Archive for the ‘George Zimmerman’ Category

George Zimmerman arrested

Story highlights Zimmerman posts $5,000 bail; he was accused of throwing a bottle at a girlfriend "He hasn't been very lucky with the ladies," attorney says of Zimmerman He became a national figure after being charged, then acquitted in Trayvon Martin's death

The 31-year-old Florida resident was arrested Friday by police in Lake Mary at about 10 p.m. and booked into the John E. Polk Correctional Facility, according to that facility's website. That facility, like its website, is run by the Seminole County Sheriff's Office.

It all came about after Zimmerman allegedly threw a wine bottle at a girlfriend, his lawyer Don West told reporters.

"Whatever happened took place several days ago," said West. "And, as far as I know, they have not been together for some time, certainly not since then."

Police first learned about it after coming "in contact with the (alleged) victim at a traffic stop" on Monday, Lake Mary police spokeswoman Bianca Gillett said.

When asked about the delay in making the arrest, Gillett said the arresting officer tried to reach Zimmerman on Monday and Tuesday, but couldn't, and was off-duty Wednesday and Thursday. It was the officer's decision not to pass off the case to another officer, Gillett said.

The incident is the latest legal run-in for Zimmerman since his acquittal in July 2012 on a murder charge in the death of Martin, a 17-year-old African-American. In fact, it's his second arrest for alleged domestic violence against a girlfriend -- though Lake Mary police spokeswoman Bianca Gillett said this alleged "victim is not the same (woman) as in 2013."

"It's clear he hasn't been very lucky with the ladies the last few months," West said of his client.

Judge bars contact, orders weapons surrendered

Zimmerman appeared Saturday morning before Judge John Galluzo, who decided to bar him from contacting the alleged victim or going into Volusia County. He was also told to surrender any weapons to a relative or third party, but not to stop drinking since the judge said "there wasn't any allegation of abuse of alcohol in the arrest affidavit."

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George Zimmerman arrested

Why George Zimmerman was arrested in Florida again

George Zimmerman is now facing another brush with the law. The Florida man, who was acquitted in 2013 over the shooting death of unarmed black teen Trayvon Martin, was arrested Friday on suspicion of domestic violence and aggravated assault with a weapon.

Police in Lake Mary, Fla. detained the 31-year-old around 10 p.m. Friday and booked him at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility, according to Seminole County documents.

During a court appearance Saturday morning, Zimmerman's bond was set at $5,000 and he was ordered to avoid contact with the woman who was not identified, the Associated Press reports.

Judge John Galluzzo gave few details of the incident, but said a wine bottle was involved and that the alleged assault happened at Zimmerman's home. Prosecutors questioned whether substance abuse treatment was needed, but the judge said that didn't seem to be a factor.

After the brief hearing, Zimmerman's attorney, Don West, told the Orlando Sun-SentinelSaturday that his client was arrested after allegedly throwing a wine bottle at his girlfriend several days ago.Zimmerman is scheduled to appear back in court on Feb. 17.

Zimmerman, a former neighborhood watchman in Sanford, Fla., first made headlines in 2012 after a confrontation with 17-year-old Martin led to Zimmerman fatally shooting the teenager. He was charged with second-degree murder but was found not guilty in an emotionally-charged trial that brought to the fore discussions of race relations in America.

Zimmerman has since had several brushes with the law. Two weeks after his acquittal, he was pulled over for speeding in northern Texas. In September 2013, his estranged wife, Shellie, called 911 to report that Zimmerman had punched her father and was threatening them with a gun.

Im really, really afraid, she can be heard saying in the 911 tape.

Mrs. Zimmerman decided not to press charges.

About two months later, Zimmermans girlfriend Samantha Scheibe told police that he had pointed a gun at her after she told him to move out. Zimmerman was arrested on charges of domestic violence and released on $9,000 bail. Scheibe later said her story had been misinterpreted and dropped the charges.

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Why George Zimmerman was arrested in Florida again

BOOK REVIEW:Killing Trayvons: An Anthology of American Violence

Killing Trayvons: An Anthology of American Violence is a new collection of essays, poetry and documents relating to the death of Trayvon Martin and the acquittal of his killer George Zimmerman. Edited by journalist and CounterPunch editor Jeffrey St. Clair; CounterPunch, The Nation and Harper's contributor JoAnn Wypijewski; and veteran civil rights activist Kevin Alexander Gray, the book looks at the Martin case as an example of an ongoing pattern of police, and wanna be police, killing of African-American youth. In the editors' words, the book tracks the case and explores why Trayvons name and George Zimmermans not guilty verdict symbolized all the grieving, the injustice, the profiling and free passes based on white privilege and police power: the long list of Trayvons known and unknown.

This books strength is partly in the range of voices it presents, and the different angles the authors take on the tragedies in question. Not all of the writers are in agreement on questions raised by Trayvons death; as the editors note in their introduction, no neat tie-up would bring comfort, or that insipid concept closure, or let Trayvon live again.

The book includes material on Stand Your Ground gun laws, which The Progressive publisher Matthew Rothschild argues legalize and immunize vigilantism. Rothschild points out that these laws, under which lethal force is permitted if there is fear of bodily harm, were initiated with the backing of both the NRA and the shadowy collection of corporations and right-wing legislators called the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). In 2005, Florida, where George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin, was the first state to pass a Stand Your Ground law. By 2009, two fatal shootings a week were treated as justifiable under the new law. The NRA is committed to bringing a version of this chilling legislation to every state in the U.S.

For those inclined to a forensic level of examination, there are extracts from the testimony of Trayvons mother Sybrina Fulton and the closing arguments of Zimmermans lawyer Mark OMara, not to mention the medical examiners report on Trayvons death and other relevant documentation.

The analysis of the case is also broadened to tie in American foreign policy. In Amy Goodmans wide-ranging interview with Cornell West, West pulls no punches in his condemnation of Washingtons targeting of brown people for drone assassination, calling President Obama a global George Zimmerman.

Trayvon Martin was demonized in death for being nabbed with at least trace amounts of pot in his possession. For anyone who has wasted time staring at a ceiling under the influence of weed, the idea that cannabis leads to physical violence is beyond ridiculous, but such an association, at least for poor non-white youth, has been cultivated for decades. In a piece called Marijuanas Dark Side: Drugs, Race and the Criminalization of Trayvon Martin, Alexander Tepperman expertly examines the drug war against poor, mostly black and brown, youth. Tepperman describes the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 as [giving] birth to prosecutorial policies and police practices that, through their selective targeting and draconian scope, devastated urban inner-city neighborhoods. This was followed by Ronald Reagans 1982 declaration of war on the evil menace of illicit drugs. Tepperman notes that this cynical campaign sent legions of young, disproportionately black men to prison for drug trafficking and possession; focusing on inner city neighborhoods created and perpetuated a cycle of racial profiling that ultimately bloated US prisons with record numbers of African-Americans.

Given the uprisings in Ferguson, Missouri and elsewhere in response to white cop Darren Wilson's not guilty verdict in the killing of Michael Brown, the book could hardly be more timely.

Since the Michael Brown case, another white cop was set free for the killing of a black man. But that case sparked a national uprising of protests, since the fatal strangulation of Eric Garner by police officer Daniel Pantaleo was filmed on a cell phone and widely circulated.

In conversations about the horrific killing of Garner, the names of other recent black victims of police violence pop up: Tamir Rice, Timothy Russell, Malissa Williams, Akai Gurley, Renisha McBride ... it's useless to try to keep up with them all. The list just goes on and on. Indeed, as pointed out in Killing Trayvons, the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement estimates that every thirty-six hours another black woman, man, or child is killed by police, security guards or vigilantes.

Many of the pieces in this book originally appeared on CounterPunch, which has been diligently covering this crisis for years. The essays form a searing indictment of a status quo that has accepted brutalization of communities of color and the premature termination of black lives since the era of widespread lynchings. As activist Mike King writes in his contribution to this collection, A key difference between yesterday's weekly lynching and today's six killings a week lies in the visibility and the conscious complicity of white America. While the white terrorism that was lynching drew out many in their Sunday best to actively participate and revel in, the sanitized modern equivalent is something that white America prefers to ignore, something it doesn't publicly celebrate but shows little sign of wanting to change, either. King concludes, Today, racist violence is a practice many white people would rather not have to think about, not see and not feel moral complicity in.

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BOOK REVIEW:Killing Trayvons: An Anthology of American Violence

Opie & Anthony – Erock Is Camera Ready (6-25-2013) – Video


Opie amp; Anthony - Erock Is Camera Ready (6-25-2013)
After a budding Twitter friendship with Anthony, Robert Zimmerman finally stops by "The Opie Anthony Show" to talk about the George Zimmerman / Trayvon Mar... Opie Jim are back. Brief...

By: Opie Rasta

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Opie & Anthony - Erock Is Camera Ready (6-25-2013) - Video

Opie & Anthony – Morning Mash-Up's Nicole Is Mad (4-25-2013) – Video


Opie amp; Anthony - Morning Mash-Up #39;s Nicole Is Mad (4-25-2013)
After a budding Twitter friendship with Anthony, Robert Zimmerman finally stops by "The Opie Anthony Show" to talk about the George Zimmerman / Trayvon Mar... Mash Up Nicole visits the...

By: Opie Rasta

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Opie & Anthony - Morning Mash-Up's Nicole Is Mad (4-25-2013) - Video