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Hundreds of protesters marched in Washington on Saturday to demand “Justice for Trayvon,” the Florida teen who was shot and killed in February.
The protest was largely organized by Howard University students. Corryn Freeman, one of the organizers, said, “We want an arrest [in Martin's death], but that’s not where it’s going to stop. George Zimmerman [who said he killed Martin in self-defense] is just a symptom of the big problem. Racism is the big problem.”
The "hoodie" was once just a staple of casual streetwear. Now it's a symbol of racial profiling. Protestors sporting "hoodies" marched through the nation's capital Saturday, demanding justice for African-American youth Trayvon Martin who was fatally shot while wearing a "hoodie" in late February by community watch volunteer George Zimmerman.
“Trayvon Martin, Emmett Till: How many more youth will they kill?” the protesters chanted as they marched more than two miles from Meridian Hill Park, also known as Malcolm X Park, to Freedom Plaza.
Humam Abdul Malik of Southeast Washington, who marched Saturday with his 13-year-old son, said protests would continue in the District and across the country until Zimmerman is tried before a jury.
“It ain’t a race issue; it’s a justice issue,” Malik said. “Let him go to court, and if he’s innocent, let it be proven there. That’s the system.”
Hundreds of people joined in Saturday’s march, which stretched nearly a city block at times.
The protest was largely organized by Howard University students, who said they want more than Zimmerman’s arrest. They are seeking reform of the justice system that so far has allowed Zimmerman to walk free — and that has resulted in what they said is the racial profiling and wrongful deaths of too many young black Americans.
“We want an arrest, but that’s not where it’s going to stop,” said Corryn Freeman, a Howard University senior who helped organize the march. “George Zimmerman is just a symptom of the big problem. Racism is the big problem.”
Upon reaching Freedom Plaza, the marchers sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” often called “the black national anthem,” and watched a reenactment of Martin’s shooting and its aftermath by Howard’s theater group, the Howard Players.
The mother of 26-year-old Emmanuel Okutuga, who was fatally shot by a Montgomery County police officer last year, clutched a photograph of her son. “This happens too often,” she said. “There are too many Trayvons out there.”
More than a dozen speakers, many of them local university students and activists, urged members of the crowd to harness their anger and turn it into durable change through community organizing and advocacy.
“It’s time to stop complaining; it’s time to get to work,” said Rashiah Greene of the National Black United Front, a national coalition of activists.
D.C. environmental justice advocate Kari Fulton said marchers need to start lobbying politicians and lodging public comments with local, state and federal agencies.
“We gotta take our hoodies to the Hill,” she said. “Don’t let this be the day that you put your right fist up, and then you walk away.”
Martin was fatally shot in February as he walked toward a home in a gated community while wearing a hooded sweatshirt and carrying a bag of Skittles and a can of iced tea. His shooter was volunteer neighborhood watchman George Zimmerman, who has said he acted in self-defense and has not been charged.
Legal counsel for George Zimmerman: Shooting of Trayvon Martin wasn't racially motivated
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The legal counsel for George Zimmerman says the shooting of Trayvon Martin wasn't racially motivated.
Updated at 7:48 a.m. ET: Florida’s 2005 “Stand Your Ground” law, which says a citizen doesn’t have to retreat before using deadly force against an attacker, could throw a legal wrinkle into the case of a neighborhood watch captain who shot to death an unarmed black teenager.
Police in the central Florida town of Sanford have said that 28-year-old George Zimmerman says he shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in self-defense during a confrontation in a gated community. Police have described Zimmerman as white; his family says he is Hispanic and not racist.Legal experts, gun-rights advocates and gun-control groups contacted by msnbc.com offered varying opinions on whether Zimmerman can avoid criminal charges under Stand Your Ground.
Richard Hornsby, an Orlando-based criminal defense attorney, says he thinks the grand jury is likely to indict Zimmerman for manslaughter, a second-degree felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison. Less likely is a more serious charge of second-degree murder, a crime that implies intent and that is punishable by up to life in prison, he said.
Trayvon Martin's final phone call -- made to his girlfriend -- is shedding new light on the moments leading up to his deadly confrontation with a neighborhood watch volunteer. NBC's Lilia Luciano reports.
“This case isn’t even a close call to me. This is a case of a guy trying to be a vigilante,” Hornsby said. “It wasn’t like he was trying to avoid trouble. He brought a firearm to a fistfight.”
“My gut feeling he will ultimately be charged with some type of manslaughter charge,” agreed Philip Sweeting, retired deputy police chief for the Boca Raton Police Department and a law enforcement consultant who has testified in court cases as an expert in police shootings and use of force.
“My gut reaction was this was an accidental discharge,” Sweeting added. “If you put yourself in the shooter’s position and you’re wrestling with this kid and a gun goes off, what are you going to tell the cops?”
If indicted, Zimmerman can raise the Stand Your Ground defense under the 2005 law signed by Gov. Jeb Bush. That legislation, derisively called the “Shoot First” law by its critics, gives Floridians the right to use deadly force to defend themselves in public places without first trying to escape. The National Rifle Association lobbied hard for the bill, saying it would allow citizens to better protect themselves from violent crime.
The key section of the law states:
A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in any other place where he or she has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony."
Police did not arrest Zimmerman after the shooting, but State Attorney Norm Wolfinger announced Tuesday the case will go before a Seminole County grand jury.
Kendall Coffey talks about the legal developments in the Trayvon Martin case and Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law.
Hornsby says the 2005 bill allows Zimmerman’s lawyers to argue to a judge – before any trial -- that the case should be dismissed on grounds he was permitted to defend himself. If the case isn’t dismissed, they could argue self-defense at trial.
Daniel Vice, senior attorney with the gun-control group Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, contends “Stand Your Ground,” combined with Florida laws allowing people to carry guns in public, have made it difficult to pursue criminal charges against people who shoot others and then say it was self-defense.
“All you have to say is that you reasonably believed you were threatened, and the only person who can dispute that is the person you have just killed,” Vice says.
"It's very hard to bring these types of cases because the 'Shoot First' law combined with public carrying of loaded guns protects people who engage someone and shoot to kill."
According to a 2010 review by the St. Petersburg Times, reports of justifiable homicide tripled after the law went into effect. It has been invoked in at least 93 cases with 65 deaths, used to excuse violence in deadly neighbor arguments, bar fights, road rage and even a gang shootout, the newspaper reported.
Lawyer: Trayvon Martin fearful in final call
Trayvon Martin case to go to grand jury
Gun-rights advocates say the facts to date are scarce and “Stand Your Ground” may or may not apply in this case.
According to transcripts of the 911 calls, a police dispatcher tells Zimmerman he doesn’t need to follow the teen, but Zimmerman apparently does anyway. So is he or the teen the one who feels threatened?
The Department of Justice has launched an investigation into the death of the teen shot in the picturesque city of Sanford, Fla. NBC's Ron Allen reports.
“The question again is whether he (Zimmerman) acted reasonably or not. At this point it doesn’t look good for him, but I don’t know what the heck happened and quite frankly no one else does either,” says Jon H. Gutmacher, an Orlando attorney, NRA-certified instructor and author of "Florida Firearms: Law, Use & Ownership."
“When you’re talking about law and whether things were legal and illegal, you can’t guess. You’re supposed to react to facts. The facts have been kept from the public and the press.”
Added Dave Workman, director of communications for the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms: “There’s a misunderstanding about what Stand Your Ground laws really do. No Stand Your Ground law translates to a broad permission for the use of lethal force when it’s not warranted.”
He added: “A lot of people have left the starting gate before they really know what has happened. A rush to judgment is never a good thing.”
Real Shocking Crimes caught on camera: "Warning Graphic."
What your mainstream media never tell you: Marvel at the al-Jazeera film crew whipping the crowd to hysteria. This is what most UK/american mainstream media do ; get the crowds TO ACT for the cameras. Ever noticed the STAGED gun shots or in-the-lens chanting? It's all fake, staged propaganda for the liars at Sky/ITN/BBC?CNN/Fox. اسامہ بن لادن ہلاکओसामा बिन लादेन को मार डाला قتل أسامة بن لادن Oussama Ben Laden tué Osama Bin Laden getötet Usama bin Ladin dödas DURBAN, South Africa -- “No high hopes for Durban.” “Binding treaty unlikely.” “No deal this year.” Thus ran the headlines. The profiteering UN bureaucrats here think otherwise. Their plans to establish a world government paid for by the West on the pretext of dealing with the non-problem of “global warming” are now well in hand. As usual, the mainstream media have simply not reported what is in the draft text which the 194 states parties to the UN framework convention on climate change are being asked to approve. Behind the scenes, throughout the year since Cancun, the now-permanent bureaucrats who have made highly-profitable careers out of what they lovingly call “the process” have been beavering away at what is now a 138-page document.
Its catchy title is "Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-Term Cooperative Action Under the Convention -- Update of the amalgamation of draft texts in preparation of [one imagines they mean 'for'] a comprehensive and balanced outcome to be presented to the Conference of the Parties for adoption at its seventeenth session: note by the Chair.” In plain English, these are the conclusions the bureaucracy wants. The contents of this document, turgidly drafted with all the UN's skill at what the former head of its documentation center used to call “transparent impenetrability”, are not just off the wall – they are lunatic. Subscribe to VesInteL World News by Email
Hundreds of protesters marched in Washington on Saturday to demand “Justice for Trayvon,” the Florida teen who was shot and killed in February.
The protest was largely organized by Howard University students. Corryn Freeman, one of the organizers, said, “We want an arrest [in Martin's death], but that’s not where it’s going to stop. George Zimmerman [who said he killed Martin in self-defense] is just a symptom of the big problem. Racism is the big problem.”
The "hoodie" was once just a staple of casual streetwear. Now it's a symbol of racial profiling. Protestors sporting "hoodies" marched through the nation's capital Saturday, demanding justice for African-American youth Trayvon Martin who was fatally shot while wearing a "hoodie" in late February by community watch volunteer George Zimmerman.
“Trayvon Martin, Emmett Till: How many more youth will they kill?” the protesters chanted as they marched more than two miles from Meridian Hill Park, also known as Malcolm X Park, to Freedom Plaza.
Humam Abdul Malik of Southeast Washington, who marched Saturday with his 13-year-old son, said protests would continue in the District and across the country until Zimmerman is tried before a jury.
“It ain’t a race issue; it’s a justice issue,” Malik said. “Let him go to court, and if he’s innocent, let it be proven there. That’s the system.”
Hundreds of people joined in Saturday’s march, which stretched nearly a city block at times.
The protest was largely organized by Howard University students, who said they want more than Zimmerman’s arrest. They are seeking reform of the justice system that so far has allowed Zimmerman to walk free — and that has resulted in what they said is the racial profiling and wrongful deaths of too many young black Americans.
“We want an arrest, but that’s not where it’s going to stop,” said Corryn Freeman, a Howard University senior who helped organize the march. “George Zimmerman is just a symptom of the big problem. Racism is the big problem.”
Upon reaching Freedom Plaza, the marchers sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” often called “the black national anthem,” and watched a reenactment of Martin’s shooting and its aftermath by Howard’s theater group, the Howard Players.
The mother of 26-year-old Emmanuel Okutuga, who was fatally shot by a Montgomery County police officer last year, clutched a photograph of her son. “This happens too often,” she said. “There are too many Trayvons out there.”
More than a dozen speakers, many of them local university students and activists, urged members of the crowd to harness their anger and turn it into durable change through community organizing and advocacy.
“It’s time to stop complaining; it’s time to get to work,” said Rashiah Greene of the National Black United Front, a national coalition of activists.
D.C. environmental justice advocate Kari Fulton said marchers need to start lobbying politicians and lodging public comments with local, state and federal agencies.
“We gotta take our hoodies to the Hill,” she said. “Don’t let this be the day that you put your right fist up, and then you walk away.”
Martin was fatally shot in February as he walked toward a home in a gated community while wearing a hooded sweatshirt and carrying a bag of Skittles and a can of iced tea. His shooter was volunteer neighborhood watchman George Zimmerman, who has said he acted in self-defense and has not been charged.
Legal counsel for George Zimmerman: Shooting of Trayvon Martin wasn't racially motivated
Tweet
The legal counsel for George Zimmerman says the shooting of Trayvon Martin wasn't racially motivated.
Updated at 7:48 a.m. ET: Florida’s 2005 “Stand Your Ground” law, which says a citizen doesn’t have to retreat before using deadly force against an attacker, could throw a legal wrinkle into the case of a neighborhood watch captain who shot to death an unarmed black teenager.
Police in the central Florida town of Sanford have said that 28-year-old George Zimmerman says he shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in self-defense during a confrontation in a gated community. Police have described Zimmerman as white; his family says he is Hispanic and not racist.Legal experts, gun-rights advocates and gun-control groups contacted by msnbc.com offered varying opinions on whether Zimmerman can avoid criminal charges under Stand Your Ground.
Richard Hornsby, an Orlando-based criminal defense attorney, says he thinks the grand jury is likely to indict Zimmerman for manslaughter, a second-degree felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison. Less likely is a more serious charge of second-degree murder, a crime that implies intent and that is punishable by up to life in prison, he said.
Trayvon Martin's final phone call -- made to his girlfriend -- is shedding new light on the moments leading up to his deadly confrontation with a neighborhood watch volunteer. NBC's Lilia Luciano reports.
“This case isn’t even a close call to me. This is a case of a guy trying to be a vigilante,” Hornsby said. “It wasn’t like he was trying to avoid trouble. He brought a firearm to a fistfight.”
“My gut feeling he will ultimately be charged with some type of manslaughter charge,” agreed Philip Sweeting, retired deputy police chief for the Boca Raton Police Department and a law enforcement consultant who has testified in court cases as an expert in police shootings and use of force.
“My gut reaction was this was an accidental discharge,” Sweeting added. “If you put yourself in the shooter’s position and you’re wrestling with this kid and a gun goes off, what are you going to tell the cops?”
If indicted, Zimmerman can raise the Stand Your Ground defense under the 2005 law signed by Gov. Jeb Bush. That legislation, derisively called the “Shoot First” law by its critics, gives Floridians the right to use deadly force to defend themselves in public places without first trying to escape. The National Rifle Association lobbied hard for the bill, saying it would allow citizens to better protect themselves from violent crime.
The key section of the law states:
A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in any other place where he or she has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or herself or another or to prevent the commission of a forcible felony."
Police did not arrest Zimmerman after the shooting, but State Attorney Norm Wolfinger announced Tuesday the case will go before a Seminole County grand jury.
Kendall Coffey talks about the legal developments in the Trayvon Martin case and Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law.
Hornsby says the 2005 bill allows Zimmerman’s lawyers to argue to a judge – before any trial -- that the case should be dismissed on grounds he was permitted to defend himself. If the case isn’t dismissed, they could argue self-defense at trial.
Daniel Vice, senior attorney with the gun-control group Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, contends “Stand Your Ground,” combined with Florida laws allowing people to carry guns in public, have made it difficult to pursue criminal charges against people who shoot others and then say it was self-defense.
“All you have to say is that you reasonably believed you were threatened, and the only person who can dispute that is the person you have just killed,” Vice says.
"It's very hard to bring these types of cases because the 'Shoot First' law combined with public carrying of loaded guns protects people who engage someone and shoot to kill."
According to a 2010 review by the St. Petersburg Times, reports of justifiable homicide tripled after the law went into effect. It has been invoked in at least 93 cases with 65 deaths, used to excuse violence in deadly neighbor arguments, bar fights, road rage and even a gang shootout, the newspaper reported.
Lawyer: Trayvon Martin fearful in final call
Trayvon Martin case to go to grand jury
Gun-rights advocates say the facts to date are scarce and “Stand Your Ground” may or may not apply in this case.
According to transcripts of the 911 calls, a police dispatcher tells Zimmerman he doesn’t need to follow the teen, but Zimmerman apparently does anyway. So is he or the teen the one who feels threatened?
The Department of Justice has launched an investigation into the death of the teen shot in the picturesque city of Sanford, Fla. NBC's Ron Allen reports.
“The question again is whether he (Zimmerman) acted reasonably or not. At this point it doesn’t look good for him, but I don’t know what the heck happened and quite frankly no one else does either,” says Jon H. Gutmacher, an Orlando attorney, NRA-certified instructor and author of "Florida Firearms: Law, Use & Ownership."
“When you’re talking about law and whether things were legal and illegal, you can’t guess. You’re supposed to react to facts. The facts have been kept from the public and the press.”
Added Dave Workman, director of communications for the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms: “There’s a misunderstanding about what Stand Your Ground laws really do. No Stand Your Ground law translates to a broad permission for the use of lethal force when it’s not warranted.”
He added: “A lot of people have left the starting gate before they really know what has happened. A rush to judgment is never a good thing.”
Real Shocking Crimes caught on camera: "Warning Graphic."
What your mainstream media never tell you: Marvel at the al-Jazeera film crew whipping the crowd to hysteria. This is what most UK/american mainstream media do ; get the crowds TO ACT for the cameras. Ever noticed the STAGED gun shots or in-the-lens chanting? It's all fake, staged propaganda for the liars at Sky/ITN/BBC?CNN/Fox. اسامہ بن لادن ہلاکओसामा बिन लादेन को मार डाला قتل أسامة بن لادن Oussama Ben Laden tué Osama Bin Laden getötet Usama bin Ladin dödas DURBAN, South Africa -- “No high hopes for Durban.” “Binding treaty unlikely.” “No deal this year.” Thus ran the headlines. The profiteering UN bureaucrats here think otherwise. Their plans to establish a world government paid for by the West on the pretext of dealing with the non-problem of “global warming” are now well in hand. As usual, the mainstream media have simply not reported what is in the draft text which the 194 states parties to the UN framework convention on climate change are being asked to approve. Behind the scenes, throughout the year since Cancun, the now-permanent bureaucrats who have made highly-profitable careers out of what they lovingly call “the process” have been beavering away at what is now a 138-page document.
Its catchy title is "Ad Hoc Working Group on Long-Term Cooperative Action Under the Convention -- Update of the amalgamation of draft texts in preparation of [one imagines they mean 'for'] a comprehensive and balanced outcome to be presented to the Conference of the Parties for adoption at its seventeenth session: note by the Chair.” In plain English, these are the conclusions the bureaucracy wants. The contents of this document, turgidly drafted with all the UN's skill at what the former head of its documentation center used to call “transparent impenetrability”, are not just off the wall – they are lunatic. Subscribe to VesInteL World News by Email
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