each year in Florida for the past 4 years. The number where circumstances match the Zimmerman/Martin case and those that mirror it with race swapped can't be large.

    But none of that it to say it wouldn't be informative to do the comparison, or that the comparison can't be done, or that *you* can't do it. Here is a good starting point - the dates, ages, and races for justified civilian homicides in Florida.

    http://databases.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/ftlaudjustified/ftlaudjustifiable_list.php

    Two final thoughts. When I first started looking at this data I had the expectation that there would be a disproportionate number of blacks killed by whites. That doesn't really seem to be the case, for civilians anyway. And finally, the biggest difference between the two cases you compare is the amount of attention the Zimmerman/Martin case has had from the media and otherwise.

    --
    46 & 2
  318. lol by 1800maxim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    [ Similarly, the statement "we don't need you to do that" is a friendly way of saying "don't do it." ]

    911 dispatchers are trained to give orders. They are trained to deal with people in various excited emotional states, and their job is to convey instructions as clearly and loudly as is necessary. "Sir, STOP DOING THAT. DO YOU UNDERSTAND? STOP FOLLOWING THE SUSPECT AND WAIT FOR THE ARRIVAL OF THE POLICE".

    See how much more effective that is? If you listen to various recordings of 911 calls, you will know that's the language they know how to use and are trained for. This "you don't need to do that" does not convey a directive.

    P.S. I'm responding to your comment, not the entire case, by the way.

    1. Re:lol by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 1

      My understanding is that 911 dispatchers are trained to keep the person on the phone, keep that person talking and focusing on providing useful information. Among other things, keeping them talking helps keep the citizen calm and out of trouble. Yelling and giving orders are likely to be counterproductive. I have never heard a released 911 tape involving a dispatcher yelling, and I used to watch COPS and some of those other police shows where the exciting parts of a 911 tape are often played.

      Furthermore, it is generally accepted practice that neighborhood watch persons avoid confrontation. The dispatcher reminding Zimmerman of something he should already know is quite sufficient. Of course, Zimmerman's attorney could argue that the hint was not understood, but it might be tantamount to admitting Zimmerman is not a very competent neighborhood watch person.

  319. What has conservatism come to? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you liberals get enough airplay here as it is

    "Liberals" have a monopoly when it comes to being concerned about an unarmed man being gunned down in the street? Really?!

  320. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by omfgnosis · · Score: 0

    We know the intent in the case of the Jim Crow laws, because we know who wrote them and why they were written.

    I'd argue that we don't need to know those things to understand the racism of the laws. Even if it were a law that came from on high, if the consequences were predictably racially biased, the law is racist, whether it mentions race or not. I don't know, for example, much about the people behind US drug law, but the effects are quite clearly racially biased; the laws are racist.

    Am I a racist for expressing this view?

    In a vacuum, as you've articulated it, I couldn't really say (but I'd probably guess yes). But in the context of your promotion of ignorance about obvious racially charged innuendo, I'm inclined to believe that you are clearly exhibiting prejudice. Perhaps it's prejudice you don't understand, but it's still there.

    Is the very phrase "gangsta thug culture" somehow a racially black concept? I'm still bewildered that you seem to think so, given the antics of Eminem and a host of disaffected, youthful Caucasian wannabes.

    It's a completely meaningless concept, except the cultural implications it carries. On a Venn diagram, the overlap between dominant culture perception of "gangsta thug culture" and "urban black culture" would be almost total, whether it's true or not. That there are people who aren't a part of "urban black culture" who identify with "gangsta thug culture" doesn't change this dominant culture association. This is how innuendo works: you don't have to spell out exactly what you mean if your audience already shares your particular biases.

    As an aside, while it's been a long time since I actively listened to Eminem, I am straining to recall anything particularly "gangsta thug" about his lyrics. At least in his early work (with which I'm more familiar), his voice seemed to be pretty unique in the rap/hip-hop milieu at the time. Yes, there was some subject overlap, presumably because he shares a lot of experiences with what black rappers/hip-hop artists were discussing, but there were a lot of themes that were more in line with a caricature of "poor white culture". What was so fascinating was that he was able to walk a fine line by attracting audiences from many cultures, without alienating a lot of the rap/hip-hop community by appearing to make a mockery of the genre the way so many other white rappers have.

  321. Good luck with finding 12 to say he's guilty by iamhassi · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up. There is no way this doesn't come out hung jury.

    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This.

    With all the news coming out apologizing for lying about what happened, editing the 911 call to make Zimmerman look racist, publishing photos of Trayvon when he was 12 rather than the 6'1 17-yr-old he was, fact that Zimmerman was injured that night and the police believed it was self-defense, witnesses saying Trayvon was beating Zimmerman, I really don't think they'll be able to find 12 people to agree Zimmerman's guilty, someone is always going to believe Zimmerman was defending himself.

    Unless they have a clear video showing Zimmerman executing Trayvon while he was eating skittles, it's pretty clear they're doing this just to satisfy public outcry.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  322. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    except your entire example is bullshit.

    First, my concealed weapon permit expressly forbids carrying in a bar, or any place of nuisance.

    Second, if you've been drinking legally you are expressly forbidden from using a firearm.

    Third, "stand your ground," requires that you are otherwise legally in right up to that point. If you are hitting someone you have already given up your right to "stand your ground."

    Also, your last paragraph, these are pretty well-defined "what-ifs" that have been established hundreds of years ago, before this country was founded. Castle doctrine has defined carriage-jacking as a justifiable use of deadly self-defense since 1628. Stand your ground has no barring here. If you break into my car while I'm in I have the right to assume you intend me bodily harm. If a caught someone else in bed with my wife in their home, well, there are many variable... how did I get into their home? If entered his/her home illegally then I'd no right to either self-defense nor "stand your ground."

  323. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Yeah, shame his DNA was found at the scene.
    No doubt in my mind that he did it.
    Also no doubt in my mind that the verdict is the proper one because the prosecutors fucked up. The moment she changed her hair, it went from another murder case to a show for her.

    And the glove? I don't know whats more baffling, that they insisted he try it, or that they let him get away with how to tried to put it on. If you can get a video, watch how he scrunches his hand for a brief moment that turns it into theatrics; which his lawyer jumped right on. They where prepared for that.
    And the judge should have barred all cameras.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  324. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DeadCatX2 seems to be shading the facts of the Dooley incident. You can read an article http://www.ksdk.com/news/world/article/311679/28/Widow-says-Floridas-Stand-Your-Ground-law-is-free-pass-for-murder here on news channel 5. According to a new york times blog as of March 20, 2012 the case is still undecided http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/03/20/florida-shooting-focuses-attention-on-stand-your-ground-law/.

  325. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by SteveFoerster · · Score: 1

    Does DNA come with a timestamp? If not, that's only important if they were strangers. They weren't. (Not saying he didn't do it, just pointing out that one thing. And I agree that once cops mess with evidence, bam, that's reasonable doubt.)

    --
    Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
  326. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by geekoid · · Score: 1

    She wasn't convicted, but she is a murderer.
    She killed her daughter. No doubt. The defense side tracked the case with alleged past sexual abuse.

    "If she didn't kill her daughter (or pay someone to do it), an acquittal is the only valid verdict"
    incorrect. If her lawyer can defend her then an acquittal is the only valid verdict. Completely separate from whether or not she did it.

    You are clearly ill informed of the facts.
    The found the girls hair in the trunk. The hair was in a state that happens to hair only after someone is dead.
    They found evidence of a decomposing body in her trunk.
    They found evidence of chloroform in her trunk.
    There is a clear record of her looking up information on how to do this exact same type of murder
    Her car smelled like a dead body.
    She fabricated a story about a nanny.

    They found her hair in the trunk from the girls corpse.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  327. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cpricejones · · Score: 1

    My guess is Zimmerman's lawyer would argue that his client simply did not understand that statement or that it was unclear. The problem with this argument though is that Zimmerman seemed to be in control of his situation.

  328. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Zimmerman was in fact knocked to the ground and being beaten, then stand your ground laws are absolutely irrelevant: he was cornered in the eyes of the law, and wouldn't have had any duty to retreat at all.

  329. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL what exactly do you think "Neighborhood watch" is?

    It's a program where residents of a neighborhood organize to keep a watchful eye out for suspicious activities or behaviour for purposes of preventing crime and vandalism. It is not a vigilante organization and members of neighborhood watches are encouraged to contact authorities if they observe suspiscious activities and discouraged for intervening. Armed patrolling of a neighborhood by a self-appointed "watch captain" most definitely does NOT constitute legitimate neighborhood watch activity.

    Of course if he hadn't had it all we would have heard about some teenager asaulting a neighborhood watch captain, and really wouldn't have put much thought to him spending time in jail.

    1. He wasn't a legitimate "neighborhood watch captain". He was self-appointed and members of that neighborhood's actual legitimate watch have already indicated he isn't associated with them and certainly isn't their "captain". Of course, this is all beside the point that there's actually no such thing as a "neighborhood watch captain".

    2. IF he was assaulted by the teenager in question (and that's a mighty big 'if'), the question remains as to motive. Let's look at the two version to see which is more plausible...

    A "neighborhood watch captain", suspecting that he is observing suspicious activity, leaves his vehicle to "check which street he's on" (what kind of "neighborhood watch captain" can't identify the street he's on in the neighborhood he lives in and since when does reading a street sign require leaving one's vehicle?), and is randomly assaulted without provocation by an unarmed teenager returning to his dad's fiance's house from a corner store run, necessitating the use of deadly force due to the viciousness of the unprovoked assault.

    -Or-

    A self-appointed "neighborhood watch captain" with a history of overzealousness, contravening established guidelines for neighborhood watch conduct by carrying a firearm while 'patrolling', suspecting that he is observing suspiscious activity based on nothing more than the appearance of a teenager, follows said teenager (despite being admonished by the 911 operator that authorities did not need him to do so - therefore further contravening established neighborhood watch guidelines), and decides to confront and challenge the teenager (who had every right to be where he was). The teenager 'stands his ground' against an unknown stranger with unclear motives for the confrontation, resulting in a scuffle that ends when the self-appointed "neighborhood watch captain", realizing that he may have bitten off far more than he could chew, resorts to deadly force under the premise of being in fear for his life from an unarmed teenager whom he outweighed by nearly 100 pounds?

    The first story requires a fairly extreme suspension of disbelief. The second offers a far more logical progression of events and more closely matches the informaton that has already been reported.

  330. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Basically we still don't know if he [OJ] did it.

    Yes we do. An innocent man doesn't make a run for Mexico with a disguise and a wad of cash.

    If OJ's crime and trial occurred before Rodney King and the '92 LA riots, he probably would have been convicted.

  331. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Politburo · · Score: 1

    Revisionist claptrap. There was no protest prior to the riot, Sharpton marched days later.

  332. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Coren22 · · Score: 2

    The story from the side of Zimmerman was that after he lost Trey, he returned to his car to await the police, Trey approached him at his car, tackled him to the ground and slammed his head into the curb, at this point, Zimmerman was in fear for his life and shot Trey.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  333. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Coren22 · · Score: 1

    Just walked by a TV at work with CNN, aparently there is a witness who say Treyvon attacking Zimmerman before he was shot. The witness's account and Zimmerman's agree that he was on the ground getting beat on, Zimmerman said Treyvon was bashing his head into the ground. Self defense is perfectly legal, if someone is using deadly force on you, you are justified in responding in kind.

    --
    APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
  334. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Whorhay · · Score: 1

    No.

    And this whole discussion makes little sense in light of other existing laws. When a person starts or initiates a confrontation using or directly threatening force in the process they are commiting a Felony. In most states any deaths resulting from a Felony offense are the fault of the person(s) committing the felony. Which is how when two conspirators try and rob a gas station ,and one is shot to death by the attendant, the surviving conspirator is charged with murder for the death.

    In this case of course the problem is that we, the public, don't know who actually started the physical confrontation. And it might be that no one but Zimmerman and Martin will ever know. But hopefully there is evidence that will allow a jury to make a sound decision one way or the other.

  335. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    Even if it were a law that came from on high, if the consequences were predictably racially biased, the law is racist, whether it mentions race or not. I don't know, for example, much about the people behind US drug law, but the effects are quite clearly racially biased; the laws are racist.

    So if it were determined that one racial group is disproportionately affected by laws against violent crime and/or murder, then we could conclude that laws against violent crime are racist and should not be instituted?

    Until you connect some of these dots and come to what is an obvious conclusion to most people, you are not contributing to intelligent discourse on this subject. Accusing people of racism where there is none, and behaving paternalistically toward minorities is not productive.

    And what is the obvious conclusion I am suggesting you should come to? That the law of the land should be color blind, and that social critiques such as the OP made should also be color blind as much as possible, and just leave race out of the discussion. Trying to interpret everything in terms of race is often well-meant, but ultimately harmful.

  336. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Nice handle. We pretend to work they pretend to pay us. Ever read Koba the Dread?

  337. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    Barack Obama: he is a thug because he criticized the Supreme Court, he trained ACORN to intimidate (!) banks, he challenged signatures in a primary election. "If Barack Obama had a son, would he be a violent thug like Trayvon Martin?" "Who is the bigger thug: Trayvon Martin or Barack Obama?"

    Eric Holder: New Black Panther Party, Al Sharpton. Holder is a thug because the DOJ is investigating the S&P for its role in the runup to the 2008 financial crisis.

    Al Sharpton: Black kids beat up an old white man (for some reason Sharpton is mentioned), Sharpton was at the White House Easter breakfast (the comments are full of the word "thug"), Trayvon Martin is a thug.

    George Bush: Kanye West criticized George Bush and is a thug, George Bush personally called John Ashcroft while he was in the hospital to get him to sign off on illegal wiretapping.

    Alberto Gonzalez: Gonzalez went to the hospital to speak to Ashcroft in the aforementioned incident.

    Rush Limbaugh: Obama is a thug, Obama is a thug, Obama is a thug, basketball is a thug sport.

    When people call Obama and Holder thugs, it is because of (fairly mild) criticisms they voice, or investigations they perform (as, you know, the goddamn Attorney General). Sharpton is a thug, and he spends all his time talking about thugs.

    When people call Bush and Gonzalez thugs, they're generally referring to an incident where they tried to force the then-Attorney General to give them a paper trail to cover for doing something illegal, while the AG was in the hospital recovering from surgery (at the time, Gonzalez was White House Counsel). The only time Limbaugh's name is tied to the word "thug" is when he uses it to describe black people.

  338. Anybody must be charged. by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    You can't just go around having brawls then wimp out and shoot somebody. Even clear self defense should require mandatory charges so a proper complete investigation is performed. Maybe an "innocent" person spends some money, suffers a little, or ends up in jail a few years. That is a small price to pay for one's whole life... assuming the threat was actually real.

    Just about everybody would trade a trial and some possible jail time against death. Nobody should be able to leave a murder scene, go home, clean up, add some bruises, leave the country, etc.

  339. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    Clearly, liberals are the real racists. Like this liberal:

    You start out in 1954 by saying, "Nigger, nigger, nigger." By 1968 you can't say "nigger" — that hurts you. Backfires. So you say stuff like forced busing, states' rights and all that stuff. You're getting so abstract now [that] you're talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you're talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is [that] blacks get hurt worse than whites. And subconsciously maybe that is part of it. I'm not saying that. But I'm saying that if it is getting that abstract, and that coded, that we are doing away with the racial problem one way or the other. You follow me — because obviously sitting around saying, "We want to cut this," is much more abstract than even the busing thing, and a hell of a lot more abstract than "Nigger, nigger."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Atwater#Atwater_on_the_Southern_Strategy

  340. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    "Meanwhile, it was Zimmerman who was rolling around the neighborhood with a gun looking for trouble."

    LOL what exactly do you think "Neighborhood watch" is?

    In a well-run neighborhood watch you are not allowed to have a gun. This is made extremely clear to you by the police, because if they fail to do so they may be liable when you shoot a kid carrying Skittles.

  341. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    I have patrolled without a weapon. So has anyone in a legitimate neighborhood watch. It's quite safe. The bad guys who know what they're doing don't mess with you because they know the cops (with real firepower, handcuffs, etc.) would appear in five minutes if one of them actually capped you. Then they'd be on the news. And the criminals on the News get some prestige, but they also get locked up for decades. Their best bet is to walk away and hope you didn't see them doing something that would get them arrested.

    Look at it this way:
    Under what circumstances could a neighborhood watchman's patrol end with gunfire and not be considered a total failure?

  342. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    There are lots of valid criticisms of black Americans. (Most of them go back to the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow, but I don't think anyone is beyond criticism.) If you just want to talk about "thugs" who run around and beat people up because they think being a thug is great because of rappers on MTV and their parents are terrible for not straightening them out, you're full of shit.

    The AC who brought up all this crap doesn't know Martin. We know he smoked pot, flipped off a webcam, put gold on his teeth, and got suspended from school. I grew up with a ton of white kids who acted like that, but nobody ever called them thugs, and nobody ever shot them.

  343. Re:How many niggers read this website anyway? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'll be whining for your mommy when the future race police you desire so much find out you're actually 1/16th black and drag you off to the gas chamber.

  344. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by matunos · · Score: 1

    Not if you start the altercation.

    I didn't say he was clearly guilty. I said there looks like enough probable cause to arrest and try him. Or at the very least to continue to investigate.

  345. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

    So if it were determined that one racial group is disproportionately affected by laws against violent crime and/or murder, then we could conclude that laws against violent crime are racist and should not be instituted?

    Let's explore this, because I think an example like this underscores the way racism can be hidden but still used. So, in a scenario where a law "against violent crime", which mentions no racial bias, effects racially biased punishment, there's a few possibilities:

    1. The over-represented population is predisposed to violent crime.
    2. Enforcement is selective.
    3. Other conditions promote violent crime in the over-represented population.

    If we can't agree that the first hypothesis is racist, you can stop reading here and we can stop wasting our time. Likewise the second. In the third case, while it may be that the law itself has a valid goal, clearly there's a broader racial problem that needs to be addressed; it might not be the scope of that law to address it, depends on the law. If the law's purpose is valid and addressing the racial bias is outside the scope of that law, then racism lies at a different level, but there's still racism.

    Since you completely side-stepped the question of drug laws, however, I will bring it back into the discussion. Crack cocaine sentencing is much more severe than powder cocaine sentencing.

    Simple possession of 28 grams of crack cocaine yields a five-year mandatory minimum sentence for a first offense; it takes 500 grams of powder cocaine to prompt the same sentence. (Source)

    This quite obviously doesn't specify race, but the fact is that crack use is more likely among blacks than whites, and vice verse for powder. Do you think the authors of the laws didn't know that? The effect, of course, has been predictable: substantial over-representation of black people in prison for drug offenses. The law is racist in its effects; its authors are either dangerously stupid or racist (or both).

    you are not contributing to intelligent discourse on this subject

    It's possible to disagree and engage in intelligent discourse.

    Accusing people of racism where there is none

    Your position has shifted from "I don't know" to a definite negative? I think you're further revealing your biases on the subject.

    and behaving paternalistically toward minorities is not productive.

    I am honestly baffled. What is paternalistic about identifying innuendo? If it were explicit rather than code, would it still be paternalistic to call out? Your reasoning is simply unsound.

    That the law of the land should be color blind

    So should society. Until we can have both, we can have neither. Choosing to ignore racism isn't color-blindness it's willful blindness.

    and that social critiques such as the OP made should also be color blind as much as possible, and just leave race out of the discussion.

    Finally, you're being more forthcoming with your motivation. Your problem isn't that an accusation of racism was (you think) misplaced, your problem is that race is even a topic in the discussion in the first place. Well, it's relevant. Racism is alive and well, and one of the major forces in our culture's evolution. Like I said, you can't just choose not to see it and expect it to go away. The consequence of promoting this kind of ignorance is that racism will have a calmer sea in which to swim. And, I have bad news: as that sea becomes more inviting, you can bet your ass the topic will be a lot more prominent.

  346. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1
    I don't see the pattern. Both Bush and Obama are called thugs on the internet. Whoop-dee-doo. You have not succeeded in proving that "gangsta thug culture" necessarily carries a racially black reference.

    However, since part of your post is actually relevant to this /. article, let's use it as a segue:

    Trayvon Martin is a thug.

    I would personally not make that statement, because even if Zimmerman's account of the incident is taken as the truth, and Trayvon behaved thuggishly in this incident, "thug" doesn't have to be the sum judgment of Trayvon's life. I have done stupid things in my life, many of them before I was 18. Hopefully the criminal investigation can run its course, the public at large can learn lessons from the incident and not repeat it, and the deceased can be remembered a little more generously, as a human being who could have had a meaningful and fulfilling life if mistakes on both sides hadn't led to this tragic outcome.

  347. Re:Racism/ to kill a black guy, any black guy by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

    Are you on crack?

    An armed man goes looking for trouble in his neighbourhood streets, what was going to happen once he found it?

    If he had no intent on killing someone then why carry the gun in the first place?

    This is yet another huge presumption on your part. I carry a gun every day. I'm damned sure not "looking for trouble". On what basis do you say he was automatically "looking for trouble"? Was it his job to patrol the neighborhood? Probably not. Was it wrong of him to do so? Also, probably not. Looking out for your neighbors isn't inherently evil or bad nor is it "looking for trouble". We don't have any evidence saying he was intending to do anything else. Do you have evidence that says otherwise?

    He was armed and dangerous and looking for trouble, the facts speak for themselves he killed the boy!

    This is the same presumption as above. Do you have any evidence that he was dangerous as opposed to merely armed? The facts we know are these:

    1. He was out in the neighborhood "patrolling" or whatever one wants to call it
    2. There have been reports of breakins in the neighborhood
    3. He reported seeing someone who may have been up to no good to the police
    4. For reasons currently not proven he followed this person on foot (not a decision I agree with, but not inherently evil/bad)
    5. Some kind of confrontation occurred. We don't know by way of evidence who started it for certain.
    6. The end result is that Martin was shot

    Those are the known facts. Practically everything else is presumption or assumption on our parts. You seem intent on presuming evil intent where there is little to no evidence to support that at the moment. Why is that?

    Even if he had been found holding the boy at gunpoint would the Police have said good job Zimmerman thats one more scumbag off the streets or arrested Zimmerman?

    Presuming there really was a reason to hold Martin at gun point that would have been vastly preferred by everyone. If it turned out there was no reason to do so, Zimmerman would have been arrested for assault with a deadly weapon.

    When it comes to determining premeditated murder you need hard evidence to convict but as the evidence largely exists in the head of Zimmerman it is unlikely he will admit to it so murder 2 is likely to be the maximum he can reasonably be convicted of. Just because the evidence available is insufficient to gain a conviction doesn't mean the motivation and planning wasn't there.

    25 to life is a pretty hefty sentence , murder 1 would only add eventual state sponsored euthanasia assuming you can get the death penalty in florida.

    Yeah, just because there is no evidence of motivation and planning lets just assume that's what happened and "convict" based on that. Who needs little things like evidence and logic before forming opinions and deciding guilt, right?

    --
    I was raised on the command line, bitch

    "Nemo me impune lacesset"

  348. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    You don't see the pattern? The three black people get called thugs because they criticize people, or because they do their jobs. The others are only called thugs when they try to intimidate someone recovering from surgery; otherwise, their name comes up because they called black people thugs, or someone else called black people thugs for something the black people said about them.

    If you don't see the pattern, it's because you don't want to. I don't really know what else to say.

  349. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    And I'm still wondering how someone didn't end up in jail for communicating a threat or inciting a riot for that one.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  350. Fie! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    News
    Nerds
    Tech

    If the story has 2 out of the 3, I think it is appropriate to post here.

    This only has one, and by god I heard this news last night on the radio, on the television, AND on the big media websites I peruse.

    I fie upon you, slashdot mods. FIE!!!

  351. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1
    I am not interested in debating drug laws, that's a can of worms for many reasons, and it's possible we might actually end up agreeing with each other. I'd rather focus on our disagreements. :) You said that if a law affected a race disproportionately, the law was racist. I refuted that by reductio ad absurdam with the example of violent crime, and I think my refutation was successful. Perhaps we can agree that where society has a clear interest in legislating against a crime (violence, theft, murder), that legislation should apply to all races.

    Accusing people of racism where there is none

    Your position has shifted from "I don't know" to a definite negative? I think you're further revealing your biases on the subject.

    Did you forget? I made my own statement that "gangsta thug culture" is a negative influence on society. And you responded that you think I am probably racist, or at least prejudiced. Since we don't know the OP, I think focusing on me in this instance will add clarity.

    I am honestly baffled. What is paternalistic about identifying innuendo? If it were explicit rather than code, would it still be paternalistic to call out? Your reasoning is simply unsound.

    It is paternalistic to adopt the attitude that "gangsta thug culture" is a distinct feature of the black community, and therefore we should feel sorry for these black people who can't help themselves and be careful never to use the word "gangsta thug culture" because pointing it out as a negative cultural influence would be racist. How about letting each member of society stand on their own feet, and separate the sketchy social phenomenon from the skin color of some (I neither know nor care if most) of its "practitioners".

    That the law of the land should be color blind

    So should society. Until we can have both, we can have neither. Choosing to ignore racism isn't color-blindness it's willful blindness.

    That's a nice sounding statement. If you were more specific, and perhaps describe how our laws should favor one race over a different race, then we'd have opportunity to discuss this. As long as you keep it vague, liberal-sounding and bland, I suppose you are safe from sounding too absurd to many readers, though.

    Finally, you're being more forthcoming with your motivation. Your problem isn't that an accusation of racism was (you think) misplaced, your problem is that race is even a topic in the discussion in the first place.

    My primary beef was indeed with the "misplaced", which must be a euphemism for "totally bogus and slanderous" accusation of racism. Dragging race into every discussion is an annoyance, but less offensive than the common liberal debate tactic of crying "racist" all the time and hoping to silence your opponent even if [s]he is not a racist at all and hasn't made any references to racism.

  352. This is proof.... by DrStoooopid · · Score: 1

    ....mob rule and public outcry supersede the rule of law. Furthermore this is proof that the public at large is too stupid to manage themselves. This will be a media-circus witch-hunt. I really don't want to live on this planet anymore.

    --
    There are 2 groups of people you can make fun of on the Internet without fear of attack. The illiterate, and the Amish.
  353. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    In standard English there is a kind of understatement which is very common and universally understood.

    The police are often overlooked as masters of understatement, double entendre, and irony. . . . especially irony.

    I guess that's why it is so effective for comedy when they depart from it.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  354. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    OK, but what are you trying to prove? It looks like you are supporting my point. You've successfully demonstrated that sometimes white people get called thugs too. Recall that we're arguing whether criticism of "gangsta thug culture" is itself inherently racist.

  355. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by sjames · · Score: 1

    You're the one accusing them of a hate crime. That puts the burden of proof on you.

    The laws as written certainly are not racist unless unevenly applied in a racist way.

  356. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    On its own, no. If we weren't having a conversation about this particular incident, I think we could have a very productive conversation on the negative effects of "gangsta thug culture," both in the black community and in society at large (where I agree it is prevalent). I would say yes, it (specifically the violence and macho posturing that sometimes comes with it) is a negative influence on our society.

    The problem with bringing it up in this context is that there's no evidence beyond Zimmerman's statements that Martin did anything that could be construed as "thuggish." Bringing up "thuggish" behavior Martin engaged in previously (smoking pot, flipping off a camera, whatever sort of delinquency he got into) smacks of blaming the victim, in my opinion.

    Talking about this incident, I'd say that "neighborhood watch," vigilante behavior and gun fetishism have a far more negative influence on our society. Promoting the idea that guns are necessary for self-defense has the effect of turning the prejudices of individuals into actual violence. The NRA promoting the idea that Obama and Holder are going to come take your guns away leads to increased sales for gun manufacturers and retailers, and a lot of those guns are being sold to paranoid racist lunatics, the last people we ought to encourage to arm themselves.

    Bringing up "thug culture" is problematic because it's at best a secondary issue in the case at hand, and it's blown way out of proportion to the actual harm it inflicts on society, to the exclusion of more relevant and damaging issues.

  357. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    "Thug" is a word that gets thrown around far more casually when it's being applied to black people. It's used as a shorthand for "blacks behaving badly." When non-black people get called thugs, it's generally warranted; when black people get called thugs, it's because they spoke their minds far more often than for any actually thuggish behavior.

    When people throw the word "thug" into a conversation about a young black man getting shot by a neighborhood watch member, they use it to imply that the black guy had it coming. That is why it's racist.

  358. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, that is why arrests AREN'T made in these circumstances. You must have probable cause to make an arrest, which they didn't have since TM was dead and there were no eye witnesses nor other information pointing to Zimmerman committing a crime at that time. What would have resulted would have been a false arrest lawsuit against them for making the arrest before having cause. It is correct to wait until you have reason to arrest someone. If/once they have cuase...go arrest the guy (which they have done). You don't arrest someone in order to find cause. I know if I were attacked and shot someone in pure self defense (not talking about the TM case), I would not expect to be arrested until they could prove I didn't illegally shoot him.

  359. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    I'm not arguing that it's inherently racist, just that it's generally racist, and especially in this case.

  360. Re:Talk about media bias by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    The only thing the OJ case proved was that you can get away with murder if you can afford the lawyers.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  361. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a bar fight with a stranger...who knows what the other person is willing to do. Consider the point that you have been assaulted (you are now the established victim). If you physically restrain/stop the attack, then no, you can't just shoot the attacker. If however, the attacker gets the upper hand and you are on the ground or say your back, and he is slamming your head into the floor....shoot him. That is not only legal, but proper. Some people are acting like powerful blunt force trauma to the skull with a hard surface underneath is "just fighting", but it could very easily kill someone. This isn't, "I slugged him and he fell down", its "I slugged him, he fell down, I jumped on top of him and continued beating him in the head". There is a difference!

  362. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    I replied to my own comment right after I posted that one. I mistakenly wrote "arrests" when I meant to say "investigations, including possible arrests." The problem is that the police half-assed the investigation, making the supposed lack of probable cause a foregone conclusion.

  363. Re:Talk about media bias by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    The First does not cover communicating threats or inciting riots.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  364. But we do have parenting speak! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....though mostly focused on pre-parenting activities. A sprinkle of real life is necessary to remind us we are human. I truly struggle having to debug people's statements and always asking for specifics, details. It annoys me that i annoy normal ppl coz of my binary disposition. anyway.... back to discussing how cumulative dung-beetle activity saved earth

  365. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Politburo · · Score: 1

    Hadn't previously heard of it.. but like those who have come before you, making assumptions regarding my screen name is folly.

  366. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by PeanutButterBreath · · Score: 1

    Besides, what kind of idiot would patrol for crime unarmed?

    AFAIK, carrying a gun is strongly discouraged among neighborhood watch groups. Their role is to watch their neighborhood and report suspicious activity to the police.

    The reasons are made obvious by this case. If Zimmerman had followed police instructions, an kid who had his own right to walk through that neighborhood would be alive, and Zimmerman wouldn't be looking at a life spent either in jail or as a pariah.

  367. Re:Talk about media bias by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    Once they start slamming my head into the concrete? Yes.

    I heard about black parents whining that they had to have a conversation with their children on how to act in certain situations. My white father had a similar conversation with me. He said, "Son, you go sneaking around people's houses at night, and you'll get your ass shot."

    Let's review:
    You're in a strange neighborhood. A gated community, that has had problems with break-ins and home invasions.
    You're walking around in the middle of the night with your head and face concealed.
    Someone is watching you.

    Do you:

    A) try to sneak away and hide in a dark corner?

    B) yell, "Hello? Could I help you?"

    My dad would say that option A will get your ass shot.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  368. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    On its own, no. If we weren't having a conversation about this particular incident, I think we could have a very productive conversation on the negative effects of "gangsta thug culture," both in the black community and in society at large (where I agree it is prevalent). I would say yes, it (specifically the violence and macho posturing that sometimes comes with it) is a negative influence on our society.

    So it is actually OK to say that "gangsta thug culture" is a negative influence? Or you can only say it when a person of a different race isn't involved? I thought it was a code word. Is it not a code word when you use it, but is when your debate opponents use it? So many questions.

    The problem with bringing it up in this context is that there's no evidence beyond Zimmerman's statements that Martin did anything that could be construed as "thuggish."

    There's also no evidence that Zimmerman was the kind of person who would shoot a stranger simply because he was a different race. In fact, the evidence I've seen has suggested that Zimmerman was not a racist. Zimmerman's account should not be taken without question. He's the only living witness, but on the other hand, he may go to jail based on whatever the heck happened that day so he does have a motivation to lie. So while his statement should be investigated fully by law enforcement, I do find it basically credible.

    Bringing up "thuggish" behavior Martin engaged in previously (smoking pot, flipping off a camera, whatever sort of delinquency he got into) smacks of blaming the victim, in my opinion.

    I agree. I had better not catch my kids engaging in behavior or speech like all the dirt that has been dug up on Trayvon, but I recognize that he's not necessarily an atypical teenager. If talk is cheap, a Twitter feed is about as cheap as talk comes, and doesn't really mean much in the grand scheme of things.

    Talking about this incident, I'd say that "neighborhood watch," vigilante behavior and gun fetishism have a far more negative influence on our society. Promoting the idea that guns are necessary for self-defense has the effect of turning the prejudices of individuals into actual violence.

    What would you suggest that a woman do if somebody tries to rape her? Just take it and try to give a good description to law enforcement? I recognize that you may be one of those liberals with a fetish for gun control, so I doubt we will agree on this. But anyway.

    The NRA promoting the idea that Obama and Holder are going to come take your guns away leads to increased sales for gun manufacturers and retailers, and a lot of those guns are being sold to paranoid racist lunatics, the last people we ought to encourage to arm themselves.

    Oh man. Please don't even go there. Read about "Fast and Furious" sometime. Obama's administration engaged in illegally selling guns to Mexican drug cartels with one of their underhanded motivations being to be able to point to the cartels (armed with American guns) later and say "See, we need more gun control!". Somebody in the Obama administration ought to go to jail over this. It appears that they already have blood on their hands (of a slain border agent) because of it, and the American people deserve better.

    Bringing up "thug culture" is problematic because it's at best a secondary issue in the case at hand, and it's blown way out of proportion to the actual harm it inflicts on society, to the exclusion of more relevant and damaging issues.

    Well, if we find that "thug culture" promotes the attitude that if somebody disrespects you, you should tackle them and beat them up, then it may be relevant to this case. If Trayvon did that, then it was a mistake that contributed to the tragic outcome. It is possible that Zimmerman is telling the truth, ya know? That still may (or may not) justify his shooting T

  369. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by eldepeche · · Score: 1

    So it is actually OK to say that "gangsta thug culture" is a negative influence? Or you can only say it when a person of a different race isn't involved? I thought it was a code word. Is it not a code word when you use it, but is when your debate opponents use it? So many questions.

    There's a conversation about "thug culture" in general, and there's a very real effort on the part of Zimmerman's defenders to paint Martin as a thug in order to blame him for getting killed. Context matters.

    There's also no evidence that Zimmerman was the kind of person who would shoot a stranger simply because he was a different race. In fact, the evidence I've seen has suggested that Zimmerman was not a racist. Zimmerman's account should not be taken without question. He's the only living witness, but on the other hand, he may go to jail based on whatever the heck happened that day so he does have a motivation to lie. So while his statement should be investigated fully by law enforcement, I do find it basically credible.

    I think the biggest problem with conversations about race is the trouble we have communicating about the difference between a person being a racist, and a person performing a racist action. The latter does not imply the former. I don't particularly care if Zimmerman is a racist; I don't think he is, I think calling this a hate crime cheapens the term, and I think it's irrelevant anyway. Most of the conversation I've seen is saying that the police failed to fully investigate the shooting because the victim was black.

    What would you suggest that a woman do if somebody tries to rape her? Just take it and try to give a good description to law enforcement? I recognize that you may be one of those liberals with a fetish for gun control, so I doubt we will agree on this. But anyway.

    The fraction of rapes in which an unknown assailant jumps out of the bushes and grabs the victim is far smaller than you think. Most rapes are perpetrated by acquaintances of the victims, or against a drunk or drugged victim. The idea that giving women guns is a solution to the problem of rape comes totally from this idea that America is an extraordinarily dangerous place and the only way to survive it is with a gun. It's at odds with reality. I don't think gun control laws are constitutional or a solution to the problem, though.

    Oh man. Please don't even go there. Read about "Fast and Furious" sometime. blah blah.

    I'm aware of Fast and Furious; it sounds like a shitty idea. It wasn't the first operation of its kind, but it appears to have been the biggest. I think more investigation is needed, and I wouldn't be too upset if Holder lost his job, nor if someone with more direct responsibility goes to jail for negligence in the operation's execution. I think the controversy is overblown, and the Obama administration has done far worse.

    Well, if we find that "thug culture" promotes the attitude that if somebody disrespects you, you should tackle them and beat them up, then it may be relevant to this case. If Trayvon did that, then it was a mistake that contributed to the tragic outcome. It is possible that Zimmerman is telling the truth, ya know? That still may (or may not) justify his shooting Trayvon based on what was happening right at that moment (was George's head being bashed against concrete? was Trayvon trying to grab his gun?), but it is at least a relevant thought for the living to take to heart in an effort to avoid repeating this incident.

    This is what I'm talking about. "Thug culture" is far from the only part of our society that promotes violence against people who disrespect us. We drop bombs on people we think are disrespecting us! Tom Friedman says we had to make Iraq "suck on this." Michael Leeden says we have to "pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business,"

  370. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not sure if it was the fact I hadn't refreshed for a while or your reply was below my threshold, but I didn't see your reply to your comment.
    I'm glad to see we agree on cause before arrests!

    I would expect to be questioned (probably down at the station) after I shot my attacker. That alone does raise some flags about the quality/depth of the initial investigation. Regardless, I don't think an arrest at the scene or right after would have been likely (or likely justified). I honestly don't see enough public information to arrest him now...which probably means there is something damning that hasn't been released yet, or he'll be acquitted if all they have is what is currently publicly available.

  371. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by FreekyGeek · · Score: 1

    He is 50% Hispanic. Also 50% white. So he's "hispanic" only by the same racist logic which claims Barak Obama is "black."

    In America, apparently you have to take the label of your darkest ancestor, no matter how small a percentage.

    What's amazing is how many otherwise intelligent, tolerant people will still insist vociferously that Obama is black even while being forced to admit that he's just as white as black. It's becaise peopel don't care about race really, they care about labels, stereotypes, and personal identity issues.

  372. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    The laws as written certainly are not racist unless unevenly applied in a racist way.

    Exactly my point. These laws are proved to have been applied unevenly in a racist way, so they are certainly racist. I'm not sure where we disagree.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  373. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by sideslash · · Score: 1

    This is what I'm talking about. "Thug culture" is far from the only part of our society that promotes violence against people who disrespect us. We drop bombs on people we think are disrespecting us! Tom Friedman says we had to make Iraq "suck on this." Michael Leeden says we have to "pick up some small crappy little country and throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean business," and he isn't laughed out of the world. The idea that black people invented macho shit like this is preposterous.

    OK... I don't claim that black people invented thug-like behavior, and I also deplore when we as a country act like thugs in international affairs. Tracking pretty closely with you here...

    The idea that fighting back against some weirdo following you through a neighborhood you don't know well is something only a gangsta thug would do is ridiculous. It's a red herring.

    I don't know if I agree here. If I thought somebody was following me, I would be creeped out. I might have words with them. I might use the cell phone I am holding to call the police. But I'm not going to hide, then jump out and tackle them and start knocking their heads against the concrete until they shoot me. However, "gangsta thug" culture would promote more of that latter solution as Zimmerman alleges took place. Without 100% endorsing Zimmerman's alibi until the final legal judgment, I will still contend that we should use this opportunity to dissuade our young people, especially testosterone filled young men (of all races) from engaging in such -- yes -- thuggish behavior as what was alleged by Zimmerman. And we should simultaneously use the opportunity to highlight the importance of whoever is holding a gun to know when is the right circumstance to use it, and the kind of horrible tragedies that can result when a gun is used. I believe it's what the president refers to as a "teachable moment".

  374. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by khipu · · Score: 1

    That's the point, genius. The law is supposed to protect a guy who is defending himself. It didn't defend the black guy who was clearly defending himself.

    That's your opinion; a jury thought differently. And it is your opinion too that the jury verdict would have been different if the defendant had been white.

    If this system is based on "equal protection under the law" but it has not worked out that way

    That's your opinion, not fact. There is little evidence for actual racism in the justice system. It probably does occur to some degree, but it pales in comparison to the much higher actual crime rates among black males. Until the actual crime rate among black males comes down to average levels, it's nearly impossible statistically to even identify racism in the justice system.

    But even if you are right and McNeil was convicted unjustly, what bearing does that have on Zimmerman? If black males suffer false convictions and harsh sentences due to racism, the solution would be to address that problem, not to subject more people to the same injustices.

  375. From the little I've seen by doston · · Score: 1
    Seattle isn't a very black city...mostly white. Paul Mooney was in town and had a show at the Moore Theater about 2 weeks ago and I decided to go, even though I knew I'd be one of the few white people there. If you're unfamiliar, Paul Mooney wrote for Pryor, created Homey the Clown, etc. He'd be a lot bigger, but he's widely considered an anti-white racist and people don't really care for his kind of comedy. Anyway, I think it's interesting to see things from a truly black perspective and it almost feels like you're listening to something you shouldn't be. ANYWAY, Mooney came out with a hoodie on but strangely never said a word about Treyvon. I couldn't understand why. Blacks, who made up probably 98% of the audience were pretty much screaming for Zimmerman's blood. At one point Mooney had to tell one of the audience members to shut up and it got a bit uneasy in there. Maybe it was the fact that Zimmerman isn't all that white looking. Maybe he felt like wearing the hoodie made his point well enough. Maybe he didn't want to start a riot, although the publicity wouldn't have hurt his (floundering) career.

    After just being there in that crowd, I'd say that if Zimmerman isn't convicted, there's going to be some kind major race riot. Probably one to put the King riots to shame. I imagine that the black community is already boiling over. You know theyve been the hardest hit with economic problems and now this. I think it could get pretty ugly. Especially in cities with larger black populations....probably not Seattle. I think Zimmerman is in big trouble either way. If he does get off, I wouldn't want to go around without armed guards. Ironic...he was trying to protect himself and the neighborhood, but in doing so, he probably made himself and his neighborhood a hundred times less safe. He's got a lot in common with Bush. Itchy trigger finger and no brain for judgment.

  376. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by doston · · Score: 1

    These "Stand Your Ground" Laws that we have thanks to ALEC and the NRA are meant only to protect white people who shoot blacks, Hispanics, Muslims, etc.

    Have a look at how "Stand Your Ground" is applied when it's the other way around.

    Funny, I didn't hear anything from the NRA and the right-wing media in that Georgia case. But I did hear a right-wing talker today talking about how the increasing American sense that race relations are deteriorating is Barack Obama's fault.

    If race relations have any relation to Obama it is only from the perspective of false hope, which is what Obama is all about. When blacks thought one of their own was being elected, they forgot to actually find out how the world works. Obama is not in their social class. It has little to do with the color of their skin. It has everything to do with their pocketbooks. They didn't elect one of their own, they elected another millionaire, who's looking out for the members of his own class and the people who finance his election. Obama isn't racist or anti black or pro white or anything to do with race. He's rich and he's a corporatist. Period. So the false hope that an elected black man might make things better for them is just an ignorant thought and probably a huge disappointment.

    "See, capitalism is not fundamentally racist -- it can exploit racism for its purposes, but racism isn't built into it. Capitalism basically wants people to be interchangable cogs, and differences among them, such as on the basis of race, usually are not functional. I mean, they may be functional for a period, like if you want a super exploited workforce or something, but those situations are kind of anomalous. Over the long term, you can expect capitalism to be anti-racist -- just because its anti-human. And race is in fact a human characterstic -- there's no reason why it should be a negative characteristic, but it is a human characteristic. So therefore identifications based on race interfere with the basic ideal that people should be available just as consumers and producers, interchangable cogs who will purchase all the junk that's produced -- that's their ultimate function, and any other properties they might have are kind of irrelevent, and usually a nuisance."

  377. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Surt · · Score: 1

    I don't think those facts are clear actually. Particularly about pursuing Martin against 911 operator's advice. Z's side hast at least at one point claimed that he was, in fact, returning to his car when M confronted and attacked him.

    I do agree that given a charge of 2nd degree murder, a finding of anything other than not guilty seems unlikely, unless the facts as reported by the media are grossly erroneous (a real possibility, given how many conflicting 'facts' have already been reported).

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  378. Re:Talk about media bias by nbauman · · Score: 1

    You're the self-appointed captain and only member of the "Neighborhood Watch." Do you:

    A) Follow the instructions of the police, and the nationwide watch groups, and not carry a gun, call 911, stay in your car, and avoid confrontation?

    B) Carry a gun, ignore instructions, get out of your car and confront people who don't know who you are and whether you're out to give them trouble?

    Option B will get your ass kicked. If you use your gun, depending on the details, you might be guilty of homicide or murder.

  379. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Viewsonic · · Score: 1

    Assuming Zimmerman was heading back to his car when he was attacked, we will then need to know what prompted Martin to follow Zimmerman and attack him. If you sit and think on that, you will come to the conclusion that Martin was somehow intimidated/harassed in one way or another for him to go after someone. If he felt threatened enough, the stand your ground law will apply to Martin because he was not the person who initiated the harassment.

  380. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stand Your Ground is clear: lethal force is authorized to halt a forcible felony. Harassment isn't a forcible felony. I don't care if Zimmerman called him a slur to his face, if Martin assaulted him first then the issue is clear.

    Given the racially charged nature, though, and the evidence of harassment already, I have to say that, if I witnessed the whole thing, I don't think I'd brave enough to come forward.

  381. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Surt · · Score: 1

    I would certainly agree that Martin cannot be prosecuted for murder due to the stand your ground law.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  382. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by sjames · · Score: 1

    You believe the intent of the law was that it be applied in a racist way. I see no evidence for that. I maintain that the law has been abused in a racist way.

    The difference is in how far up the chain the racism goes. It also suggests a different corrective action.

    Specifically, according to my theory, the racists are in the DAs office and the police dept, and must be weeded out there. Rescind stand your ground and they'll just abuse some other law (possibly including wrongfully prosecuting a minority who dares to defend himself against a racist attacker).

  383. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    zimmermans lawyers have jumped ship actually, and in such a high profile case that is in no way a good sign

    They didn't jump ship, he just went uncommunicative, and they said that if he won't won't contact them, they can't represent them. But if he's willing to contact them again, they'd love to represent him once again.

  384. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    2) The courts have, more than once, ruled that a woman is not "asking for it (rape)" if she wears short skirts while walking down the street. The notion that Martin would be asking for it by wearing a hoodie is far flimsier.

  385. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your example doesn't apply.

    From Florida law:

    776.041Use of force by aggressor. —The justification described in the preceding sections of this chapter is not available to a person who:
    (1)Is attempting to commit, committing, or escaping after the commission of, a forcible felony; or
    (2)Initially provokes the use of force against himself or herself, unless:
    (a)Such force is so great that the person reasonably believes that he or she is in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm and that he or she has exhausted every reasonable means to escape such danger other than the use of force which is likely to cause death or great bodily harm to the assailant; or
    (b)In good faith, the person withdraws from physical contact with the assailant and indicates clearly to the assailant that he or she desires to withdraw and terminate the use of force, but the assailant continues or resumes the use of force.

    So if you're in a bar fight and "provoke[d] the use of force against [your]self", whether by fighting words or violence (thus quite possibly including both parties), you have to either give up and back down, or reasonably believe you have "exhausted every reasonable means to escape", which would include giving up and backing down where possible, before you can make a justified shoot.

    Next time, criticize the law, not the media's spun version, ok?

  386. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what better time for friendliness, convolution and irony than a 911 call! Police are more keenly aware of the distinction between an explicit and insinuated command than most (which is why so many consent to search requests of the "you want to open that up for me?" variety), but politeness doesn't stop them from giving explicit orders when they are legally able to.

  387. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 1

    Please tell me, Mr. Coward, what facts did I "shade"?

    I said Dooley initiated the verbal confrontation. I also said James initiated the physical altercation. This is true - Dooley had turned around and was leaving the scene when James assaulted him in an attempt to take control of the gun. Dooley, being older, smaller, and weaker, could reasonably fear for his life when someone bigger, stronger, and younger attacks him. And yet despite his claim of "self defense" he was still arrested in less time than it took for the Sanford police to identify Trayvon Martin.

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
  388. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    That's your opinion, not fact. There is little evidence for actual racism in the justice system.

    Usually, someone doesn't post something that insanely false until they've had time to be around here more than a couple of days.

    Our justice system is so racist, that the biggest variable in the length of jail time a defendant gets is the color of his skin, followed only by the color of his victim's skin.

    Next to South Africa, I'm not sure there is any developed country with a justice system as racist as the US. In fact, I would not be surprised to learn that South Africa is measurably less racist when it comes to its justice system than the US.

    The US was born as a slave state, and the stain will be with us, if not forever, than for a lot longer than it should. I doubt very much that anyone reading this will live to see the US have anything like equality when it comes to race. And considering by all recent studies, the racial divides in the US are getting worse, not better, I'm not sure any of our kids will live to see it either.

    Now, I understand that you joined Slashdot to express your sympathy and approval for George Zimmerman. Such astroturf trolling is not unknown. But if you're going to engage in such activities, you might want to learn some comments section manners, like at least pretending to be part of a community before you start beating a drum for your agenda.

    You will find that Slashdot users are a pretty tolerant bunch. There are opinions expressed here that are sometimes pretty outside the mainstream, and sometimes expressed in less than civil terms. But political astroturf trolling, especially done as in-artfully as you've done it, is about as welcome as a fart in church.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  389. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jnaujok · · Score: 1

    Hey, Charles Barkeley asked why no one has shot George Zimmerman dead yet this morning...

    I'm sure that he'll be dropped by the networks for his hate speech...

    In 3..... 2....

    --
    Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
  390. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    And the glove? I don't know whats more baffling, that they insisted he try it, or that they let him get away with how to tried to put it on. If you can get a video, watch how he scrunches his hand for a brief moment that turns it into theatrics; which his lawyer jumped right on. They where prepared for that.

    A leather glove fits normally. Then you soak it in liquids and let it dry out. Then try to put it on while wearing another (latex) glove. It didn't fit? No shit!

  391. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    and since when does reading a street sign require leaving one's vehicle?),

    Pretty common in many neighborhoods (including mine) to have tiny street signs that are pretty much unreadable from the road during night-time.

  392. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Rakarra · · Score: 1

    Martin came to Zimmermans neighborhood looking like a gangsta and behaving like one to some extent

    Looking like a gangsta, so he was black? And wearing a hoodie? I guess I'm safe, I can wear my hoodie since I'm white.

  393. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by rochrist · · Score: 1

    A lot of closeups of Zimmerman in court today. He sure looked clean and unblemished for a guy that allegedly had his nose broken and his head repeatedly slammed into the sidewalk. To tell the truth, I'm ashamed you're an American too.

  394. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by rochrist · · Score: 1

    Because he just shot an unarmed person to death? I'm fairly certainly that a toxicology report is standard practice in those cases.

  395. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    Neighborhood watches are purely voluntary and are rarely official in nature (sponsored by the police or city since they don't want the liability either). It's not a question of being "allowed". I can just drive around in my car and be the "Neighborhood watch".

    You are absolutley right, if you wander around looking for trouble you are going to be on your own if something happens.

  396. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    Actually there were several witnesses that said there was a physical altercation between the two men. It's a question of who started what and what led to the shooting (We already know how it ended).

    Zimmerman has a very narrow legal window in which he can defend himself with lethal force without seeing jailtime. We'll see what the prosecution has on him soon.

  397. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Charcharodon · · Score: 2
    Sort of.

    Verbal threats - no. Verbal threats backed up by 15 other gang members who have surrounded you on the street - Yep, check your targets though. Stop shooting once they flee. Don't want to waste ammo or be accused of being over zealous

    Physical threats with a lethal weapon ie baseball bat, knife, a gun, etc - yes. Shoot until the threat is down and not getting back up. Just make sure you didn't start the altercation else you will be in jail.

    A drunk taking a swing at you - no. Getting jumped in the middle of the night by an attacker who has you pinned on the ground - yes. Again just make sure you didn't start the altercation or you will see jail time.

    All of this will play out on whether or not Zimmerman was truly defending himself from Martin's unprovoked attack or Zimmerman starting a fight with Martin and pulling a gun and shooting Martin after Martin started giving Zimmerman a justified ass whoopin.

  398. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by jnaujok · · Score: 1

    Sorry, mis-remembered. It was Mike Tyson, not Chuckles. Still, I'm sure he's being dropped by all his sponsors and ad agencies...

    Right?

    Right?

    (crickets)

    --
    Life, the Universe, and Everything... in my image.
  399. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by khipu · · Score: 1

    Our justice system is so racist, that the biggest variable in the length of jail time a defendant gets is the color of his skin, followed only by the color of his victim's skin.

    That is a blatant misuse of statistics. Just because race is "the biggest variable" doesn't mean that there is racism. Race is simply correlated with a large number of other factors (family structure, income, education, higher rates of recidivism, etc.). Once you take all those other factors into account, most of the differences go away.

    The US was born as a slave state, and the stain will be with us, if not forever,

    The US inherited slavery from European colonial powers. The same powers exterminated the American Indians. The founding of the US was part of the solution. European powers still went on enslaving and committing genocide for centuries, and even today, European nations remain racially and religiously intolerant. The "stain" you speak about is a European stain, not an American stain.

    Now, I understand that you joined Slashdot to express your sympathy and approval for George Zimmerman.

    Are you joking? I've been a Slashdot user since long before the Zimmerman case.

    You will find that Slashdot users are a pretty tolerant bunch. There are opinions expressed here that are sometimes pretty outside the mainstream, and sometimes expressed in less than civil terms. But political astroturf trolling, especially done as in-artfully as you've done it, is about as welcome as a fart in church.

    Political astroturf trolling? You seriously want to assert that anybody is paying me for taking such a politically unpopular position? Here are some other positions I take: I don't think we should take action on global warming, I don't particularly like Obama's health care plan, and I do believe in a strict separation of church and state. I'm a libertarian. You're obviously some kind of progressive. And like progressives everywhere, since the rational and scientific basis of your ideology falls apart under scrutiny, you exhaust yourself in ad hominems and innuendo.

    Trouble is that your irrational and ideologically driven policies end up hurting people. You can accuse the US and its justice system of "racism" as much as you want, it's not going to help African Americans because that's not their problem. Furthermore, if you seriously think that Europe does any better in any of these areas, I suggest you live there for a while as a minority; I have, and I can tell you first hand, whatever may be wrong in the US, it is much worse in Europe.

  400. Re:Racism/ to kill a black guy, any black guy by blackest_k · · Score: 1

    The evidence that you seem to ignore that he is dangerous is the dead boy. He didn't just carry a gun he used it. Or are you claiming that is in dispute.

    "The Orange County Clerk of Courts website shows a man named George Zimmerman, 28, was charged in July 2005 with resisting arrest with violence and battery on an officer. The charges appear to have been dropped." I guess that wasn't enough to refuse Zimmerman a gun permit.

    Zimmerman could have held the boy at gun point, If someone was pointing a gun at you and you were unarmed, would you resist. I doubt it since you appear to be aware of the damage a bullet can do.

    Zimmerman isn't convicted yet however the decision on what to charge him with has been made and presumable that decision is based on supporting Evidence not on a whim.

    I started out this conversation by pointing out that it could be the case Zimmerman did want to kill someone and escape the consequences of the law. Where your claiming i am presuming guilt you are presuming innocence. neither conclusion can be reached without examination of the actual evidence.

    The 3 statements you made regarding the requirements for murder1 could be met in this case however largely it is a thought crime, without a witness to the killing it is pretty much impossible to prove. Only Zimmerman could say if it was the case or not and he isn't likely to confess.

    Zimmerman seems to have seen himself as some kind of vigilante maybe he thought he was Batman or just an arrogant racist with a chip on his shoulder or a wanna be cop. The incident in 2005 realistically would have closed the door to his entry into law enforcement.

    Zimmerman had called Police many times before this incident to report incidents of this and that seems to me that you would have to be actively seeking criminal acts in an affluent area to be calling the police so often, How many of these calls actually led to arrests of his suspects we don't know but looking for trouble seems to have been his hobby.

    I am sure we can both agree there is a case to answer, and his guilt or innocence will be determined in a court of law.

    I am curious
    Why do you carry a gun everyday? Are you paid to do so as part of your job? what are you afraid might happen if you didn't carry a gun? Is it an unusual thing to be carrying in your area.

    I do know someone who was shot during a robbery over in africa last summer. One of the local gangs thought he was rich and during the robbery he was hit with a hammer and shot. If he had a gun maybe he would have been able to defend himself or perhaps he would have been killed he was out numbered anyway. The bullet wound wasn't as bad as the state of his arm which took the damage that was intended for his head.

    I accept that there are area's of the world which are so lawless that a weapon is a necessity is the usa really that bad?

  401. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    I've been a Slashdot user since long before the Zimmerman case.

    I apologize for accusing you of being a Zimmerman astroturfer.

    The US inherited slavery from European colonial powers

    Of course it did. Slavers, seeing the end of their lucrative trade coming in Europe, fled to this continent in order to create a slavers-paradise, which they did. America was created in order to be a slave state. It was a feature, not a bug. The rest of the civilized world had abandoned slavery, while the US clung to it like a security blanket - because there was a ton of money in it for a very small few, some of whom descendants are still running the place today.

    I love America like I love my family, khipu, but it is very, very ill from racism.

    Oh, and I have also lived and worked in Europe "as a minority". There is no racism in any European country as awful and as damaging to the national soul as the racism of the US. One could make a pretty good argument that there is no racism in any developed country in the world nearly as bad as the US.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  402. Re:Stand your ground, kill a black guy, get a coup by khipu · · Score: 1

    Of course it did. Slavers, seeing the end of their lucrative trade coming in Europe, fled to this continent in order to create a slavers-paradise, which they did. America was created in order to be a slave state.

    The idea that the US revolution was caused by a desire to replace slave trade with Europe is completely untenable. Europe never had any significant slave trade with Africa (otherwise, there would be lots of African blood in Europe today, yet most of Europe is totally white). Europe also didn't need African slaves, since it had its own native system of hereditary human bondage. In fact, many immigrants came to the US fleeing a life of bondage or destitution in Europe.

    The reasons and causes of the American revolution are documented in numerous contemporaneous writings, and slavery wasn't a big part of it. Slavery was economically important, and people realized that they couldn't get states together for a revolution and abolish slavery at the same time. But even at the time of the American revolution, a lot of people realized that slavery was morally wrong and that it would eventually have to be abolished.

    The rest of the civilized world had abandoned slavery, while the US clung to it like a security blanket

    Oh, sure, they had "abolished slavery" in Europe, but that was a meaningless gesture. Britain and France were enslaving entire nations as "colonies" well into the 20th century. Germany was killing Jews by the millions. Japan was mass murdering Chinese and viciously xenophobic. Debt bondage still existed in many European nations through much of the 19th century. And European nations maintained systems of hereditary nobility and even indentured servitude well into the 19th century. That is what the nations you call "civilized" were doing.

    I love America like I love my family, khipu, but it is very, very ill from racism.

    If you look at the statistics, the primary problems of the African American community are broken families (two thirds of black kids grow up in single parent homes), high crime rates (several times as high as among whites and other minorities), poverty, and low levels of education. None of those are caused by contemporary racism (although some are remnants of past discrimination), and the only people able to address these issues at this point are African Americans themselves. Yes, there is still some racism in employment and housing, but not enough to hold anybody back. I guarantee you: if you are an African American and get a college degree in a STEM field, you will do well.

    Oh, and I have also lived and worked in Europe "as a minority". There is no racism in any European country as awful and as damaging to the national soul as the racism of the US.

    Then you were blind to what was going on around you. European minorities like Turks and Arabs are subject to high levels of job and housing discrimination, high rates of hate crimes, and limits on social mobility. Many racist policies that are illegal in the US are routine in Europe. European nations have explicitly rejected multiculturalism and demand that all minorities fully and completely assimilate into the mainstream culture. And even if you completely assimilate, you will still be subject to racial profiling and prejudice if you look different. And to top it all off, many European nations even refuse to quantify these problems, thinking that it's better to just pretend these problems don't exist.

    African Americans tend to have positive experiences in Europe because they aren't a European minority, they are a curiosity and treated as exotic guests. African Americans are particularly welcome by European intellectuals as subjects to demonstrate their moral superiority to the US. That's not a new phenomenon: Nazis and various socialists states basically interacted with African Americans in the same way, while being highly intoleran

  403. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by fuzznutz · · Score: 1

    You lost me at #2. Only an idiot charges someone holding a gun because they think they are being mugged. Your money or your cell phone is not worth your life. The *ONLY* condition in which one could reasonably act in this fashion is when you are *CERTAIN* to die if you do not act. i.e. Armed individual's motivation is murder, not robbery.

  404. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Electricity+Likes+Me · · Score: 1

    Actually they care about experience. If the common point of discrimination is going to be that you look "black" then that's what you are. It doesn't matter what else you are, because the guy who wants to put some uppity black guy in his place sure as hell doesn't care that your mother is white.

  405. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    An idiot, or a man that is not thinking rationally - and if you think that you can think rationally when you are verbally assaulted while having a gun pointed at you, you might be just a tad overconfident.

    In any case, being idiot is not a crime. And I can also easily imagine Trayvon been indoctrinated by the "gangsta culture" - we've all seen the photos of him posing - to behave like a macho, and all that.

  406. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by fuzznutz · · Score: 1

    An idiot, or a man that is not thinking rationally

    And that is precisely why you lost me at #2 in your "likely" sequence of events in which Martin "acted in reasonable self-defense" manner.

  407. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    "Reasonable" in this case pertains only to the assessment of being in grave danger - i.e. being threatened by death or bodily harm, or in a commission of a crime such as burglary or rape. In other words, if a reasonable person in Trayvon's position would have assumed that they are being assaulted, it's good enough to justify any force, up to and including lethal, that was directed in response to that threat. There's no requirement that the nature of the application of such force would itself be reasonable.

  408. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by fuzznutz · · Score: 1
    And by your own admission that assessment was impaired.

    An idiot, or a man that is not thinking rationally [...] indoctrinated by the "gangsta culture"

    Therefore not reasonable by ordinary standards. It is not reasonable to attack an armed man while unarmed when cooperation or flight is an option. A healthy dose of machismo does not make it more reasonable. If Zimmerman lost him, which is the case per the 911 recording, why did Martin, who feared death or bodily harm, not rush home? Not reasonable. QED

    By the way, I agree with your assertion that Martin was likely indoctrinated in gangsta culture. Besides the *recent* photos, there is evidence from the published purported Twitter postings. I read them. They were disturbing for an innocent, good, mind-your-own-business child.

  409. Re:Racism/ to kill a black guy, any black guy by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

    The evidence that you seem to ignore that he is dangerous is the dead boy. He didn't just carry a gun he used it. Or are you claiming that is in dispute.

    No, I'm not ignoring it. I dispute it is evidence that he is dangerous. There is a difference between a person who is dangerous, a more or less constant quality of the person, and what may be a dangerous act. One doesn't prove the other and as such isn't evidence. Side note, at 17 you're within days of being legally a man and am very far away from being a boy. Words mean something. Constantly calling Martin a boy is only logical if you're attempting to paint a particular picture. A more accurate term would be young man, or teenager (at best).

    "The Orange County Clerk of Courts website shows a man named George Zimmerman, 28, was charged in July 2005 with resisting arrest with violence and battery on an officer. The charges appear to have been dropped." I guess that wasn't enough to refuse Zimmerman a gun permit.

    It is possible you don't follow these types of things closely. As such, you may not realize just how ridiculously easy it is to get charged with that in the US these days. A cop approaches me, doesn't like what I'm doing for whatever reason, attempts to arrest me and I shove him. Bam, resisting arrest with violence and battery. Happens all the time to protestors. That he wasn't convicted and charges were dropped both says a lot and answers your question as to his carry (not a gun permit, we don't have those in the US) permit. Some what unrelated, I get the feeling you're not from the US. Is that the case?

    Zimmerman could have held the boy at gun point, If someone was pointing a gun at you and you were unarmed, would you resist. I doubt it since you appear to be aware of the damage a bullet can do.

    Well, that depends on what is going on. If a person wasn't doing anything wrong and someone else pulled a gun on them, I would absolutely expect them to resist in some manner or other. As to what Zimmerman should have or could have done, we don't really know as we don't really know the circumstances around the time of the shooting. As I've noted before, we are only speculating. The available facts are pretty thin at this point.

    Zimmerman isn't convicted yet however the decision on what to charge him with has been made and presumable that decision is based on supporting Evidence not on a whim.

    One would hope. That said, it is entirely possible they charged him whether or not they thought they could get a conviction. Right or wrong, absent clear evidence that a conviction was impossible I don't think they had a practical choice the minute this became a (inter)national news story.

    I started out this conversation by pointing out that it could be the case Zimmerman did want to kill someone and escape the consequences of the law. Where your claiming i am presuming guilt you are presuming innocence. neither conclusion can be reached without examination of the actual evidence.

    Quite right. However, it is more accurate to say that I'm presuming innocence until proven guilty combined with the fact that I have a hard time believing someone would come up with such a convoluted plan to commit such a grievous act. Of course, there's a first time for anything, no?

    The 3 statements you made regarding the requirements for murder1 could be met in this case however largely it is a thought crime, without a witness to the killing it is pretty much impossible to prove. Only Zimmerman could say if it was the case or not and he isn't likely to confess.

    It could only be met if we presume your original supposition is correct. Either way, you're right in that it cannot be proven either way without a witness or a very unlikely confession. Thus, all we can do is theorize.

    Zimmerman seems to have seen himself as some kind o

    --
    I was raised on the command line, bitch

    "Nemo me impune lacesset"

  410. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

    You know what, he could have shot the kid in the foot or the leg and both could have lived. HE DIDNT HAVE TO KILL THE KID - SO FUCK HIM - HE DID IT ANYWAY.

    --
    CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
  411. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    It is not reasonable to attack a man with a gun unarmed, yes, but it is not illegal to do so in a situation where attacking in self-defense would be legal in general. And that only requires a reasonable expectation of imminent death or significant bodily harm coming to you. So long as that specific part of Trayvon's reasoning can be demonstrated to agree with that of a "reasonable person" - i.e. that having a gun pointed is you implies a threat of death or bodily harm, which I think you'd agree it does - he could claim SYG.

  412. Zimmerman by hackus · · Score: 1

    Why is this even national news?

    This is a local community issue.

    We have many more things to be worried about than who Zimmerman is, what he is or who he is or what he is doing.

    On a national scope this is not appropriate consdering we are on the verge of WWIII, our currency is being destroyed by our fascist/corporatized government and millions of people are on food stamps.

    This has to be misdirection to keep our minds on fighting each other rather than worrying about the billions of dollars this fascist government and its minions like Corzine are stealing from the American citizenry on a daily basis.

    -Hack

    --
    Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
  413. Slashdot angle by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

    Yeah, /. can be good for discussing tech angles of general stories

    --
    I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
  414. absolute wording of Constitution by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

    Here, 1st Amendment (particularly speech/press) would be a problem with that - I understand other countries (such as Canada) have reasonable exemptions like this.

    --
    I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
  415. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    It took time to work out that he could be convicted, this is normal procedure, liek the prosecutor said "we don't prosecute by petition" and that's hwo we want it.

    No, normal procedure is to arrest and hold someone who killed someone else until proven it was legal. The fact he confessed to homicide and was released is most certainly *not* normal procedure.

  416. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Trayvon's mother, and father, may never think poorly of their son's behavior despite any evidence. It is a common failing among parents.

    They'll blame racism for it.

  417. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    But there is no FD report of the treatment, nor doctor's assessment of the damage. There's no evidence Zimmerman's nose was broken.

  418. Re:Talk about media bias by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    If you think police always arrest people immediately, then you need to stop commenting on this story and go learn something because you're spewing ignorance.

    Zimmerman confessed to homicide and was immediately released. That's why it is so unusual. Rarely do they kick confessors of homicide out of the Police station.

  419. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is in Florida due to "stand your ground" Google it.

  420. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Stand your ground doesn't give you the right to stalk someone in a threatening manner, then shoot them when they confront you. When the only other witness is dead.

  421. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately, no wheels were turning at all in Florida until there was a public outcry.

  422. Re:Talk about media bias by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Really? In what percentage of cases do they do that?

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  423. Re:Talk about media bias by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    At least one, and as far as I've seen, only one.

  424. Re:Talk about media bias by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    That's not very good research.........and you know it.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  425. Re:Talk about media bias by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Nobody has posted anything contradictory, so it seems sufficient. The best attack someone can muster is to question me, not actually refute my statements, which is essentially an endorsement.

  426. Re:Talk about media bias by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Nobody has posted anything contradictory, so it seems sufficient. The best attack someone can muster is to question me, not actually refute my statements, which is essentially an endorsement.

    I asked my lawyer friend, so we'll see if he gets back to me. Unfortunately he often ignores me on such questions. If he does, I'll post what he says here (unfortunately such statistics seem hard to find by googling).

    But come on, appeal to ignorance is hardly a good reason to hold an opinion, especially one condemning a whole police department in a case where you're likely to have bad data anyway, because of all the media distortion (media distortion, and media not actually caring a whole lot if they get their facts straight).

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  427. Re:Talk about media bias by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    But come on, appeal to ignorance is hardly a good reason to hold an opinion, especially one condemning a whole police department in a case where you're likely to have bad data anyway, because of all the media distortion (media distortion, and media not actually caring a whole lot if they get their facts straight).

    I've heard of hundreds of murders (most through the media, but some from witnesses of relatives). The only case of someone confessing to homicide who was then released was a case of a old man who stated he fell asleep and killed some college kids on 6th Street in Austin. And there was no outrage over that one, and the police apologized to him for the trauma killing all those people caused. Oh, and he kept his license, as he didn't even get a ticket for illegally parking while parked on the sidewalk on top of dead students. But short of that one, can you name a single homicide where someone confessed to killing and was immediately released? Heck, last time I brought that one up, people asserted it didn't happen, so even that one doesn't exist (according to some here).

  428. Re:Talk about media bias by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I can tell you one where a pastor clearly killed the guy, and had motive. The only question was whether the pastor intended to kill the guy or did it on accident. The police left the pastor free for two years while they collected evidence. I presume they didn't worry about him killing other people. They finally arrested him when it looked like he was a flight risk, traveling to Mexico. Ended up getting life in prison on first degree murder charges.

    Now the pastor is in jail for life, and tells people he is doing God's work, converting prisoners.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  429. Re:Talk about media bias by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Here's my brief conversation with my lawyer friend:

    Me: It didn't seem strange to you that they didn't arrest him as soon as he confessed to killing the guy?
    Lawyer: yes. thats what shows they have serious evidence problems.

    So take from that whatever you will. It's not clear to me if he's saying the police have evidence problems because they are incompetent, or they are competent and followed the course of action that police normally do when they have evidence problems.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  430. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    As far as we know, it's a matter of someone (Zimmerman) feeling threatened on 'his' property

    Zimmerman owns the public street? I must have missed that bit.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  431. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    You seem rather keen, almost desperate, to prove her guilty.

    Of course the best alibi is that someone else did it...

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  432. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    "Rational" and "reasonable" are two different words. An action can be one or the other, both, or neither.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  433. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    So, Mr. White Guy gets the right to follow around people with a gun,

    First off, he is a Hispanic man with an interesting history:

    The 28-year-old insurance-fraud investigator comes from a deeply Catholic background and was taught in his early years to do right by those less fortunate. He was raised in a racially integrated household and himself has black roots through an Afro-Peruvian great-grandfather - the father of the maternal grandmother who helped raise him.

    Second, he had a concealed carry permit, so he could carry a concealed firearm, period.

    Third, are you saying Zimmerman should not have called the police?

    Why might Zimmerman have had an interest?

    A criminal justice student who aspired to become a judge, Zimmerman also concerned himself with the safety of his neighbors after a series of break-ins committed by young African-American men.

    Though civil rights demonstrators have argued Zimmerman should not have prejudged Martin, one black neighbor of the Zimmermans said recent history should be taken into account.

    "Let's talk about the elephant in the room. I'm black, OK?" the woman said, declining to be identified because she anticipated backlash due to her race. She leaned in to look a reporter directly in the eyes. "There were black boys robbing houses in this neighborhood," she said. "That's why George was suspicious of Trayvon Martin."

    harrass them and finally shoot them for the deadly threat of walking around while black and carrying skittles,

    Carrying skittles? Do you think this is the bag? -> Zimmerman Injuries Seen in Exclusive Photo

    "Walking around while black" . . . like Zimmermans great grandfather? And one more interesting bit -

    “You will recall the incident of the beating of the black homeless man Sherman Ware on December 4, 2010 by the son of a Sanford police officer. The beating sparked outrage in the community but there were very few that stepped up to do anything about it. I would presume the inaction was because of the fact that he was homeless not because he was black. Do you know the individual who stepped up when no one else in the black community would?

    while the black boy should have called the police.

    Zimmerman did call the police - he spent a considerable amount of time on the phone with them. And yes, it would have been a much better idea for Martin, who had a phone with him and was chatting on it, to have called the police if he was worried, instead of apparently assaulting Zimmerman.

    I get it, "standing your ground" is . .

    Stand your ground doesn't have anything to do with this.

    . . .only for your fellow Stormfront members, you racist fucker. You are so full of it, one day you gonna explode in a quite dramatic crapageddon.

    Don't you claim to be a biochemist? Do you have any ability to engage in a rational, fact based discussion on this matter? You certainly haven't demonstrated that you do. You might want to talk to a counselor, you seem to have some issues.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  434. Re:Good luck with that fair trial thing by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    If you recall, Zimmerman did call the police, that is how the series of events started. Eventually he gave up, ended the call, and headed back.

    It was shortly after that Martin allegedly surprised Zimmerman, punched Zimmerman in the face dropping him to the ground, and then started pounding his head into the concrete. There are photos showing Zimmerman's head bleeding, and the police report noted that Zimmerman was bleeding from both his nose and the back of his head. Witnesses have stated that they saw Martin on top of Zimmerman.

    Now, are you thinking that as Zimmerman lay underneath Martin, having his head pounded into the concrete, that instead of trying to fight back and try to escape, Zimmerman was going to dial the police and call for help that might arrive in, what, 5-10-15 minutes? Really? You think that might be a reasonable option as he faced the immediate threat of severe or fatal injury from continued beating from the 190cm tall Martin? I'll save you the trouble - no, that was not a reasonable option in any way. Of course you can adopt that as your personal survival strategy when you are assaulted if it still seems like a good idea. I'm betting you won't - you'll try to fight back and escape. . . just like Zimmerman. Either that, or you'll be dead or a vegetable.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell