Walking to the convenient store for a snack is
an activity many teenagers often do. Trayvon Martin was one of these teens who
decided to grab a snack but unlike most teens, Trayvon never made it home. On February 26th Treyvon Martin was walking home from a convent store but was
stopped by George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain in Sanford, Florida.
Nobody is sure of exactly what happened but this encounter led to the shooting
death of 17 year old Treyvon Martin. When police arrived at the scene Martin
was pronounced dead, Zimmerman claimed that he had killed Martin in self
defense. Zimmerman had a bloody nose and wound on his head. Martin had no
weapons in his possession only a bag of skittles and an ice tea. When police
arrived on scene Zimmerman told them he shot Martin in self defense. Police
never arrested Zimmerman or even took him in for drug/alcohol screening which
is common practice by the department.
During the walk
Martin called his girlfriend, who told him to run, then heard him talking to
somebody right before she heard the phone drop. Treyvon Martin's girlfriend
tried to call back but never got an answer. Witnesses from the area say they
heard crying, then a gunshot, and then silence. When the arrived at the scene
they saw Zimmerman standing over Treyvon Martin's body. Zimmerman called 911 before
his encounter with Martin and was advised not to follow him even though he
thought Martin was up to no good. He obviously ignored the suggestion and
decided to take matters into his own hands. The situation sounds like Zimmerman
was following a suspicious suspect, Martin, in the neighborhood. Martin was
probably scared of the man following him and may have hit the man out of fear.
Zimmerman may have mistaken the contact as malicious and then shot
Martin.
I think this is a
very unfortunate "accident". Zimmerman was trying to do the right
thing by keeping his neighborhood safe but went to far by taking matters into
his own hands. He should have never approached Martin, but instead should have
waited for police to examine the situation. I think that there should have been
some form of formal punishment taken against Zimmerman. If a police officer
shot a defenseless teen dead, he/she would have faced formal punishment. The
fact that Zimmerman went up to a teen who was probably in fear of the man and
then shot him after a scuffle is not right. In Zimmerman's eyes this incident
may have been self defense but he actively put himself in a compromising
situation.
I think the
police kind of dropped the ball in this case. They should have investigated the
situation thoroughly. They should have contacted Martin's girlfriend and
questioned other witnesses. They should have also taken Zimmerman into custody
and tested him for drugs/alcohol and should have tried to piece together his
story. I don't think police should ever take somebody's word and not thoroughly
investigate a situation, let alone a situation in which someone is dead. The
Chief of Police in this town stepped down and Department of Justice is
reviewing the case. There were obviously some mistakes made in this
investigation. This is a very unfortunate case, many things should have gone
differently and maybe someone should have been held accountable for the death
of this young man.
I agree to an extent. I think based off of a lot of the reports that have been coming out about Zimmerman indicate that he is a bit of a paranoid person. There have been news outlets reporting that he has called police over 40 times this year to report suspicious looking people in the neighborhood. Having a neighborhood watch is never a bad thing, but the people who are in charge of an organization like that need to have their head on straight and understand that their job is to alert police and stay out of the way. THe fact that he took matters into his own hands, using deadly force, is unacceptable.
ReplyDeleteI read an article just a few minutes ago that retracted the "40 calls this year" statement. It said that the police gave incorrect dates and that actually Zimmerman made the 46 calls over a period of close to ten years.
DeleteI agree and find this to be a very unfortunate situation. It is hard to believe that the teen did not give Zimmerman any reason to be suspicious, but then again you point out there have been times where he is paranoid and over-reports incidents. If this is the case, the police should have done something about this or fired him, and because they didn't, the consequences took the life of what appears to be, an innocent young man.
ReplyDelete