Coito ergo sum wrote:There is no evidence for any of that. One, there was no neighborhood watch training that was disregarded by virtue of Z leaving his vehicle, or following Martin. None. If you have something to that effect, link to it or provide a source.
From the
pamphlet handed out by the Department of Justice:
Also:
The Palm Beach Post wrote:When the Retreat at Twin Lakes community told Sanford police it wanted to start a neighborhood watch, city volunteer program coordinator Wendy Dorival spoke to them in September 2011.
Her PowerPoint presentation, and a neighborhood watch manual the city makes available, both make clear: Don't confront.
"The philosophy is, 'No weapons. Don't confront. Call the police,' " Dorival said Wednesday.
**********
Excerpts from Neighborhood Watch manuals:
"What you will not do is get physically involved with any activity you report or apprehension of any suspicious persons. This is the job of the law enforcement agency." -- City of Sanford (where Trayvon Martin slaying occurred)
"Neighborhood Watch is an observe and report type of program. Neighborhood Watch members are encouraged not to stop and question people, but to observe and report their observations to the Sheriff's Office and a trained officer will respond and investigate the incident." -- Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office
"It should be emphasized to members that they do not possess police powers and they shall not carry weapons or pursue vehicles. They should also be cautioned to alert police or deputies when encountering strange activity. Members should never confront suspicious persons who could be armed and dangerous." -- National Sheriff's Association
http://www.palmbeachpost.com/news/crime ... 52704.html
Although it's unclear that the organization there was even chartered formally as a Neighborhood Watch program, from that same article.
Coito ergo sum wrote:There is no evidence supporting your assertion. Period.
Clearly, one will always say "more evidence may come in," but right now, there is no evidence what you just alleged he "disregarded."
There is, as shown above. You were simply unaware of it. But the DoJ saw fit to give that point emphasis by placing it in a blocked off section of its own page.
Coito ergo sum wrote:That takes the girlfriend's report too far. She doesn't know. She only knows that Martin said "why are you chasing me?" And, Zimmerman said "why are you in the neightborhood." She can't possibly know, based on what she said she heard, who "initiated" the confrontation.
Here is a portion of her interview with the local prosecutor:
MB Civic wrote:PROSECUTOR: I am sorry, Trayvon said he was not running because—-he’s not going to run he said because you could tell he was tired? How could you tell he was tired?
GIRLFRIEND: He was breathing hard.
PROSECUTOR: Real hard?
GIRLFRIEND: Real hard. And then he told me this guy was getting close! He told me the guy was getting real close to him. And the next I hear is, ‘Why are you following me for?’
PROSECUTOR: OK. Let me make sure I understand this so, Trayvon tells you the guy is getting closer to him and then you hear Trayvon saying something.
GIRLFRIEND: Yeah.
PROSECUTOR: And what do you hear Trayvon saying?
GIRLFRIEND: ‘Why are you following me for?’
PROSECUTOR: ‘Why are you following me for?’
GIRLFRIEND: Yeah.
PROSECUTOR: And then what happened?
GIRLFRIEND: I heard this man, like an old man say, ‘What are you doing around here?’
PROSECUTOR: OK, so you definitely could tell another voice that was not Trayvon and you heard this other voice say what?
GIRLFRIEND: ‘What are you doing around here?’
http://www.michaelbutler.com/blog/civic ... th-police/
Clearly, she's reporting that she could hear Zimmerman, and that Zimmerman was following Martin. Martin turned around, asked why he was being followed ... but according to Martin's girlfriend, Zimmerman was following Martin.
Coito ergo sum wrote:By side, what do you mean? There is the "Zimmerman is a murderer" side, and the "there is reasonable doubt as to whether Zimmerman is a murderer, or at least it isn't at all clear that he is a murderer," side. It seems you are on the latter side.
The way I've seen the discussion break down, one side thinks Zimmerman was a murderer, and one side doesn't.
I personally think that at the very least he was guilty of terrible judgement in pursuing a confrontation despite his training and the advice of the dispatcher. Whether his negligent judgement rises to the level of criminal negligence is for the jury to decide, because they will access facts in the case that we onlookers won't have.
Coito ergo sum wrote:Yes, but you're making a false equivalence. Me, FBM, etc., are not claiming Zimmerman is innocent. We're claiming the evidence is unclear or there is reasonable doubt. So, what's nonsensical or "more heat than light" about that? You appear to agree with that. The other side, the kiki, maiforpeace, etc. side, are stating very unequivocally that he is a murderer, and not only that, but a psycho, paranoid, gun-nut, among other things.
The misstatement you made above, for instance, which was didactic and not admissive of any uncertainty, while it was clearly wrong, gives me cause to question your other claims, just as I question those who disagree with you.
I'm not saying that your mistakes are on a par with those you listed from Mai, Kiki, and others, but the fact is you listed them already and they needed no further airing in my post. You've made good points on some of the fallacies being pandered, for whatever my opinion is worth here.
But clearly you missed doing something as basic as googling the handout the DoJ gives the Neighborhood Watch before you made a bald claim about its contents. What other statements made here, on both sides, are this baseless?
That was the point of my post, and I hope you don't take it personally, because it's not meant that way at all.