Posted on 04/03/2012 10:36:05 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
What happened to Trayvon Martin? The short answer: I dont know.
I know that he was shot by George Zimmerman while wearing a hoodie and carrying a box of Skittles. No weapons of mass destruction. An awful tragedy. My thoughts and prayers go out to his parents and family. A thorough and fair investigation is obviously a necessity.
But after decades of studying the criminal justice system, how it works and how it doesnt, including the shadow cast by racism over that system, that is what I know.
I also know this: If the police and prosecutors had a clear case that Zimmerman had unreasonably resorted to deadly force in a situation where the law prohibits it, if they had probable cause to arrest him and believe they could and should secure a conviction, they would have arrested him.
With the eyes of the nation upon them, with the president comparing Martin to the son he doesnt have, with marchers and editorials, the easiest thing, the most political thing, the move that would turn down the temperature would be to arrest Zimmerman.
I know that is not always what has happened. Too often in our history, police and prosecutors have been reluctant to arrest African-American men for killing white men in situations where they would have done so had the races been different.
I know that police and prosecutors and juries have been too willing to assume that any African-American man in a hoodie is likely to be a criminal and that crimes involving the death of an African-American have not received the same attention as those involving the death of a white person.
I also know that in highly politicized cases, just the opposite has happened.
The most notorious example of this, obviously, was the Duke lacrosse team case, where the prosecutor moved too fast, where his motives were political, where a thorough investigation would have spared not only the young men involved but also, ironically, the young woman, whose reputation was also ruined in the process.
And Martins also almost certainly would be were an unjustified arrest made here.
We are a nation of laws, not men and women. From everything I can see, police and prosecutors in Sanford, Fla., are proceeding carefully and thoroughly as they must, given the issues involved.
The law allows an individual to resort to deadly force when he reasonably believes he is facing death or serious bodily injury. In many states, an individual is required to retreat (at least when attacked outside his own home) when he could do so safely. Florida is not one of those states. I do not support Stand Your Ground laws because they allow lives to be taken in self-defense where it is not in fact a necessity. But I dont make the law in Florida, and neither do those charged with its enforcement.
The law does not require that the individual who resorts to deadly force be right. His actions must be judged at the time he takes them. The standard is objective: what a reasonable person would do. But in applying that standard, the reasonable person stands in the shoes of the one who resorted to deadly force.
Obviously, race should not be a factor in this analysis.
Obviously, wearing a hoodie should not be a factor in this analysis.
But if there is credible and substantiated evidence that Zimmerman reasonably believed he was facing death or serious bodily injury at the time he shot, then the police and prosecutors would be violating their ethical duties and the rule of law in arresting him to respond to a political crisis.
I understand the presidents identification with Trayvon Martin. I understand his concerns that deaths such as this have, historically, been too easily ignored on racial grounds. But it is essential that our leaders have the courage to say that, ultimately, the issue here should not be race. The issue is the rule of law, applied without regard to race.
*******
Susan Estrich is a law professor in Southern California and managed the 1988 presidential race of Democrat Michael Dukakis.
>> Comments?
With her every written word, Susan’s raspy, wheezing voice resonates at a deafening level tweaking the tinnitus I try to ignore.
Yeah, she can be sane at times.
That’s a pretty funny satire. Ironically, it did cross my mind when the story broke that maybe Trayvon did steal the Skittles.
Is that wrong? Am I a bad person?
(sniff)
“If you elect George Bush, black churches will burn!”
Yeah, for the shameless, scumbag Democrats there is no bottom of the sewer.
Thank you! I never put 2 and 2 together, but your comment makes sense. The “Stand your ground” law has NO application here. It’s just a liberal way of trying to get rid of a law that they don’t like. Not relevant in this case. Self-defense is more appropriate.
I understand the presidents identification with Trayvon Martin. I understand his concerns that deaths such as this have, historically, been too easily ignored on racial grounds. But it is essential that our leaders have the courage to say that, ultimately, the issue here should not be race. The issue is the rule of law, applied without regard to race.
So in other words, Hillary will be running as a centrist.
As if black churches "explode" all the time, and nobody reports on it.
Not to mention if black churches BURNED DOWN "all the time", like Bill Clinton remembers from his childhood.
Ridiculous. But there are cretins that believe it.
“.. interrogated for five hours..”
Would that length of time be unusual for a someone who had a broken nose, a head injury, and the truamatic experience of taking a life and almost losing your life? I know I would not have said more than I want an attorney and a ride to the hospital.
I don't believe that is true. SYG law is not relevant to this case though IMO.
The law does not require that the individual who resorts to deadly force be right.
No, Susan, I am certain that that is not the case. One is still required to believe, by the 'reasonable man' standard, that one's life or another person's life is in imminent danger. As a Constitutional scholar you should know better than to characterize a law without knowing it.
No, Zimmerman was not arrested. He was detained and questioned but not arrested.
This article is a hit piece on SYG laws disguised as reasonableness about the Martin/Zimmerman incident. Her apparent honesty about the law is cover for a political agenda.
Skittles is street slang for the drug dextromethorphan, or DXM found in some cough syrups.
What happened to Gloria?
Did she fall down and bump her head?
Re: Skittles
Is there actual documentation that Martin made any kind of purchase at a store before he was shot?
Right!
Re: Handcuffs
Handcuffing, searching, and physically examining the survivor is standard police procedure until the details are sorted out.
Zimmerman always had the option to say nothing - which is always the best plan when you find yourself at the center of an intensely emotional, intensely dangerous legal situation.
It appears that Zimmerman thought that “voluntarily cooperating” with the police might bolster his credibility.
Horrendous mistake.
Zimmerman could also have politely and persistently requested that he be released or arrested.
Based on just the physical evidence, it’s hard to see what grounds existed for an arrest.
Lesson learned.....
Unless you’re terrified of spending a couple nights in jail, NEVER talk about what happened, even if you’re completely innocent.
“Re: Skittles
Is there actual documentation that Martin made any kind of purchase at a store before he was shot?”
I think that is an important question. Now that FReepers have schooled me on drug language, I’d be interested in seeing an autopsy result. Since “skittles” is street code for Ritalin, maybe someone was scoping the neighborhood for easy cash. One other question: If Martin, while on top of Zimmerman, had somehow managed to pull the gun out of Zimmerman’s waistband and shoot him, would that have been acceptable to the Black community?
I can't recall a single instance where, in a discussion of a crime, she did not take the most extreme liberal and PC view possible.
Not once
Until tonight.
Maybe it's just too dark at 3:00 am to see pigs flying, but I am looking out the window anyway.
Ca alors!
PC is rotting your brain, Dude, Something I would expect Susan to say, but to her credit, she refrained.
"Being right" in this context, is NOT the after the fact definition of "right." It is the personal honest belief of the victim of an attack, at the moment, right or wrong.
The alternative interpretation is absurd. If we were to entertain the claims of the brainless mob with blood in their eyes, we would have to postulate that after shooting the "child" dead, Zimmerman then continued to break his own nose and give himself a concussion.
African Science and logic.
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