Will be interesting to see the make up of the jury. I think each side chooses 6 evenly although I am not sure in murder trials.
The public outcry by supporters of Trayvon Martin's family, for the arrest of George Zimmerman, has the public weighing a question that our country's legal system has already asked and answered: A suspect is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
The problem in this case, of course, is that the target of Trayvon supporters has admitted his role in the death of Martin, and that the Sanford Police, as a law enforcement agency, never felt a warrant for his arrest should be executed. So they didn't arrest him.
In any other town, for any other crime, that would equate to case closed. But the racial card has been played in this case, with Martin's supporters demanding Zimmerman's arrest, even if they have to resort to bullying
"and breaking the law".
Martin's younger supporters have already tried, for lack of a better word, what amounts to bullying the Sanford Police Department, by staging a protest movement in front of the PD—a movement that shut down police work at Sanford's official headquarters, according to
WESH News in Orlando.
That protest resulted in the entire law enforcement agency being forced to close their doors to the public at their official site, hindering others in the community from being served there.
What's next, a lynch mob?
But Sanford PD didn't use force against the protestors then, instead choosing to diffuse the potential controversy that they felt some were trying to create. So they moved their daily operations to City Hall and worked from there.
The protestors, also known as the "Dream Defenders" movement, however, also threatened to "break the law" if they have to in order to see Zimmerman get arrested, according to
WESH.
The Martin family attorney, Natalie Jackson, shockingly, supported the students' actions, saying "These students are beautiful; I have to tell you, they have the passion and determination to do what they did."
Martin's family says all they want is justice. Sanford Police say they gave it to them by not arresting a man they didn't feel was guilty of intentionally killing their loved one—or that it can't be proven that he did.
Many Americans who have experienced the death of a loved one want justice, too. But what kind of justice can a court give a family if the person who took their loved one's life wasn't in the wrong—or it can't be proven in a court of law?
Our court systems require that a burden of proof be met in order to convict someone of murder. Would Americans really want it any other way?
And our police departments require a burden of proof be met before a person is arrested for a crime. Otherwise, we have the Civil Rights issues all over again, right? And no one wants that.
And our prosecutors require that even if police suspect a person might be guilty of a crime, but they can't give enough evidence to prove it and gain a conviction, that they not waste taxpayer money-making an arrest--or trying a case that can't be won.
That's what Trayvon Martin's family and supporters don't seem to understand. They are hoping for something that just can't happen. And their supporters' actions to get that justice is proving to be anything but "just" when you consider their willingness to "break the law" if necessary.
Just what kind of warped justice is that?
Today it is being reported by CNN that the Grand Jury scheduled to hear testimony and case details about the night Trayvon Martin was shot and killed has been cancelled, and that
special prosecutor Angela Corey will decide if George Zimmerman should stand trial or not.
Some speculate that a personal request to Pres. Obama may be made for "justice" by Martin supporters if their media and protest efforts don't result in Zimmerman's arrest, or if the Justice Department can't influence the special prosecutor to agree to an arrest.
But that would be asking for more racial tensions than already exist in the case, giving the appearance that Pres. Obama shows favoritism to his race, even though the country's legal and law enforcement agencies felt an arrest was not warranted—or provable in a court of law.