June 19, 2013

Sanford police chief fired in wake of Trayvon Martin case

39562706b0175977279bd3f81d952c14 Sanford police chief fired in wake of Trayvon Martin case
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: Martin family lawyer: “We’ve continued to move closer to justice”
City manager cites “escalating ” in
The former police chief drew criticism for not charging
911 tapes show Trayvon Martin’s father did not know of his son’s fate the next day

() — Sanford, Florida, Police Lee, who drew criticism for his department’s actions in the Trayvon Martin case, was fired Wednesday.

“After much thoughtful discussion and deep consideration for the issues facing the city of Sanford, I have determined the police chief needs to have the trust and respect of the elected officials and the confidence of the entire community,” City Manager Norton Bonaparte said in a .

“We need to move forward with a police chief that all the citizens of Sanford can support. I have come to this decision in light of the escalating divisiveness that has taken hold of the city.”

Lee will receive a three-month severance and a week’s salary in addition to any earned time off.

As a search for Lee’s replacement is carried out, interim Chief Richard W. Myers will remain on the job.

Late Wednesday night, representatives of the Martin family said they “respected” the city manager’s decision.

“It’s important that we really believe that, as all of this has unfolded, we’ve continued to move closer to justice,” said family attorney Daryl Parks.

Timeline of events in Trayvon Martin case

Lee had submitted a in April that said he was stepping down, but voted not to accept it.

In March, he had said he was stepping down temporarily in the wake of the public furor over the failure of the police to arrest George Zimmerman, the volunteer who has said his shooting of Martin on February 26 was an act of self-defense.

Also Wednesday, the Sheriff’s Office released 911 tapes of calls placed the morning after the shooting, when police had still not identified the 17-year–old victim. He was unarmed and carrying no identification when he was shot while walking to his father’s girlfriend’s house after picking up some snacks at a nearby store.

In the first call, Trayvon Martin’s father, Tracy Martin, calls police at 8:39 a.m. asking to file a missing persons report, which typically would not be accepted until 24 hours after a person has been discovered missing. “It hasn’t really been 24 hours,” he tells the police dispatcher. “But I’m from Miami and my son’s up here with me … he don’t know anybody up here.”

Documents shed light of Trayvon Martin killing

In the return call, placed nine minutes later, the dispatcher tells the victim’s father that an officer is en route to where he was staying.

Lee had said Zimmerman was not charged in the shooting because there were no grounds to disprove his account of the events — that Martin had attacked him. Since then, Zimmerman has been arrested and charged with second-degree murder.

The incident sparked a national debate as to whether the shooting was an act of racial profiling by Zimmerman and about the state’s “stand-your-ground” law.

Jailhouse calls show Zimmerman, wife talking in code

During an appearance at the National Association of Black Journalists convention in New Orleans, Martin’s mother, Sybrina Fulton, said the family has been heartened by the response from the community.

“It’s just nice to see so many people that support us, so many people that walk up to us just to give us a hug. Just to tell us that they support us,” she said. “It does the heart good. Yes, we still are hurting. We just had to go through a Mother’s Day and a Father’s Day and it hurts. It just hurts.”

Zimmerman lawyer seeks new bond hearing

b10a35794c99cb0b5ae84f4832530f7f Zimmerman lawyer seeks new bond hearing

(Phatforums News / ) — The lawyer for George Zimmerman, the Florida volunteer charged with the murder of teen Trayvon Martin, filed a motion Monday for a new bond hearing.

On the website gzlegalcase.com, Zimmerman lawyer says his client allowed his to be misstated to the court, but in all other ways, he has been forthright and cooperative.

Zimmerman’s bond was revoked Friday by Kenneth Lester, who ordered Zimmerman back to jail after the state accused him and his wife of lying about their financial assets so Zimmerman could obtain a lower bond.

Zimmerman, 28, surrendered to police Sunday and was booked into jail, where he is being held without bail on a second-degree stemming from Martin’s shooting death in February. Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty, claiming he acted in self-defense against Martin, 17, after the two got into a fight in the Orlando suburb of Sanford.

The Sheriff’s Department says Zimmerman is being segregated from the general jail population of nearly 1,400 inmates because of the high profile nature of the case. His cell, which is designed for two inmates, is about 67 square feet. He has no access to TV, but can read books and magazines from the jail library. He’ll also receive three hours of recreation time a week.

The state had asked for Zimmerman’s bond to be revoked after submitting transcripts of conversations Zimmerman had with his wife, Shellie, while he was initially jailed. The transcripts revealed that they talked about having access to at least $135,000 in Zimmerman had raised over the Internet from those sympathetic to his case.

O’Mara laid out the case for a new bond hearing on the website, saying Zimmerman had been cooperative with authorities. “He has twice surrendered himself to law enforcement when asked to do so, and this should demonstrate that Mr. Zimmerman is not a flight risk,” the site said. “He has also complied with all conditions of his release, including curfew, keeping in touch with his supervising officers, and maintaining his GPS monitoring.”

The site said the audio recordings of Zimmerman’s phone conversations while in jail “make it clear that Zimmerman knew a significant sum had been raised by his original fundraising website. We feel the failure to disclose these funds was caused by fear, mistrust and confusion. The gravity of this mistake has been distinctly illustrated, and Mr. Zimmerman understands that this mistake has undermined his credibility, which he will have to work to repair.”

According to the site, Zimmerman should be credited for disclosing the existence of the funds to his attorney, five days after the bond hearing. The statement says the defense lawyers told the court and the ’s Office and the money was transferred to the Legal Defense Fund, which is independently managed.

The site says that of the $204,000 raised by the fund, about $150,000 was transferred to the Legal Defense Fund. Zimmerman used about $30,000 for while he had been in hiding.

Martin attorney: Zimmerman misled court about money

4d5bd2cb68617233452f8eea503ce8ef Martin attorney: Zimmerman misled court about money
Martin attorney: Revoke Zimmerman’s bond
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Mark O’ says he learned about the money on Wednesday
The revelation came as the lawyer was shutting down Zimmerman’s Internet presence
“The lying has already begun,” Trayvon Martin said
Zimmerman is charged with second-degree murder in the death of Trayvon Martin

() — The attorney for Trayvon Martin’s family says George Zimmerman should be back in jail because he failed to tell a judge he had $204,000 during a recent bond hearing.

“They tried to portray themselves as indigent that they did not have any money,” said Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump. “We think the court should revoke his bond immediately, and he should be held accountable for misleading the court.”

Zimmerman, who is charged with second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of unarmed 17-year-old Martin, has been given about $204,000 from supporters his lawyer Mark O’Mara said Thursday.

The Zimmerman received will be discussed Friday at a court hearing in Florida, O’Mara said.

O’Mara told CNN’s “AC360″ that Zimmerman told him Wednesday of the donations as they were trying to shut down his Internet presence to avoid concerns about possible impersonators and problems with his and accounts.

“He asked me what to do with his PayPal accounts, and I asked him what he was talking about,” O’Mara told . “He said those were the accounts that had the money from the website he had. And there was about … $204,000 that had come in to date.”

O’Mara had said earlier this month that he believed Zimmerman had no money. “I think he’s indigent for costs,” he said, adding that Zimmerman’s had few assets.

Zimmerman, 28, was released Monday on $150,000 bail, 10% of which his family put up to secure his release. He is accused in the February 26 death of Martin, who was African-American.

Critics have accused Zimmerman of racially profiling Martin and unjustly killing him. Zimmerman said he shot Martin in self-defense.

Asked whether knowledge of the money might have made a difference to Judge Kenneth Lester Jr., who presided at Zimmerman’s bond hearing, O’Mara said, “It might have.”

O’Mara continued, “I’m certainly going to disclose it to the court tomorrow — coincidentally, we have a hearing.”

The hearing was originally scheduled to discuss issues about the unsealing of Zimmerman’s criminal file, but the donations could overshadow that issue.

Crump said Zimmerman’s failure to reveal that he had the money shows that he is being dishonest.

“If his testimony at the bond hearing is any indication of what is to come, then the lying has already begun,” Crump said.

O’Mara said he was prepared to “deal with any fallout,” but predicted Lester would not feel misled. “I told him what I knew at the time, which was exactly what I was aware of.”

The money has been placed in a secure account since O’Mara learned about it, he said, adding, “Nobody’s touching it until we figure out how to handle it.”

But criminal defense attorney Mark Geragos said Lester might not react benignly. “I know a lot of judges who would remand the guy back into custody immediately,” he said. “If you’ve got more money stashed in an account and you could just pay the bond and be gone, that gives a lot of judges concern.”

Though the account has been closed, O’Mara said he intends to open a legal defense fund for Zimmerman. “I’ve had dozens, hundreds actually, of people wanting to donate,” he said.

O’Mara, who said he charges $400 per hour for family law cases, estimated Zimmerman’s defense costs could reach $1 million. “You can really go through a lot of money on a case like this, with the intensity of it,” he said.

Although details of the shooting remain murky, it is known that Martin ventured out from the Sanford home of his father’s fiancee and went to a nearby convenience store, where he bought a bag of candy and an iced tea. On his way back, he had a confrontation with Zimmerman, who shot him.

Zimmerman had called 911 to complain about a suspicious person in the neighborhood, according to authorities.

In the call, Zimmerman said he was following Martin after the teen started to run, prompting the dispatcher to tell him, “We don’t need you to do that.” Zimmerman pursued Martin anyway but then said he lost sight of him.

According to an Orlando Sentinel story later confirmed by , Zimmerman told authorities that after he briefly lost track of Martin, the teen approached him. After the two exchanged words, Zimmerman said, he reached for his cell phone, and then Martin punched him in the nose. Zimmerman said Martin pinned him to the ground and began slamming his head onto the sidewalk, leading to the shooting.

Police have said Zimmerman was not immediately charged because there was no evidence to disprove his account that he’d acted in self-defense. A police report indicated he was bleeding from the nose and the back of his head.

Florida city commission rejects police chief’s resignation in Trayvon Martin case

39562706b0175977279bd3f81d952c14 Florida city commission rejects police chiefs resignation in Trayvon Martin case
Officials reject top cop resignation
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

NEW: Zimmerman is “doing well,” “feeling much better than being in” jail, his lawyer says
NEW: He is “on his own” with no special protection, shuttling between locations, he adds
The city ’s offer to resign was rejected Monday by Sanford city commissioners
Zimmerman pleaded not guilty Monday in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in Sanford

() — City commissioners in Sanford, Florida, voted Monday to reject the proposed resignation of their embattled police chief, who has been under fire for the handling of the probe into Trayvon Martin’s death in February.

Lee has been on paid leave since March 22, a day after the commission expressed a in him because of the case. He remains so after the commission’s decision, with . Darren Scott continuing to serve as acting chief.

George Zimmerman, who has said he killed the 17-year-old Martin in self-defense, was not arrested after being questioned by police the night of the shooting. Arrested weeks later after a special prosecutor was assigned to the case, he was released from jail early Monday and hours later entered a not .

Earlier Monday, the city announced in a statement that a separation agreement had been reached with Lee to resign. If it was approved by the City Commission, it would have taken effect at midnight.

But by a 3-2 vote, the commission opted not to accept the proposed deal, which would have permanently dismissed Lee from the job and given him a severance package. Two commissioners had questioned the of Lee losing his job, while Mayor Jeff Triplett said he preferred to wait possibly several months for the results of an investigation into Lee and his department.

“I’m not ready to have him come back and run the Police Department, but I don’t know if I’m ready for this either,” Triplett said, who sided with the majority to reject the resignation.

, a lawyer for Martin’s family, criticized the commission for not letting Lee step down.

“Sanford residents deserve quality leadership in law enforcement who will handle investigations fairly for all people,” he said. “If Chief Bill Lee recognized that his resignation would help start the healing process in Sanford, city leadership should have accepted it in an effort to move the city forward.”

City Manager Norton N. Bonaparte told CNN that “moving the city forward” is a priority, and something that he hoped might have been expedited by making Lee’s departure final.

During Monday’s meeting, Bonaparte explained that he and Lee had “agreed to” the resignation, after Lee “decided that he can no longer serve as police chief.”

But Randy Jones, a commissioner, pointed to other parts of the agreement stating Lee was “willing, ready and able” to remain on as chief, hadn’t been found to have done anything wrong and was resigning on Bonaparte’s “recommendation.”

Added Patty Mahany, another commissioner supportive of Lee, “What did the chief do wrong? I mean, tell us.”

Bonaparte said an interim chief — in place of Scott, the current acting chief — could be in place early next week.

The case has drawn intense media attention, with Sanford residents and many civil rights leaders from outside central Florida criticizing the Police Department for not immediately arresting Zimmerman, 28, after he shot the unarmed teenager.

HLN: Zimmerman wife talks publicly for the first time

Zimmerman is now free and awaiting trial, after making bail and leaving the John E. Polk Correctional Facility in Sanford at 12:05 a.m. Monday.

“He’s doing well. He’s very glad to be out, trying to get settled in, still worried about his safety … talking to his family and feeling much better than being in (jail),” his lawyer told CNN later Monday.

Also Monday, O’Mara filed documents in court in which Zimmerman entered a written not guilty plea and waived the right to appear at a formal arraignment.

Zimmerman is now “on his own” with no police protection or security detail, O’Mara said, shuttling to and from several secret locations in light of threats against him and his family. He wore a bulletproof vest while leaving the jail accompanied by Michael Smith, the owner of Magic Bail Bonds.

“There’s been a lot of chatter lately about his release, and that’s concerning to him and us,” said O’Mara.

Follow the timeline of case

The ’s Office said that Zimmerman had been fitted with a GPS monitoring device, allowing authorities to track his location.

Zimmerman’s release came as something of a surprise. Over the weekend, his lawyer had said Zimmerman might remain behind bars until the middle of this week as his team worked to secure funds to meet the $150,000 bail set last Friday.

With the 10% cash payment customarily made to secure bond, Zimmerman’s family needed $15,000 for him to make bail.

Martin’s family wasn’t pleased by news of Zimmerman’s release, said one of their attorneys, Daryl Parks.

“It’s tough for them to see their son’s killer walk free again,” he said.

The case has riveted the nation and sparked intense discussions about race, gun control and “stand your ground” laws, which make it legal for people to use deadly force when they feel a reasonable threat of death or serious injury.

Florida to review ‘stand your ground’ law

Although details of the shooting remain murky, what is known is that Martin ventured out on February 26 from the home of his father’s fiancee in Sanford and went to a nearby convenience store, where he bought a bag of Skittles and an Arizona Iced Tea.

After spotting him, ZImmerman called 911 to complain about a “suspicious” person in the neighborhood. In the call, the neighborhood watch volunteer said he followed Martin after the teen started to run, prompting the dispatcher to tell him, “We don’t need you to do that.”

Zimmerman claims the unarmed teen attacked him, before he fired his gun. Martin’s supporters say Zimmerman targeted Martin because he was black.

On Friday, Zimmerman’s father testified that when he saw his son the day after the shooting, he was wearing a protective cover over his nose, his face was swollen, and he had two vertical gashes on his head.

Martin’s family and the special prosecutor appointed to investigate the case have rejected Zimmerman’s self-defense claim, saying they believe Zimmerman disobeyed the police dispatcher who advised him to stop following Martin, racially profiled him and unjustly killed him.

The case has also shined a hot spotlight on the city of Sanford, and particularly interracial relations in the community.

Mahany, for one, said Monday that reports of gaping rifts in Sanford along racial lines have been vastly overstated, adding, “I don’t think Sanford needs healing.”

And Jones, the other dissenting commissioner, blamed outsiders for fanning the flames.

“It is not Sanford residents who created this firestorm,” he said. “It was brought in from the outside. We all know it.”

Trayvon Martin: George Zimmerman released on bail

8e5b28e379987e4425bda387a5a66362 Trayvon Martin: George Zimmerman released on bail

( News / BBC News) — George Zimmerman has been released from prison on bail as he awaits trial for the killing of Trayvon Martin.

The volunteer left the jail late Sunday night on a $150,000 (£93,000) bond.

He is set to go on trial on charges for the fatal shooting of unarmed black teenager on 26 February.

He claims he was acting in self-defense, but the case sparked an in the US.

Mr Zimmerman was driven away from the prison and is expected to stay at a .

At his bail hearing last week, the judge said Mr Zimmerman must inform police of his location every three days and must adhere to a curfew between the hours of 19:00 and 06:00.

Key dates in the Martin case

26 February: Trayvon Martin is fatally shot and police do not arrest the shooter, George Zimmerman
16 March: Recordings of 911 calls made before the shooting are released to Martin’s parents, they demand for Mr Zimmerman’s arrest
22 March: Lee “temporarily” steps down and Seminole County Norman Wolfinger stands aside from the investigation amid mounting calls for the prosecution of Mr Zimmerman
23 March: US President identifies with the Martin family and says if he had a son he would have looked like Trayvon Martin
10 April: Mr Zimmerman’s lawyers withdraw as his counsel and say they lost contact with him two days earlier
11 April: George Zimmerman taken into custody and charged with second-degree murder
23 April: George Zimmerman released on $150,000 bail

Four Stand Your Ground case studies

He will also be tracked electronically and forbidden from carrying firearms, drinking alcohol, or contacting the victim’s family personally or through an intermediary.

Trayvon ‘profiled’

In court on Friday, Mr Zimmerman apologized to Trayvon’s parents, saying he did not realize how old the 17-year old was or that he was unarmed.

The family’s lawyer Benjamin Crump said the teenager’s parents were “devastated” that Mr Zimmerman would be freed on bail.

The case sparked protests across the United States calling for the arrest of Mr Zimmerman and “justice” for Trayvon Martin.

Florida police did not arrest him for six weeks after the shooting because under Florida law, the use of lethal force is allowed if a person feels seriously under threat.

According to an affidavit of probable cause released by the prosecutor’s office when charges were brought, Trayvon Martin was walking home from a local shop carrying a bag of sweets and a can of iced tea when he was “profiled” by Mr Zimmerman.

The document notes that Martin was unarmed but Mr Zimmerman assumed he was a criminal.

The neighborhood watch volunteer had told a police dispatcher he thought Martin, who was wearing a hooded sweatshirt, looked suspicious.

Mr Zimmerman was advised by the police dispatcher not to go after the young man. But minutes later a confrontation ensued, leading to the fatal shooting.

Zimmerman apologizes as judge sets $150,000 bond

80afb887a0217290788b1b84c17f951b Zimmerman apologizes as judge sets $150,000 bond

: I am sorry
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Investigator says authorities don’t know who started fight that led to death
Defendant’s father says his son’s face was swollen and had gashes the next day
Attorneys for Trayvon Martin’s family call apology “disingenuous”
George Zimmerman tells the teen’s family he is sorry for what happened

Sanford, Florida (CNN) — George Zimmerman apologized Friday to the family of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed African-American teen that he shot in a confrontation that riveted a nation and sparked intense discussions about race, racial profiling and .

Zimmerman spoke moments before a Florida judge set a $150,000 bond that will let him get out of jail while he awaits trial.

“I wanted to say I am sorry for the loss of your son,” Zimmerman said in an unusual appeal directly to Martin’s family before he testified in the Courthouse in Sanford. “I thought he was a little bit younger than I was, and I did not know if he was armed or not.”

Zimmerman’s attorney, Mark O’, said after the hearing that his client was responding to an interview in which Martin’s mother, Sybrina Fulton, said she wanted to hear from the man who shot her son.

“He didn’t want to defend himself, he didn’t want to discuss the facts of the case. He heard the request of the family, and he wanted to respond to it,” O’Mara said, adding that an attempt to apologize to the family in private was rebuffed.

Attorneys for Martin’s family, however, called the apology a self-serving act by a man facing a life prison sentence if convicted of the second-degree against him.

“This was the most disingenuous, insulting thing I’ve ever seen,” said Martin family attorney Natalie Jackson.

Martin’s parents were “completely devastated” over the decision to allow Zimmerman to post bond and eventually go free, attorney said.

Prosecutors had asked that Zimmerman remain in jail without bond or that Judge Kenneth R. Lester Jr. set bond at $1 million — an amount O’Mara said the family would be unable to handle.

Assistant Bernie de la Rionda said Zimmerman’s prior run-ins with a police officer and a woman who named him in a domestic violence injunction show that he is violent and a threat to the community.

Lester, however, described the incidents as “run of the mill” and “somewhat mild” in approving O’Mara’s request for bond.

With the 10% cash payment customarily made to secure bond, Zimmerman could be freed with $15,000 from his family, attorneys said.

He will likely remain in jail for at least a couple of days while his attorneys and authorities work out terms of his release, which also include electronic monitoring and other restrictions, O’Mara said.

The judge told O’Mara to talk to authorities about his request to allow Zimmerman to leave Florida while awaiting trial. O’Mara said he is concerned about threats to Zimmerman’s safety, as well as that of his family.

De la Rionda said no decision has been made on whether to allow Zimmerman to leave the state.

The decision to grant Zimmerman bond followed a hearing in which his wife and parents testified that he was a caring, nonviolent man.

“I know that he is very protective of people, very protective of homeless people and also of children,” Gladys Zimmerman testified by telephone.

She said her son helped organize a campaign to “get justice” for a homeless man who had been beaten in Sanford, where he lived and where the shooting of Martin took place.

He also ventured into a dangerous Orlando neighborhood twice a week to mentor a 14-year-old African-American boy, his mother said. She testified that she begged him not to go because of the danger.

“He said, ‘Mom, if I don’t go, they don’t have nobody,’ ” she said.

HLN: Zimmerman wife talks publicly for the first time

Zimmerman’s father, Robert Zimmerman Sr., testified that his son is not a violent man despite previous incidents discussed by de la Rionda during the hearing, including a scuffle with a police officer and a dispute with a woman.

“I’ve never known him to be violent at all unless he was provoked, and then he would turn the other cheek,” Robert Zimmerman testified.

According to authorities, Zimmerman has said he killed Martin in self-defense after the teenager accosted him, knocking him to the ground and bashing his head against the concrete.

Zimmerman’s father testified Friday that when he saw his son the day after Martin’s shooting, he was wearing a protective cover over his nose, his face was swollen, and he had two vertical gashes on his head. He also reportedly suffered a broken nose.

Timeline of case

Martin’s family and the appointed to investigate the case have rejected that argument, saying they believe Zimmerman disobeyed the instructions of a police dispatcher to stop following Martin, racially profiled him and unjustly killed him.

Although details of the shooting remain murky, what is known is that Martin ventured out from the home of his father’s in Sanford and went to a nearby convenience store, where he bought a bag of and an Arizona Iced Tea.

On his way back, he had a confrontation with Zimmerman, who shot him.

Zimmerman had called 911 to complain about a suspicious person in the neighborhood, according to authorities.

In the call, Zimmerman said he was following Martin after the teen started to run, prompting the dispatcher to tell him, “We don’t need you to do that.” Zimmerman pursued Martin anyway.

After briefly losing track of the teen, Zimmerman told authorities the teen approached him and the two exchanged words. Zimmerman said he reached for his cell phone, then Martin punched him in the nose. Zimmerman said Martin pinned him down and began slamming his head onto the sidewalk, leading to the shooting.

Florida to review ‘stand your ground’ law

Police have said Zimmerman was not immediately charged because there was no evidence to disprove his account that he had acted in self-defense. A police report indicated he was bleeding from the nose and the back of his head.

In Friday’s hearing, an investigator for special prosecutor Angela Corey’s office said authorities have no evidence showing who started the altercation that led to Martin’s death.

“Do I know? No,” investigator Dale Gilbreath said when asked if he knew who started the fight.

He said wounds on the back of Zimmerman’s head were consistent with his skull being struck with something harder than his skull, and said under questioning from O’Mara that the object could have been a concrete sidewalk.

But he said evidence in the case is not consistent with Zimmerman’s account that he was able to move away from the sidewalk just before being shot.

Martin was shot once in the chest at close range, Gilbreath said.

De la Rionda declined to comment on most of Friday’s proceedings, including Zimmerman’s testimony. But he said there’s more to come when the case comes to trial.

“We obviously have evidence we feel we can go forward with,” he said. “We did not put our entire case on today.”

Crump said Martin’s father, , weeped through much of Friday hearing, and the family was distraught at the prospect of Zimmerman being able to reunite with his family.

“They pray that his freedom is only temporary, because the pain he has caused this family is going to be permanent,” Crump said.

Judge to decide if George Zimmerman should be granted bail

d2c9ccc48d6b2ffbd7d5a634af346789 Judge to decide if George Zimmerman should be granted bail

, Fla. (AP) – The volunteer charged with killing Trayvon Martin is asking a to let him out of jail while he awaits trial, and say he stands a of being granted bail at the hearing Friday.

’s attorney will make the request at the hearing at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center. Two questions likely to be at the center of the proceeding are whether he would be allowed out of the country and how he would remain safe.

Family members of Zimmerman’s are expected to testify by phone at the hearing.

Legal experts say factors in Zimmerman’s favor include that he has ties to the local community and that he doesn’t appear to be a since he turned in voluntarily after second-degree murder charges were filed against him last week. He also has never been convicted of a crime, which would indicate he doesn’t pose a threat to society.

“Although it’s not routine for people charged with murder to get bond, they do get bond, and I think there is an excellent argument to be made in his specific case for him to be released on bond,” said Randy McClean, who practices in Seminole County, about 15 miles northeast of Orlando.

A spokeswoman for special prosecutor Angela Corey’s office said Thursday she wouldn’t comment on whether Corey would object to Zimmerman being released on bond.

Defense attorney Mark O’Mara indicated he would ask that Zimmerman be allowed to leave the area, if he is granted bond, because of concerns about his safety. Circuit Judge Kenneth Lester was assigned the case Wednesday after a previous judge recused herself because of a potential .

Trayvon Martin was talking on his cell phone when he was shot and killed in February.

“Normally, the conditions are that you stay local. I think that is going to be difficult,” O’Mara said in an interview. “I think nobody would deny the fact that if George Zimmerman were walking down the street today, he would be at risk. That is a reality.”

O’Mara has said he would prefer that Zimmerman be released so he can assist in building a defense case.

The judge would have discretion to allow Zimmerman to live elsewhere along with a number of restrictions such as a curfew, regular reporting requirement and possibly an electronic monitoring ankle bracelet, said Florida International University law professor Joelle Moreno.

O’Mara said he would ask for assistance from law enforcement. Kim Cannaday, a spokeswoman for the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office, said she couldn’t comment on what security procedures will be in place for Zimmerman if he is released. The sheriff’s office does have the ability to monitor defendants outside the county if a judge requests a GPS monitor to be used as a condition of release.

Zimmerman is charged with second-degree murder in the 17-year-old Martin’s death during a Feb. 26 confrontation in a Sanford, Fla., gated community. Martin was walking home from a convenience store when Zimmerman spotted him from his truck and called police to report him as suspicious. Zimmerman has claimed self-defense under Florida’s “stand your ground” law, which eliminates a person’s duty to retreat under threat of death or serious injury.

The lack of an arrest for 44 days spurred nationwide, several in Seminole County, in which participants chanted and held signs that said, “Arrest Zimmerman Now!” Anger over a delay in Zimmerman’s arrest led to the Sanford police chief stepping down temporarily and the recusal of the prosecutor who normally handles cases out of Sanford. Sanford city officials were holding a town hall meeting Thursday to address some of the residual anger from the case.

Zimmerman charged with second-degree murder in Trayvon Martin shooting

zimmerman Zimmerman charged with second degree murder in Trayvon Martin shooting
’s booking photo provided by the Department. (AP)

( News / AP) — George Zimmerman, the 28-year-old neighborhood who shot and killed Trayvon Martin on Feb. 26 in Sanford, Fla., has been charged with second-degree murder in the 17-year-old’s death. Zimmerman has been transferred to , according to news reports, and is being held without bail.

“Just moments ago we spoke by phone with Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton,” Angela Corey, the special prosecutor investigating the case, said at a in Jacksonville. “Three weeks ago our prosecution team promised those sweet parents we would get answers to all of their questions, no matter where our quest for the truth led us. And it is that search for justice for Trayvon that has brought us to this night.”

“We did not come to this decision lightly,” she said, declining to discuss specifics of the investigation. “We do not prosecute by pressure or petition … We’re law enforcement. We enforce the law.”

Zimmerman turned himself in and is in in Florida, Corey said, but would not disclose where he is being held.

According to CNN, Zimmerman left the state of Florida, but returned when he learned he would be charged. Zimmerman will now be transferred to the Jail, Corey said.

The announcement comes a day after Zimmerman’s attorneys said that they were dropping the case because their client had stopped communicating with them. (On Sunday, Zimmerman launched a website seeking for his legal and .) According to Corey, Zimmerman retained a new attorney “within the last hour.”

That attorney, Mark O’Mara, said Zimmerman would plead not guilty, and hoped the judge would consider a bond.

“He is troubled by everything that has happened,” O’Mara said. “Truly, it must be frightening to not be able to go into a 7-Eleven or a store. It would trouble any of us.”

O’Mara said that because of the “high emotions” involved in the case, Zimmerman would likely be held in protective custody.

O’Mara was a TV analyst during the Casey Anthony trial.

Sanford, Fla., is a gated community outside of Orlando. Zimmerman told police he was attacked by Martin and was acting in self-defense.

Earlier this week, Corey announced the case would not go to a .

“There’s been an overwhelming amount of publicity,” Corey said, expressing concern about damage to a potential jury pool. “It’s regrettable that so many facts got released and misconstrued.”

“Forty-five days ago, Trayvon Martin was murdered,” Rev. Al Sharpton said at a separate press conference in Washington, flanked by Martin’s parents. “No arrest was made. The chief of police announced after his review of the evidence there would be no arrest. His parents refused to leave it there.”

“Tonight,” Sharpton continued, “Maybe America can come together and say only the facts should matter, when dealing with a loss of life.

“This is not a night for celebration,” he added. “This is a night that shouldn’t have happened in the first place.”

“It’s about justice, justice, justice,” Ben Crump, the Martin family’s attorney, said. “If we just stand our ground, we can make a difference.”

Martin’s parents spoke briefly at the press conference.

“We simply wanted an arrest, and we got it,” Fulton said. “Thank you, Lord. Thank you, Jesus … A heart has no color. It’s not white, it’s not black—it’s red. And I just want to thank you from my heart to your heart.”

“We will continue to walk by faith,” Tracy Martin said. “And we will march and march and march until the right thing is done.”

066e4ff522553142b9dc40a067007957 Zimmerman charged with second degree murder in Trayvon Martin shooting

Breaking News: George Zimmerman to be charged in Trayvon Martin shooting, official says

7b83f84397e1069f5ecd6725e1b919ba Breaking News: George Zimmerman to be charged in Trayvon Martin shooting, official says
(Trayvon Martin’s slaying rivets nation:?The fatal shooting of an unarmed black 17-year-old by a volunteer in , Fla., has led to a , numerous and a national spotlight. Picture courtesy of )

( News / Washington Post) — Florida Angela Corey plans to announce as early as that she is charging neighborhood watch volunteer in the shooting of Trayvon Martin, according to a law enforcement official close to the investigation.

It was not immediately clear what charge Zimmerman will face.

Martin, 17 and unarmed, was shot and killed Feb. 26 by Zimmerman, who said he was acting in self-defense. Police in Sanford, Fla., where the shooting took place, did not charge Zimmerman, citing the state’s “stand your ground” law.

Corey told reporters Tuesday night that she would hold a news conference about the case within 72 hours. A news release from her office said the event will be held in Sanford or Jacksonville, Fla.

, who is representing the Martin family, said this week that Corey’s office had asked where Trayvon’s parents would be each day this week. They arrived Wednesday in Washington for a civil rights conference organized by the Rev. Al Sharpton, where they are scheduled to speak.

The announcement of a charge against Zimmerman would come a day after Zimmerman’s withdrew from the case, citing their inability to contact Zimmerman.

Lawyers Craig Sonner and Hal Uhrig on Tuesday expressed concern about Zimmerman’s emotional and physical well-being, saying he has taken actions without consulting them. They also said they do not know where Zimmerman is.

“You can stop looking in Florida,” Uhrig told reporters. “Look much further away than that.”

Corey said Monday that she would not bring the case before a grand jury, which was expected to convene this week. She said her decision to forgo the grand jury should not be viewed as a factor in determining whether charges will be filed.

Corey has indicated in recent weeks that she might not need a grand jury to bring charges against Zimmerman.

The lawyers said they stand by their assertions that Zimmerman acted in self-defense when he killed the 17-year-old, who was unarmed, but they acknowledged that they formed their impressions without meeting Zimmerman.

All sides await decision on charges in Trayvon Martin shooting

021758e19da3940b75b0866116b0e931 All sides await decision on charges in Trayvon Martin shooting

Zimmerman say media unfair
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

A convening in Seminole County could take up the case as early as Tuesday
Special prosecutor Angela Corey says she has never used a grand jury in such a case
Corey didn’t rule out the use of a grand jury, saying “we make that decision ourselves”

() — As controversy over the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin swirls, all sides are anxiously awaiting a decision this week by a special prosecutor whether to bring charges against the neighborhood watch volunteer who killed the teen.

The case could be taken up as early as Tuesday by a grand jury that is expected to convene in Seminole County, Florida.

But, like so many details of the case itself, it is unclear how the special prosecutor plans to handle possible legal proceedings.

Angela Corey, the special prosecutor, has to make one of three choices: File charges, drop the case or send it to a grand jury.

Two prosecutors are working to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to bring charges against 28-year-old George Zimmerman for the February 26 shooting in Sanford, Florida.

Corey said she has never used a grand jury to decide on charges in a justifiable homicide case.

“We do a thorough investigation. We make that decision ourselves,” she said.

It is unknown if the prosecutors have interviewed Zimmerman. In late March, Corey told HLN that prosecutors had yet to speak to him, nor did her office know where he was.

Zimmerman’s attorneys say he is available anytime to talk to the special prosecutor.

Prosecutors are trying to unravel what happened the night that Martin was killed. Witnesses and attorneys for both sides have offered conflicting accounts.

What is known is that Martin, wearing a hoodie, ventured out from his father’s ’s home in Sanford to get a at a nearby convenience store. As he walked home with a bag of and an Arizona iced tea, he was shot and killed by Zimmerman.

questioned Zimmerman and released him without charges.

From there, the case has evolved into see-saw allegations by Zimmerman’s supporters, Martin’s family and authorities.

Zimmerman says he killed Martin in self-defense after the teen punched him and slammed his head on the sidewalk, according to an Orlando Sentinel report that was later confirmed by Sanford police.

One of the responding officers saw a wound on the back of Zimmerman’s head and a bloody nose, and noted that his back was wet — indicating he had been lying in the grass, according to the police report.

An enhanced copy of a surveillance video showing him in after the shooting appears to show a bump, mark or injury on his head.

Martin’s family and supporters have dismissed the video.

They say Zimmerman, who is Hispanic, racially profiled the teen, who was black, and ignored a police dispatcher’s directive not to follow him.

Zimmerman’s attorneys interpret the call differently, and say the operator did not order Zimmerman not to follow.

A recording of a 911 call made the night of the shooting captured someone pleading for help. Zimmerman has said he was yelling for help, according to his family members and his account to authorities.

Martin’s have said they are certain the voice heard on the 911 call is Martin’s.

Audio experts Tom Owen and Ed Primeau, who analyzed the recordings for the Orlando Sentinel using different techniques, said they don’t believe it is Zimmerman.

They compared the screams with Zimmerman’s voice, as recorded in a 911 call he made minutes earlier describing a “suspicious” black male.

The debate was further muddied when a witness, who declined to be identified by CNN, said she saw and heard the incident through her window.

When pressed if she could determine who was yelling, the witness said “It was the younger, youthful voice (rather) that it was the deep voice I heard when they were arguing.”

Zimmerman’s attorneys have questioned the account, saying it was dark at the time of the shooting.

Until now, only friends and relatives of Zimmerman’s have come forward to speak on his behalf. Zimmerman’s attorneys have said he wants to share his story but can’t because of threats to his safety and the possibility of charges.

Martin’s family has said a Sanford police detective filed an affidavit saying he did not find Zimmerman’s statements after the shooting credible — but that Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee and State Attorney Norm met the night of the shooting and disregarded the detective’s advice.

Neither Sanford police nor prosecutors have confirmed the existence of such an affidavit. And Wolfinger vehemently denied that such a meeting occurred.

The two sides have also debated what Zimmerman whispered under his breath during his 911 call.

Martin’s supporters said he uttered a racial slur; Zimmerman’s lawyer said he told them he whispered “punks.”

Whether a grand jury will choose to indict, Zimmerman’s attorney, Craig Sonner, said: “We don’t know.”

Gov. Rick Scott appointed Corey as a special prosecutor as calls for “Justice for Trayvon” grew in the days following the shooting.

The Martin case has triggered a nationwide debate about Florida’s “stand your ground” law — which allows people to use deadly force anywhere they feel a reasonable threat of death or serious injury — and race in America.

Authorities have said Zimmerman was not immediately charged because there were no grounds, at the outset, to disprove his account that he’d acted to protect himself.

The governor has formed a task force to review the law.

Thousands have converged on Sanford to join in protests calling for Zimmerman’s arrest and decry the police department’s handling of the case.

The protests have been peaceful, and Sanfor Mayor Jeff Triplett hopes they remain that way — whether or not Zimmerman is charged.

“The message that they wanted to get out, they got it out,” he said Friday. “So my expectation (is) that that would continue if one way or another, you know, whatever the decision is.”