Posted on 07/05/2013 7:16:21 PM PDT by IChing
After another dramatic day of dicey testimony and legal maneuvers in the George Zimmerman murder trial, the prosecution rested and the judge denied the defenses request for Judgment of Acquittal based on lack of evidence.
I guess theres just no way judge Debra Nelson was going to make the call on her own, given the ominous gravity of promised violence and even murder from mobs and mobs of Trayvonistas.
The day started out with dishonesty under oath on the witness stand from Trayvon Martins mother, Sabrina Fulton, during opening testimony.
When asked, under cross-examination by defense attorney Mark OMara, about the first time the audiotape of a witnessess 911 call was played for her, Fulton eventually said something utterly preposterous (Im not merely referring to her claiming that the screams for help on the tape were from Trayvon).
The tape was first played for her, allegedly, at the Sanford mayors office in a room full of lawyers and others, including Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump and the mayor of Sanford. OMara asked her if anyone in the room had told Ms. Fulton (known by some bloggers as TradeMom for trademarking/commercializing her deceased sons first name) anything regarding the contents of the tape before they played it for her, as a way of preparing her for what she was about to hear. Fulton said no, nobody gave her any indication of the nature of what she was about to hear.
If anyone reading this actually thinks that that gathering of schemers all got together in the mayors office to play the tape for Martins mother without first at least giving her a description of what it was, where it was from, and why it was important, then I have a health care plan to sell you.
The obvious prevarication didnt end with that. OMara moved on, posing the idea to Fulton that if she were to consider the alternative, that the screams on the tape were not those of Trayvon, then of course she would have to conclude that they were from the accused, George Zimmerman; and therefore that her son had caused his own deathwouldnt she?. Fulton hemmed and hawed, then indignantly claimed she didnt understand the question. Where I come from, we call that bovine scat; of course she understood the question. She just refused to answer it, pretending she didnt get it.
OMara then slightly altered the approach, suggesting very gently that it would naturally be her hope that her son would not have caused his own death, wouldnt it? Fulton again evaded, pretending to need OMara to repeat the question and clarify it, which he very politely did. Again, Fulton tried to deflect by defiantly saying she would instead hope that the incident never happened, that her son would still be alive, etc.and when OMara asked one more time, she stubbornly insisted that she didnt understand the question. OMara tenderly gave up, ending his cross-examination there.
Now, before you go thinking OMara was some kind of callous bully beating up on a grieving mother who lost a son, be advised that he had tried to open his cross examination with a heartfelt statement of apology for her loss, but that he was cut off mid-sentence by an objection from the prosecutions tableon the grounds that his gesture was not an actual question to the witnessand judge Nelson sustained the objection. You tell me who is heartless in that exchange.
Trayvon Martins older brother, Jahvaris Fulton, then took the stand, and said not what hed originally said when hed first heard the tape. He had originally said that he couldnt say that it was his brothers voice yelling for help, but in court he testified that it was. OMara began a meticulous impeachment of his testimony on a related timeline of a previous statement captured on an audio recording, but judge Nelson interrupted OMara and declared the impeachment to be inappropriate, forbidden for OMara to carry out.
Next we saw a train-wreck of non-testimony from the Chinese immigrant medical examiner who did the autopsy on Trayvon Martin. It would have been comical if it wasnt so annoyingly awful and pointless. Dr. Shiping Baos English was halting and heavily-accented, which was not the real problem. Incidentally, the state of Florida apparently finds and hires medical examiners (remember Dr. Rao from last week? Rao & Bao, eh) by importing the most culturally-incompatible foreign voodoo practitioners from all corners of the planet, with whom attempting communication is worse than dying itself if you are a creepy-azz, English-speaking cracka such as myself.
From the witness stand, Bao basically tried to hijack the proceedings, going rogue and actually trying to argue about trial procedure and the nature of legal testimony with defense attorney Don West and whoever else might try to get him to cooperate. Instead of just answering questions, Bao wanted to speak up whenever he felt like it, and ask questions of his own! He tried to lecture the court about the way things should go. I was ready to murder the guy myself just to get him off the stand.
Bao balked at answering questions regarding his professional, medical opinion, protesting defiantly that he was under oath (to West, Im under oath, do you understand? If I give my opinion, its not fact! Its not fact!) and that he could change his opinion at any time from what it was weeks ago, to what it was an two days ago, from hour to hour, and so on. Again and again, he tried to interrupt his testimony to pontificate on the difference between opinion and fact, as if the attorneys before him needed to be told. West grew visibly incredulous at the piece of work before him, and made me respect him even more for his sheer patience. Even judge Nelson, normally willing to endlessly indulge any witness difficult conduct if it caused problems for the defense, sort of tried to get the guy to shape up.
There came a point where it became apparent that Bao was reading answers to anticipated questions from notes, and West asked him if that was the case. There ensued a standoff among Bao, West, prosecutor De la Rionda, and judge Nelson over whether Bao would/must allow his personal notes made the night before (not the actual official notes from the autopsy) to be seen by the attorneys, and a copy made of them for the court. Bao tried to dig in his heels and insist that they were his notes, that no one else had seen them nor would he surrender them at all. He came across like a rat trapped in an outside cellar window-well, as he looked around in paranoid, smirking anxiety as the lawyers closed in around him to study the notes in his hands, and seize them from him as Nelson declared that he had to give them over.
Defeated on the question of relinquishing control of his notes, Bao sat in brief silence as defense attorneys brought them back to their table and pored over them together. The courtroom was still. Suddenly, Bao blurted into the microphone, You see something funny there?! Nelson had to tell him to put a sock in it yet again.
Baos testimony continued for another agonizing few years until he was dismissed, the court not having learned anything really except that he claimed not to remember a single detail from the autopsy of Martin, even though he claimed to be the most supremely expert and skilled performer of autopsies the world round, having done so many of them that everyone present should listen to his rambling blather. Bao had repeatedly changed his assessment of things such as the injuries to Martins hands and knuckles, and the length of time it took from the time of the gunshot to the estimated time Martin finally died. He seemed genuinely irritated that West would try to get him to commit to providing a cogent professional analysis, or an explanation of why he kept changing his opinions.
Whew.
So then it came to a cliffhanger. Mark OMara stood before judge Nelson and delivered a magnificent, lengthy monologue, replete with an amazingly detailed recitation of piles and piles of case law and precedents, on the manifold legal reasons why the defense believed that Nelson was obliged to render a Judgment of Acquittal, finding Zimmerman not guilty by directed verdict. That meant that if granted, the defense wouldnt have to present a case, because the judge would have agreed with OMara that there simply wasnt a valid case made by the prosecution.
OMara spoke for a very long time. His brain seems to be some kind of marvel of biology, storing facts from prior cases and collating aspects of the case presently before the court in a compelling, sensitive, urgent and pleasant way. He virtually never had to look down to read from notes or papers, only pausing here and there to recall a name or take a sip of water.
The upshot of OMaras marathon motion was his declaration that the prosecution, even with what facts and evidence presented seen in the light most favorable to the state as is required, had not disproved the defenses reasonable claim of self-defense. Further, OMara argued that no ill-will, hatred, nor depraved mind existed in Zimmerman on the night in question; nor had the state proven any such state of mind, therefore the charge of 2nd degree murder was utterly unfounded and the case should not continue on to the jury.
After one of the prosecuting attorneys (a rather toad-like creature named Mantei) mounted a somewhat sullen and snotty but forcefully-spoken, fairly well-articulated rebuttal to OMaras overture (with obligatory amounts of case law quoted as well), OMara took one more run at closing the deal, with yet another masterpiece of speech and reasoned appeal.
No dice. Judge Nelson acted as if she never even considered not letting the case move on to the jurys deliberations. She let OMara finish, then abruptly announced to the court that the case would go on.
I have to confess here, I cant say I completely blame her for chickening out and putting it on the jurys shoulders. The case is so highly controversial and potentially explosive that for a moment today, I saw her as a human being with a truly tremendous burden on her shoulders.
But that was only for a moment. Im now back to seeing her as cravenly and unfairly hostile to the defense all along. Shes probably a lesbetarian, besides.
Yep, I did - with a lot of help from his dedicated “in house” & faithful father, who was always calm, and kept the peace when I got frustrated with male teen antics.
He was normal, (but I was raised in a family of 7 girls, and had no clue about adolescent males).
His now deceased Dad must be smiling down from heaven. I sensed, when he was just a teen, that he was born to write, and had a gift for words.
He has succeeded in all of his endeavors in his real-life career (see his “CV” on ClashDaily).
I am delighted that he has found his writing voice at last, and I am hope he gets enough encouragement/feedback to keep on going, developing his talent. Go there (ClashDaily) and send him a “like”.
The ME could not remember anything about the autopsy. Absolutely nothing. His mind is completely blank.
Until he could remember that TM hands were closed so he couldn’t get a picture of the palms. Then his memory was clear.
Lmao
I hope Nelson is “happy” now.
She sure hasn’t convinced me she knows anything about law. Buffon is a more apt descriptor.
I would suspect she’s a Sharpton fan.
not sure I understand why “the writer is as chicken, as the judge and the rest of the cowards associated in this case”
Perhaps you could elaborate a bit more? I just don’t get your point.
Thank you! Send it to all your homies, and beyond. ;-)
You are doing a great job with your ClashDaily.com site.
Kudos.
I’ve watched the whole trial and have tried to keep up with the ongoing thread about it.
You are spot on.
I rarely post, but this piece, and this is from someone who saw most of the trial today, is masterful. Thank you for posting it here.
O’Mara pointed out that it used to happen all the time up until 2006, when a certain case (Jenkins) ushered in a new era, that of self-defense immunity hearings. Since then, most cases which would otherwise been JOA’d have instead been dismissed after the immunity hearings. So there, na-na-naa-na-na...
...and that other poster is right, why are you calling Nelson “he”? Not that whatever s/he is doesn’t leave some room for question...
His knuckles were hurting
“dicey testimony”
You lie about it and I’ll swear to it.
Roll them bones, baby.
OMG, she makea the Hildabeast look feminine and beautiful by comparison.
LMAO
Read the last paragraph of his article. He gives the Judge a pass for passing the buck onto the jury. My point. Too many people have already
“Passed the buck”. And that is why George Zimmerman is fighting for his
life NOW.
I love Freepers
Line of the day:
Bao: Nobody knows TrayvonMartin autopsy better than me.
West: Except that you know nothing about it.
Bao: Correct
Many thanks, Rushmore Rocks.
Wow, I’m grateful for your praise, Auntie Mame.
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