Trayvon Martin Case.... the plot thickens

  • Thread starter Thread starter New Editor
  • Start date Start date
LOL @ Treyvon's mom saying she thinks his death was an accident and quickly backing down.

Happens around 4 minutes in:


^^LOL @ The lawyer's change in body language.

Now she says she means their meeting was an accident:
 


VIBE;4275893 said:
Supposedly he considers himself Hispanic on his voting registration and DL, so he's Hispanic.

he considered himself white... WHEN THE POLICE CAME. The whole reason why he was labeled white was because of the police report...
 
kingblaze84;4278160 said:
Glad Zimmerman got charged with murder today......big props to the special prosecutor, the KKK doesn't have as strong a hold on Florida as I thought. There better be a conviction though......

shaq-face.jpg
 
dailykos.com/story/2012/04/13/1083255/-George-Zimmerman-s-MySpace-sign-on-was-datniggytb-A-nickname-not-a-slur-source-claims

George Zimmerman's MySpace sign-on was 'datniggytb.' A nickname, not a slur, source claims

After first denying that the account was his, a family member says the MySpace account "datniggytb" actually was George Zimmerman's, but that this wasn't a racist reference.

“That was an old nickname his black friends gave him,” the Zimmerman family member said. “He didn’t have an issue with the profile name.”

The family member, according to a story in the right-wing Daily Caller, also said "tb" did not refer to Trayvon Benjamin, the first and middle name of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed teenager Zimmerman shot and killed Feb. 26. The initials stand for "Tugboat," another nickname the family member said friends gave Zimmerman because of his chunky build. The editor who wrote the story did not explain the rather strange reasoning behind asking if a years-old account presumably initiated before Zimmerman ever heard of Martin included the boy's initials.

At first, in two phone calls, the source denied that the MySpace account was Zimmerman's:

“All I can tell you is that it didn’t come from him. He doesn’t have a MySpace account. He never has. Anything personal online like that was shut down already … I just talked to George. It’s not him.”

In a third call, the tune was changed. Zimmerman, the source said, had forgotten about that account. But how does one forget about something so recently logged into? The last time the account was used was April 11, the day before Zimmerman was arrested and charged with second-degree murder. It has now been deleted.

Meanwhile, a Miami-Dade Fire Rescue captain, Brian Beckmann, is under investigation for his racist remarks on a Facebook page. The entry has been deleted, but not before being screen-captured:

"Listening to Prosecutor Corey blow herself and her staff for five minutes before pre-passing judgment on George Zimmerman," it read.

"The state seeks reelection again, truth aside. I and my coworkers could rewrite the book on whether our urban youths are victims of racist profiling or products of their failed, shitbag, ignorant, pathetic, welfare dependent excuses for parents, but like Mrs. Corey, we speak only the truth. They're just misunderstood little church going angels and the ghetto hoodie look doesn't have anything to do with why people wonder if they're about to get jacked by a thug."

It's one thing to sit around discussing politics with your white nationalist buddies, quite another to post the resulting sewage on your Facebook page. Is this the kind of fellow we want responding to emergency calls made by folks like Trayvon's parents, who are about as close to this sleazebag's description as Newt Gingrich is to the presidency? What a pathetic representative of the forces that are meant to protect us.

A spokesman for the department said that Beckmann had worked there since 1997 and that the "post on his personal Facebook page is being investigated by Miami-Dade fire rescue."
 
Last edited:
Yo ya think she´s getting some loot behind the scenes from that niggas pops.Why would she say there meeting was an accident.Sounds like she´s getting that money under the table.
 
thegrio.com/specials/trayvon-martin/richard-land-southern-baptist-convention-leader-criticizes-black-leaders-support-for-trayvon-martin.php

Richard Land, Southern Baptist Convention leader, criticizes black leaders' support for Trayvon Martin

NASHVILLE, Tennessee (AP) -- The head of the Southern Baptist Convention's public policy arm condemns the response of many black leaders to the Trayvon Martin case as "shameful." Some black pastors within the nation's largest Protestant denomination say Richard Land's comments are setting back an effort to broaden the faith's appeal beyond its traditional white, Southern base.

Land says he stands by his assertion that President Barack Obama "poured gasoline on the racialist fires" when he addressed Martin's slaying and that Obama, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and the Rev. Al Sharpton have used the case "to try to gin up the black vote for an African American president who is in deep, deep, deep trouble for re-election."

Land, who is white, said in an interview he has no regrets about his remarks. He said he understands why the case has touched a nerve among black leaders, but he also defended the idea that people are justified in seeing young black men as threatening: A black man is "statistically more likely to do you harm than a white man."

"Is it tragic that people react that way? Yes. Is it unfair? Yes? But it is understandable," he said
.

The comments come as the Southern Baptist Convention is trying hard to diversify its membership and distance itself from a past that includes support of slavery and segregation.

Last year, the denomination for the first time elected a black pastor to its No. 2 position of first vice president, and the Rev. Fred Luter is expected to become the first black president of the Southern Baptist Convention at this year's annual meeting in June.

When asked about the concern that Land's comments hurt the effort to attract non-white members, Luter said, "It doesn't help. That's for sure."

While SBC presidents are elected for one-year terms, as the head of the SBC's Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission for 23 years, the outspoken Land is arguably the most powerful person in the denomination and certainly its most visible spokesman.

"I think his (Land's) statements will reverse any gains from the rightful election of Fred Luter," said the Rev. Dwight McKissic, a black pastor at the SBC-affiliated Cornerstone Baptist Church is Arlington, Texas.

McKissic said he plans to submit a resolution at the SBC's annual meeting asking the convention to repudiate Land's remarks.

"If they don't, we're back to where we were 50 years ago," he said.

Land counters that he has been working for racial reconciliation for his entire ministry.

He was one of the chief architects of a 1995 resolution by the Southern Baptists apologizing for their role in supporting slavery and racism. Since that resolution, black membership in the SBC has tripled, Land said, going from about 350,000 in 1995 to about 1 million today.

While he recognizes that his comments may hurt black membership within the SBC, he said he was not setting back the quest for racial reconciliation.

"Part of racial reconciliation is being able to speak the truth in love without being called a racist and without having to bow down to the god of political correctness," he said.

Land told The Associated Press that he has also criticized white religious leaders, including Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell, when they behaved in ways he considered irresponsible.

And he said he thinks McKissic's resolution will fail.

"I have no doubt, based on the emails I have received, that a vast majority of Southern Baptists agree with me," he said.

Land made the comments about Sharpton, Jackson and Obama during his weekly radio show. His broader point was that there has been a rush to judgment, with many people convinced that shooter George Zimmerman is guilty even before he goes to trial.

Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, says he was defending himself when he fatally shot the 17-year-old Martin during a scuffle.

Martin was unarmed as he walked from a convenience store, and the case has become a racial flashpoint with protesters speculating that Zimmerman singled out Martin because he was black.

Zimmerman, who has a white father and a Hispanic mother, was charged with second-degree murder on Wednesday by a special prosecutor assigned to the case. The charges came after weeks of protests around the country.

 
“Race Matters” In Stand Your Ground Law: Black Woman Serving Time For Letting Off Warning Shot (Against Abusive Husband) [Video]

Stand Your Ground is back in the spotlight in Jacksonville.

A local woman is behind bars, looking at 20 years in prison, but her family said she never should have been arrested in the first place.

“She did what she had to do to live, and I believe if she didn’t do that, my sister wouldn’t be sitting in jail today, she would be sitting in a coffin,” said Helena Jenkins, Marissa Alexander’s sister.

While Jenkins fights to get her out of jail, she realizes it could have been worse.

Marissa Alexander was convicted on three counts of aggravated assault after firing a warning shot at her ex-husband inside their home in 2010.

“No one was harmed, and it did what it was supposed to do,” said Jenkins.

Alexander had already taken out a protective order against her ex-husband earlier that year when he was arrested for physically abusing her.

So when a fight started in their master bathroom, Alexander told police she feared for her life.

According to court documents she ran to the garage to get her registered handgun.

But instead of leaving, she returned to the kitchen and fired a single shot into the ceiling with her ex-husband and his two small children in the room.

“There wasn’t a way for her to leave out of the house,” Jenkins said.

“There is no duty to retreat. Even though she did try to leave, there is no duty to retreat,” said Marissa’s first husband, Lincoln Alexander Jr.

Alexander Jr. said she confided in him about the physical abuse in her second marriage, and how she felt she had no other choice that day but to fire her gun.

“She felt like she had the right to stand her ground,” he said.

Alexander’s attorney filed a Stand Your Ground motion before the trial, but the judge dismissed the defense.

“The defendant had split seconds to decide if she was in fear for her life and ultimately the judge found that there were other things she could have done like leave the residence through a front door or a back door,” said defense attorney Jesse Dreicer.

Dreicer did not work on her case, but said under Florida law, after Stand Your Ground was dismissed and she was convicted, Alexander is looking at a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years.

“The judge has no discretion to look into what she might have been thinking,” he said.

In a phone interview, Assistant State Attorney Nick Lake said the state offered Alexander a plea deal, but she refused.

Lake said after her trial, a jury of her peers decided she did not have the right to react to domestic violence, with her own act of domestic violence.

“To this day she is being punished for considering the life of somebody who didn’t consider hers,” said Jenkins.

Alexander’s pre-sentencing hearing is on Monday, April 23.

Her lawyer is asking for a retrial.

link to story>http://www.loop21.com/life/marissa-alexander-stand-your-ground-al-sharpton

 

Members online

Trending content

Thread statistics

Created
-,
Last reply from
-,
Replies
1,094
Views
1
Back
Top
Menu
Your profile
Post thread…