Posted on 01/19/2015 5:12:05 AM PST by SJackson
The Real George Zimmerman
Posted By Ari Lieberman On January 19, 2015 @ 12:38 am In Daily Mailer,FrontPage | 11 Comments
George Zimmerman, the man who shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, is unsurprisingly in the news again. It seems he just cant get his act together. This time hes accused of throwing a wine bottle at his girlfriend who has described him as a psychopath and smashing her cell phone, which earned him an aggravated assault charge. Zimmerman, who appeared in handcuffs and a blue prison uniform during his arraignment, was released on $5,000 bond.
This isnt Zimmermans first brush with the law since his July 2013 acquittal on second degree murder charges. In fact, menacing with firearms and bouts of domestic violence are recurring themes in Zimmermans checkered history. Shortly after the July 2013 trial, for instance, Zimmermans now ex-wife Shellie made a panicked phone call to police alleging that Zimmerman had threatened her with a firearm, smashed her iPad and punched her father in the face. Hes in his car and he continually has his hand on his gun and he keeps saying, Step closer hes just threatening all of us with his firearm and hes going to shoot us, Shellie Zimmerman frantically told a 911 dispatcher before police arrived at the scene. A weapon was never recovered in this case, but 911 audio demonstrates a sincere belief on the part of Shellie Zimmerman that her estranged husband had a gun in his possession and that her life was in danger.
A few months after the altercation with his ex-wife, Zimmerman was also accused by another girlfriend, Samantha Scheibe, of threatening her with a shotgun and engaging in a destructive tirade which ended in Zimmerman barricading himself in Scheibes home. Scheibe told police that Zimmerman had broken some of her belongings and then pushed her outside of the residence, locking the door. Yet another girlfriend, former fiancé Veronica Zuazo, filed for and was granted a restraining order against Zimmerman in 2005 over domestic violence allegations. Zimmerman cross-claimed with his own accusations of domestic violence and was granted a restraining order against Zuazo.
In September 2014, Zimmerman was again in the news over a road rage incident in which he allegedly followed another motorist and harassed him while both were driving. The alarmed driver pulled off the road to call 911, telling the dispatcher that Zimmerman had threatened to shoot him. According to the other driver, whose identity was not released to the public, Zimmerman fled before police arrived. A few days later, the same driver made another call to police alleging that he saw Zimmerman in his truck outside his place of work.
Criminal charges in the above cases were either dropped or never filed, but they do give a strong indication of the real character of George Zimmerman. The latest altercation coupled with the previous incidents paint a portrait of a troubled man with, to say the least, some serious anger management issues. While this does not render him a murderer, it certainly does chip away at his credibility. And since there were only two antagonists in the Trayvon Martin shooting case, one of whom is dead, credibility is a central issue.
As noted by David Horowitz in a July 2013 article, Is the Zimmerman Case Really Open and Shut?, there were a number of facts in this case that were indisputable. Zimmerman lied during the proceedings. He schemed with his wife to conceal the fact that he had received well over a hundred thousand dollars in donations. He disingenuously stated that he had no knowledge of Floridas Stand Your Ground law when it was established that he in fact did know of the law. And he stated that Martin jumped out at him from the bushes, when there were no bushes in that area. Moreover, Zimmerman sustained very superficial injuries some minor scrapes and bumps and these injuries are not entirely consistent with the life and death struggle that Zimmerman described.
Trayvon Martin, who had made a purchase at a local convenience store, was unarmed when he was killed. Zimmerman, a cop wannabe, marked Martin as suspicious, because, as we now know, he was young, black and wearing a hoodie. Prosecutors asserted that Zimmerman disregarded a police dispatchers specific instructions to stop following Martin, though Zimmerman disputes this and claimed that he was merely trying to verify his location. Whichever version is accurate, it is indisputable that by initially exiting his vehicle and following Martin, Zimmerman put into motion a sequence of events that ultimately culminated in a confrontation which led to the tragic death of an unarmed 17-year-old youth with no criminal record.
As observed by Horowitz, Zimmerman inexplicably stated in an interview with Sean Hannity that he would not have done anything differently that night because it was Gods plan. That bizarre and heartless response speaks volumes about Zimmermans character. Surely Zimmerman had a multitude of alternatives. For one thing, he could have placed a 911 call from his car and left it at that.
Horowitz was criticized by numerous Frontpage readers in the comment section of his article for ostensibly taking too liberal of a position. But Zimmermans repeated post-acquittal run-ins with the law where his rage and aggression are central and undeniable themes have vindicated Horowitzs position that this case was far from clear-cut in terms of Zimmermans alleged self-defense. There was, in fact, ample reason to question Zimmermans account of events and the legal process needed to take its course.
This is not to say that Zimmermans version of events was untrue and his acquittal wrong. The defense did an excellent job in raising reasonable doubt, but some myopic conservatives were clearly too quick to assume Zimmermans innocence, ignoring an abundance of inculpatory evidence while focusing instead on exculpatory evidence. In many ways, their reactions mimicked those of radical leftists and race-baiters like Al Sharpton, who automatically assumed that Zimmerman was guilty regardless of the sufficiency of the evidence and ramped up an unassuageable campaign of lynch mob justice.
I don’t get what Liberman’s point is here. Whether Zimmerman is a nice guy or a jerk is irrelevant. The *only* thing that matters was whether or not he acted in legal self-defense the night he shot Martin. The cops at the scene thought he did, and a jury of his peers thought he did as well. The system worked as it was supposed to, and it rendered its decision.
“He is no hero to the right, regardless of how the left wants to change the story.”
True; while many defended his actions, nobody was holding him up as a role model for young men everywhere. He was designated as on the “conservative” side by a media that creates classes and assigns members to them; he was attacked for 1) owning a weapon, and 2) protecting property rights - both no-nos in the new world order.
Even conceding that GZ is a racist who “profiled” TM. Even conceding that he has “anger management problems”, and is violent, so what?
Even racists have a right to self-defense. Even violent racists have a right to protect themselves, and even their property.
The important question is “who attacked whom?”. A jury settled that under the law.
Had Martin just continued on to the apartment, rather than doubling back, none of this would have happened. I could care less if Zimmerman is a sinner or saint. . .but that day, he was assaulted by Martin and Martin paid the price, end of story. . .same deal with Michael Brown. . .thug life has its privileges AND its consequences.
I remember people on FR who called him a hero.
I can understand lauding his actions in terms of gun rights; there wasn’t much else to praise in him. In fact, we still don’t know a whole lot about him.
George Zimmerman is a mess, no question about it. But he has also been branded with criminal behavior when it was NOT criminal, and this was probably the starting position.
If you are as likely to be hung for being a wolf as being a sheep, then there is no greater cost for behaving like a wolf.
Criminal charges in the above cases were either dropped or never filed,
...
The most important part of the entire article.
A lot of FReepers seem to struggle with the whole concept of dumb vs criminal.
Shows you that America is still too weak, too frightened and too clueless to take on the cancer that is EVERYWHERE today - violent racist crime against whites.
When we still dwell on a guy like Zimmerman and analyze “should he have followed a punk in a neighborhood that had experienced crime” and what he has done since - all while we see blacks committing horrible violence on whites weekly, tells me we are still soft as a pillow.
I was hoping the hatred displayed towards white the last few years would wake people up. I guess we still have a lot more Mississippi Burnings, daily MSM Headlines that Whites are racist devils and Knockout Games to go.
“The “author” of this drivel, believes in the old, “it’s not the charges, it’s the seriousness in which they were made” that counts theory!”
and the concept: show me the man and i will show you the crime!!
Don't know, I wouldn't have gotten out of my van either. Of course in my neighborhood I'd have a pretty good idea where I was. However even if he did follow him, that's not illegal, and it's not clear to me it represented poor judgement. It does seem that's his only action open to criticism, and from what was presented doesn't seem to be to arise to criminality. I think the police and prosecutor had it right the first time, but if the special prosecutor was going to proceed on political grounds, a lesser charge would have made sense.
He went through a lot, and I’m sure it had an impact. But even if he had anger issues prior to the incident, the prosecutors couldn’t connect any dots.
The author has a rather distorted view of the facts.
But even if he had gotten very close to Martin, so what? It's no excuse for Martin to knock him down and start pounding his head into the pavement. Whether he followed Martin closely or as he said only for a short distance before turning around, he did not escalate the situation as some on this forum have suggested. Martin did so by ambushing Zimmerman.
If I start walking in a strange neighborhood that had seen frequent robberies/home invasions wearing a hoodie like many burglars, if someone starts following me I don't have the right to knock them down and bang their head into the concrete. The person following me didn't escalate the situation...I did by attacking the observer.
Ari Lieberman should stick to foreign affairs where he has some knowledge. When he ventures into domestic American affairs, he transitions to carrying the progressives’ water for them.
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