Zimmerman explains what he saw on the 911 call, and the prosecution's witness confirmed that it was suspicious enough to warrant inquiry (a call to 911).Sean Hayden wrote:And you think that helps his case?
Sounds like a terrible nightmare for Martin. One that ended in him being shot to death.
What had Zimmerman seen Martin do prior to calling 911?
If a person is against Stand Your Ground, when Martin is out of eyeshot from Zimmerman, and when he is supposedly on his way to a relative's house with his skittles, wouldn't it be incumbent upon Martin to run away? He hadn't even reached a situation where he had been attacked. Without stand you're ground, even if you are attacked -- even if you have right of self defense -- you have to run away if it would be reasonably possible for you to do so. Here, Martin HAD ALREADY RUN AWAY. He was gone and had plenty of time to be probably half a kilometer at least given the time interval between Martin running (recorded on the 911 call) and the later conflict occurring.
For those who are against stand your ground, they ought to be holding Martin to the requirement of running away, shouldn't they?