Thursday, April 5, 2012

Trayvon Martin Shooting: Voice Experts Claim Cries Heard On 911 Call Were Not George Zimmerman's

George Zimmerman 911 Call
Before George Zimmerman shot Trayvon Martin on February 26, a 911 call recorded the voice of someone screaming. Whether that person was Martin or Zimmerman -- who police say claimed he was attacked by Martin before the fatal incident -- has been an open question since the calls were released by the Sanford, Florida police department. (WARNING: Above audio is disturbing.)
The Orlando Sentinel consulted two voice experts to try to settle the debate, and both came to the same conclusion: The cries could not have come from George Zimmerman.
One expert, Tom Owen, used voice identification software to rule out Zimmerman as the source. From the Sentinel:
"I took all of the screams and put those together, and cut out everything else," Owen says. The software compared that audio to Zimmerman's voice. It returned a 48 percent match. Owen said to reach a positive match with audio of this quality, he'd expect higher than 90 percent.
"As a result of that, you can say with reasonable scientific certainty that it's not Zimmerman," Owen says, stressing that he cannot confirm the voice as Trayvon's, because he didn't have a sample of the teen's voice to compare.
Another analyst came to a similar conclusion using different technology.
The voice analysis is the latest piece of information to cast doubt on the narrative, advanced by Zimmerman and his family, that the Neighborhood Watch volunteer was attacked by 17-year-old Travyon Martin. A police video this week showed no blood or bruises on Zimmerman in the aftermath of the incident, while Martin's funeral director said he saw no signs of a struggle on the teen's body.
CORRECTION: A previous headline for this story stated that voice experts claimed the cries on the 911 call came from Trayvon Martin. In fact, they only said that the cries did not come from George Zimmerman.

Prosecute the killer of our son, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin

SIGN THIS PETITION

Prosecute the killer of our son, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin
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    1. Florida Attorney General (+ 3 others)
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    Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton
    Sanford, FL
Why This Is Important
On February 26, our son Trayvon Martin was shot and killed as he walked to a family member's home from a convenience store where he had just bought some candy. He was only 17 years-old.
Trayvon's killer, George Zimmerman, admitted to police that he shot Trayvon in the chest. Zimmerman, the community's self appointed "neighborhood watch leader," called the police to report a suspicious person when he saw Travyon, a young black man, walking from the store. But Zimmerman still hasn't been charged for murdering our son.
Trayvon was our hero. At the age 9, Trayvon pulled his father from a burning kitchen, saving his life. He loved sports and horseback riding. At only 17 he had a bright future ahead of him with dreams of attending college and becoming an aviation mechanic. Now that’s all gone.
When Zimmerman reported Trayvon to the police, they told him not to confront him. But he did anyway. All we know about what happened next is that our 17 year-old son, who was completely unarmed, was shot and killed.
It's been nearly two weeks and the Sanford Police have refused to arrest George Zimmerman. In their public statements, they even go so far as to stand up for the killer - saying he's "a college grad" who took a class in criminal justice.
Please join us in calling on Angela Corey, Florida's 4th District State's Attorney, to investigate my son's murder and prosecute George Zimmerman for the shooting and killing of Trayvon Martin.

George Zimmerman Video Shows Little Evidence of a Broken Nose, Doctor Claims

Enhanced video footage of George Zimmerman about 30 minutes after he shot Florida teenager Trayvon Martin shows little evidence of a broken nose, the president of the Florida College of Emergency Physicians said today.
But the video does show what could be an injury to the back of Zimmerman's head.
The never-before-seen evidence of an injury to Zimmerman, in this case a gash or mark to his head, would appear to back his claim that he was in an altercation with Martin on the night of Feb. 26 in Sanford, Fla. Zimmerman says he shot the teen in self defense after he was attacked.
Zimmerman, 28, claims Martin, 17, punched him in the nose, knocked him down and repeatedly slammed his head into the ground.
The police surveillance video, first obtained exclusively by ABC News last month and clarified by Forensic Protection, Inc., shows Zimmerman exiting the police cruiser with his hands cuffed behind his back. Zimmerman is frisked and then led down a series of hallways, still cuffed. At one point, one of the officers stops to look briefly at the back of Zimmerman's head.
There was no obvious sign of any injury to Zimmerman's head or face on the video until it was enhanced.
ABC NEWS
A new enhanced version of the surveillance... View Full Size
George Zimmerman: Enhanced Video Shows Injury Watch Video
Trayvon Martin Supporters Demand Justice Watch Video
Trayvon Martin Protests Intensify Watch Video
But Dr. Vidor Friedman, president of the Florida College of Emergency Physicians, remains unconvinced.
"If somebody had been beating his head against concrete I'd think we'd see more obvious scrapes," Friedman said. He also said he would expect to see bandages on Zimmerman's head.
More significantly for Friedman was the condition of Zimmerman's nose.
"All of the ridges in his nose are clearly defined. You would expect significant swelling in the hour or two after a break. There appears to be none. It doesn't look like his nose was broken or badly broken," Friedman said.
Police Video Surveillance of George Zimmerman
The initial police report noted that Zimmerman was bleeding from the back of the head and nose, and his lawyer later claimed that Zimmeran suffered a broken nose. After receiving medical attention at the scene of the shooting, it was decided that he was in good enough condition to travel in a police cruiser to the Sanford, Fla., police station for questioning. He did not check into the emergency room following the police questioning.
The surveillance tape of Zimmerman, later released by the Sanford Police Department, could be used as evidence if Zimmerman is brought up on charges, sources tell ABC News.
Zimmerman's lawyer, Craig Sonner, has said his client felt "one of them was going to die that night," when he pulled the trigger.
The case has gained national prominence with rallies across the country demanding that Zimmerman be arrested and charged with murder.
Lawyers for Martin's family sent a letter to the Justice Department today asking that the federal probe into the killing look into the fact that Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee met with State Attorney Norm Wolfinger on the night of shooting. Lawyer Benjamin Crump also claims in the letter that members of Zimmerman's family were also present in the police station that night.
The lead homicide investigator, Chris Serino, wrote in an affidavit that he recommended manslaughter charges be brougth against Zimmerman but was advised by the prosecutor not to file charges because there was not enough evidence for a conviction, sources have told ABC News.
"We look forward to your thorough and comprehensive review of the suspicious circumstances surrounding this meeting," Crump wrote.

A Justice Department spokesman said the agency will review the Martin family letter.
State prosecutors are expected to go before a Seminole County grand jury on April 10 to determine what, if any, files should be charged.
An analysis of a 911 call done over the weekend by the Orlando Sentinel determined that screams for help overhead on a 911 came from Martin, although Zimmerman's family insist they recognize his voice in the screams.
George Zimmerman: Enhanced Video Shows Injury Watch Video
Trayvon Martin Supporters Demand Justice Watch Video
Trayvon Martin Protests Intensify Watch Video
Two evidence experts consulted by the Sentinel found the voice heard in a 911 call placed by a woman in a home near where the shooting occurred was only a 48 percent match to Zimmerman's voice. One of the experts, Tom Owen, told the Sentinel to reach a positive match he would expect higher than 90 percent.
"As a result of that, you can say with reasonable scientific certainty that it's not Zimmerman," Owen told the paper.
Owen,the chair emeritus at the American Board of Record Evidence, was not able to determine if the voice was that of Martin, the Sentinel reports, because he did not have audio of the teen's voice to compare to the shouts for help in the 911 call.

Trayvon Martin police report reveals Zimmerman was ‘bleeding from the nose and back of head’

A partially redacted police report detailing the initial investigation in the Feb. 26 shooting death of Trayvon Martin has surfaced.
Reuters reporter Matthew Keys first posted scanned copies of the report to his Twitter account. As the Chicago Tribune noted, the report contains details that conflict with several rumors surrounding the case.
The report states that George Zimmerman's gun "was placed into evidence" and not returned to him, and the scene of the shooting was secured with crime scene tape. This directly conflicts with statements made by civil rights activists, including Rev. Jesse Jackson, who had claimed the Sanford, Fla., police department "didn't even bother to put yellow tape around the murder scene when he diedthat's how much the police did to find out what happened to this young boy."
After officers discovered Martin's body, the report states that they unsuccessfully attempted to revive him.
According to the report, Sanford police spent more than seven hours at the scene. They interviewed six witnesses, whose names were redacted from the report. The partial report contains information from the first two officers to arrive at the scene.
The first to arrive was officer Timothy Smith. From Smith's report:
"While I was in such close contact with Zimmerman, I could observe that his back appeared to be wet and was covered in grass, as if he had been laying on his back on the ground. Zimmerman was also bleeding from the nose and back of his head."
"Zimmerman was placed in the rear of my police vehicle and was given first aid by the SFD. While the SF was attending to Zimmerman, I overheard him state, 'I was yelling for someone to help me, but no one would help me.' At no point did I question Zimmerman about the incident that had taken place."
From officer Ricardo Ayala, the second to arrive:
"I attempted to get a response from the black male, but was met with negative results. At that time, Sgt. Raimondo arrived and attempted to get a pulse from the black male but none was found. At that time, Sgt. Raimondo and I turned the black male over and began CPR. Sgt. Raimondo did breaths and I did chest compressions."
"Sgt. McCoy arrived and relieved me continuing compressions. Sanford Fire Rescue arrived on scene and attempted to revive the subject but could not. Paramedic Brady pronounced the subject deceased at 1930 hours."
"The scene was then secured with crime scene tape by Ofc. Mead and Ofc. Wagner. Ofc. Robertson began a crime scene contamination log. Lt. Taylor arrived on scene and notified dispatch to have Major Crimes responds to the scene."
"Ofc. Mead and Ofc. Wagner were able to make contact with neighbors in the area. They were able to obtain statements from all witnesses on scene."
"The scene was turned over to SPD Major Crimes."

She Speaks! Trayvon Martin's Girlfriend Talks (DETAILS)

Trayvon Martin's girlfriend, the young lady who was on the phone with him moments before he was shot and killed, has been interviewed by two district attorney prosecutors appointed to the case.
EXCLUSIVE: Trayvon Pictured With A Close Friend! 
According to a source at RadarOnline, Trayvon’s girlfriend was interviewed at an undisclosed location for more than two and a half hours.
The source claims:
"Trayvon's girlfriend was interviewed by the two district attorneys that Special Prosecutor Angela Corey appointed to the case.
She was interviewed last week and her mother was present throughout. She was very forthcoming and had pertinent information to the investigation because she was the last person that talked to Trayvon before George Zimmerman shot and killed him.
It was extremely emotional for her and her mother wanted to make sure it wasn't too much for her. She would be a very compelling witness for the state of Florida if criminal charges are filed against George Zimmmerman."
Last week it was revealed that the Florida State Attorney's Office issued a subpoena for Trayvon's girlfriend to appear in front of the grand jury on April 10.
On the night Trayvon was killed, the last person he talked with was his girlfriend; phone records show that she spoke with Trayvon up to the minute when he and George Zimmerman confronted each other.

Kristol Says Trayvon Martin Case Has Become ‘Demagoguery’ By Those Who ‘Want To Indict The Whole Society’

On Fox News Sunday’s panel this morning, conservative pundit Bill Kristol bemoaned the national attention by activists and media being given to the Trayvon Martin case. “It is just demagoguery, I think, mostly on the side of those who want to indict the whole society for this death,” Kristol said of the “maybe very unjustified shooting of this young man.” Watch it:
The plain injustices of the case have spurred national attention. If shooter George Zimmerman had been arrested at any time up to this point (as the facts of the case suggest he should have been), that would certainly have quelled the outrage around this case.
As Juan Williams said, “The thing that I think is the point of concern is why was the decision made not to arrest Zimmerman. … The idea that someone would kill this little boy…seems outrageous and at least the arrest is necessary.”
To his credit, Kristol acknowledged that Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law, which played a key part in Zimmerman’s defense, is not “sensible” and deserves to be debated.

Trayvon Martin: Before the world heard the cries


Tracy Martin had been looking for his son Trayvon since the night before. He went to bed figuring the teen must have gone to the movies and turned off his phone. When Trayvon still wasn't home in the morning, Martin called the police.
After a flurry of phone calls back and forth, an officer told him a police unit was on the way. "So I went outside waiting for Trayvon to show up," Martin said.
Instead of one squad car with his son in the backseat, three vehicles pulled up: a police cruiser, an unmarked sedan and another official-looking car. Martin would discover the third car belonged to a chaplain.
It was not yet 8 in the morning, barely 12 hours since the shooting that took place about 100 yards away, and Martin was still unaware of the fate of his son.
The February 26 shooting death of Trayvon Martin, 17, at the hands of George Zimmerman, 28, a neighborhood watch captain who said he acted in self-defense, has riveted the nation, largely because of race. Trayvon Martin was black. George Zimmerman is white and Hispanic.
For about 10 days, the story remained obscure. Television news from nearby Orlando aired a few segments. The Orlando Sentinel published two brief articles, and the twice-weekly Sanford Herald ran 213 words. Otherwise, there was media silence. This is an account of what happened before everyone knew Trayvon Martin's name.
BREAKING THE NEWS
When Tracy Martin greeted the police that morning, a plainclothes detective asked him to describe his son. "He asked me what he last had on. He asked me if I had any recent pictures," Martin said.
"I showed him a recent picture in the camera and he shook his head and said, 'OK, let me go to my car and get something.'" The detective returned with a folder.
It was drizzling, and he asked Martin if they could go inside. When they were seated he pulled out a photo. It was Trayvon, dead at the scene - his eyes rolled back, a tear on his cheek, saliva coming from his mouth. "From that point, our nightmare," Martin said.
"YOU GOT ME"
The night his son was killed, Martin, 45, was out to dinner with his fiancée, Brandy Green. Martin, who was divorced from Trayvon's mother, Sybrina Fulton, in 1999, is a truck driver from Miami who has a long-distance relationship with Green, a resident of the Retreat at Twin Lakes subdivision in Sanford where Zimmerman also lived.
Martin would visit Green on weekends, making the four-hour drive to the Orlando suburb of Sanford. In late February he was able to bring his son because Trayvon, a junior, was serving a 10-day suspension from Miami's Dr. Michael M. Krop Senior High School. He'd been caught with a plastic baggie that contained traces of marijuana.
On Wednesday, the day after receiving the news, Martin went to the Sanford Police Department looking for answers - and his son's body. Police took him to a room and played some of the 911 recordings of neighbors who called to report a disturbance followed by a gunshot.
They did not play an earlier call to a police non-emergency line, during which Zimmerman reported a "suspicious guy" and ignored the operator's suggestion to quit following him. Investigator Chris Serino then took Martin to another room and told him Zimmerman's version of events.
Sanford police have stopped talking to reporters about the case, and Serino has never spoken publicly about his role in it, but here is how Martin recalls what Serino said: "He told me Zimmerman's story was that Zimmerman was of course following him and that Trayvon approached his vehicle, walked up to the car and asked Zimmerman, ‘Why are your following me?' Zimmerman then rolls his car windows down, tells Trayvon ‘I'm not following you.' He rolls his car windows up.
"Trayvon walks off. Zimmerman said he started running between the buildings. Zimmerman gets out of his car. He comes around the building. Trayvon is hiding behind the building, waiting on him. Trayvon approaches him and says, ‘What's your problem, homes?' Zimmerman says ‘I don't have a problem.'
"Zimmerman starts to reach into his pocket to get his cellphone, and at that point Trayvon attacked him. He says Trayvon hits him. He falls on the ground. Trayvon jumps on top of him, takes his left hand and covers Zimmerman's mouth and tells him to shut the F up and continues to pound on him.
"At that point Zimmerman is able to unholster his weapon and fire a shot, striking Trayvon in the chest. Trayvon falls on his back and says, 'You got me.'" The Martin family has been telling their story as part of a campaign to have Zimmerman arrested. He himself has kept quiet.
Sanford police have declined numerous requests for comment on any aspect of the story, even before a special prosecutor overseeing the case invoked a state law that restricts otherwise public information in the course of an active criminal investigation.
Zimmerman has not spoken publicly, since any statements he makes could affect future litigation against him. Though he is free, he remains in hiding.
His father, brother, and defense lawyer, Craig Sonner, have said in interviews that Zimmerman is not racist and has been unfairly vilified. He feared for his life during his altercation with Trayvon Martin, they say, and was justified in using deadly force. In his conversation with Martin, Serino referred to Zimmerman's background as "squeaky clean."
Zimmerman had been arrested in 2005 for shoving a state alcohol agent officer during an argument at a bar. Charges were dropped after he entered a special program for first-time offenders. Later that year, his then-girlfriend took out a restraining order, accusing him of domestic violence.
Sanford police released Zimmerman without charge, but Martin says Serino told him he would challenge Zimmerman's account. "The detective's words were, 'I want to interview him again to catch him in a lie,'" Martin said.
A law-enforcement source, who had been informed of the case by investigators, told Reuters that Serino was eager to bring a charge but encountered resistance from the office of the prosecutor, State Attorney Norman Wolfinger.
"Chris (Serino) would have made a recommendation for manslaughter, but Norm Wolfinger's office wanted it to be a slam dunk," said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "They don't want to hear that this is wrong or that is wrong with the case. That's the way this county does business." Wolfinger on Monday broke a long silence about the case, denying reports he quashed police intentions to charge Zimmerman with manslaughter.
Although police found no contradictions within Zimmerman's story, their decision not to arrest Zimmerman was lambasted by critics and has sparked demonstrations around the country.
For now there is one arbiter who matters. Special Prosecutor Angela Corey, a state attorney from northern Florida appointed by Scott on March 22, has taken over the investigation and will decide whether charges are warranted.
ZIMMERMAN DROPS OUT OF SIGHT
Immediately after the shooting, while waiting for police to arrive, neighbor Selma Mora Lamilla saw Zimmerman pacing back and forth, holding his head in his hands. "He was like, 'Oh my God, what just happened?'" said Mora Lamilla's roommate, Mary Cutcher.
Zimmerman understood the magnitude of his situation right away, said Joe Oliver, a family friend and colleague of Zimmerman's at mortgage risk management firm Digital Risk LCC.
"The day after, he went into his job to let them know what was going on," said Oliver, who has spoken to Zimmerman at least twice since the shooting. "That is the last I know of anyone seeing George."
Zimmerman and his wife moved out of the townhouse they rented in the Twin Lakes complex almost immediately, Oliver said, and they are now living in seclusion. Across town in Sanford's black neighborhood, word spread quickly that a black teenager had been killed.
The shooter, said to be white, had gone free. As in many cities in the South, Sanford has a long history of racial tension, and black mistrust of the police runs deep. In 2011, a previous Sanford police chief was forced out of the job after a white police officer's son was captured on video sucker-punching a black homeless man outside a bar.
Sanford police did not arrest the assailant until video of the attack surfaced on local TV and provoked an outcry from Sanford civil rights leaders. Now, once again, anger was building. A rumor that superiors had quashed an investigator's intent to charge Zimmerman had already made the rounds in the black community, said Velma Williams, the only black member of the five-person Sanford city commission.
"People were getting suspicious, saying we knew that was going to happen based on history," Williams said in an interview. She went to see Police Chief Bill Lee on Thursday, March 1, four days after the shooting.
"I told him, 'I can see a train coming down the track at 50 miles an hour, and you better get a handle on this,'" Williams said. "He said to me, ‘You can rest assured that it's a thorough and objective and fair investigation.'"
Three weeks later, on March 22, when there was still no arrest and the city commission had voted "no confidence" in Lee by 3-2, the chief announced his temporary resignation. Lee told a news conference that while he stood by the Sanford Police Department, he was stepping aside.
"It is apparent that my involvement in this matter is overshadowing the process," he said. "I do this in the hopes of restoring some semblance of calm to the city, which has been in turmoil for several weeks."
TRAYVON MARTIN AS JOHN DOE
At the time of the shooting, Trayvon Martin was not carrying identification - only $22, a cellphone, and the now familiar bag of candy and can of iced tea. His body, taken to the Volusia County Medical Examiner's office, was tagged as a John Doe.
Although Martin had identified his son to police on Monday, February 27, and asked Serino the next day to issue police clearance for releasing the body, not until Wednesday was a funeral director permitted to drive it back to South Florida. In Miami, the boy's mother, Sybrina Fulton, 46, a program coordinator for the Miami Dade Housing Authority, stayed home in bed.
"Every little thing kind of frustrates you, especially if you don't have the body ... Just to know the funeral home had the body gave us some comfort," Fulton said.
"I cried every day. There was nothing else I could do as a mother. Thank God his dad was able to run around and take care of things," she said. The family held a viewing on Friday, March 2. The memorial service and interment were Saturday. The painful work of laying Trayvon to rest was complete. Now would begin the more difficult search for justice.
FINDING BEN CRUMP
Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton wanted George Zimmerman arrested. They believe he stalked their son because he was black, and they were outraged that Sanford police had accepted Zimmerman's claim of self-defense.
Lee, the police chief, would contend under Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law that police could not arrest Zimmerman without evidence to contradict his story. Martin turned to Patricia Jones, his sister-in-law.
An attorney herself, she knew whom to call: Benjamin Crump, the state's best-known civil rights attorney, based in Tallahassee. Crump and law partner Daryl Parks had previously gained renown representing the family of a black teenager who died in a boot-camp-style youth detention center in 2006, winning the boy's family $7.2 million in damages from the state of Florida and Bay County.
On Tuesday, February 28, Crump was at the Duval County Courthouse in Jacksonville, about 125 miles north of Sanford, arguing that public records should be released in civil litigation over Antonio Cooks. Cooks, a black bail bondsman, had been shot and killed by Jacksonville Sheriff's Officer Jason Bailey while Cooks was serving a warrant and Bailey was responding to a burglary call.
During a break in the hearing, Crump noticed messages from Tyrone Williams, another attorney he knows, and Jones. They urgently asked for his help. Soon Jones put him in touch with Tracy Martin.
"I told him to believe in the system," Crump said of that first call. "I really believed they were going to arrest Zimmerman. I said, 'He's a neighborhood watch person with a gun. Of course they are going to arrest him just for that.'" "Then 48 hours passed and they still hadn't arrested him," Crump said. "After that we just had to do what we had to do."
He took the case pro bono. Realizing he needed a lawyer who knew Sanford and Seminole County, Crump turned to Natalie Jackson, a former Navy intelligence officer who founded the Women's Trial Group, which specializes in cases for women and children. Her mother lives in Sanford.
Now Crump and Jackson needed a media strategy. On March 5, Jackson brought in Ryan Julison, a publicist who had worked with her on a number of high-profile cases. After speaking with Tracy Martin, Julison said he also took the job for free and went to work pitching the story to national media.
Crump knew from his experience on the boot-camp case that publicity could force officials to act, but it would require persuading two people who had never stood before a television camera to withstand the spotlight.
"I got on the phone with Tracy Martin and I told him, ‘It's not going to be any fun, but this is the only way to find justice,'" Julison said. "You are going to have to bare your soul and express your emotions and your inner grief." Martin and Fulton agreed. There was only one problem. At first, the media weren't interested. Julison pitched the story to a long list of media contacts.
Eventually, on March 7, Reuters published a story titled "Family of Florida Boy Killed by Neighborhood Watch Seeks Arrest." The next day, CBS News aired a segment on "This Morning," and by 10 a.m. a crowd of reporters gathered at Natalie Jackson's law office for a news conference with Ben Crump and Tracy Martin. A media firestorm had begun.
EPILOGUE: THE 911 RECORDINGS
The day after the news conference, on March 9, Velma Williams went back to see Police Chief Bill Lee with community activist Kenneth Bentley. "We said, look, chief. Last time I was here I told you a train was coming down the tracks and it was going 50 miles an hour," Williams recalled.
"I said it's going 150 miles an hour now. And it doesn't have any brakes." Back in New York, civil rights activist Al Sharpton was monitoring events, his interest piqued by an earlier call from Crump.
After the police chief told reporters on March 12 he lacked a probable cause to arrest Zimmerman, Sharpton took up Trayvon Martin's cause on his MSNBC show, fueling cable television competition.
The twist that catapulted Martin's shooting into a world story was the release of recorded 911 emergency calls, including one that captures screams for help in the background that end with a gunshot.
Chief Lee had resisted Crump's requests to make the tapes public, but he was overruled by Sanford Mayor Jeff Triplett. On the night of Friday, March 16, Triplett invited Trayvon Martin's parents and their legal team into his office to listen to each of the calls, which he played on his computer.
"When we got to the cries for help, that was when Sybrina burst into tears," recalled Jackson. "She said, 'That's Trayvon. That's our son.' She ran out of the room crying." (Zimmerman's brother, Robert, would later swear the voice belonged to George.)
"The mayor himself started to cry," Jackson said. "Everybody in the room was in tears." Mayor Triplett overruled his police chief and distributed disks of the phone calls to the media that night. They have been broadcast unceasingly ever since.

Shooting of Trayvon Martin

The shooting of Trayvon Martin took place on February 26, 2012, in Sanford, Florida. Trayvon Martin was an unarmed,[1] 17-year-old African American male who was shot and killed by George Zimmerman, a 28-year-old community watch coordinator. Martin was walking from a convenience store to the home of his father's fiancée when Zimmerman, while contacting the Sanford Police Department to report Martin's allegedly suspicious behavior, began following Martin.[2][3][4] Soon afterward, they engaged in a confrontation that ended with George Zimmerman fatally shooting Trayvon Martin.
Zimmerman told police who arrived on the scene that the shooting was self-defense.[5][6] Responding officers handcuffed Zimmerman and took him into custody but they did not formally arrest him, saying they did not find evidence to contradict his assertion of self-defense.[7] The lead homicide investigator reportedly said he did not believe it was self-defense[8] and he wanted to charge Zimmerman with manslaughter, but the state attorney's office said there was insufficient evidence for a conviction.[9][10]
The circumstances around Martin's death received national and international attention, particularly regarding Florida's Stand Your Ground law and allegations of racial motivations and police misconduct, triggering public demands for Zimmerman's arrest.[11][12] A number of high-profile citizens have made public comments or released statements calling for a full investigation, including Reverend Al Sharpton,[13] President Barack Obama,[14] Jesse Jackson,[15] and Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi.[16]

Contents

 [hide

People involved in the case

Trayvon Martin

Trayvon Martin
Trayvon Benjamin Martin (February 5, 1995 – February 26, 2012) was the son of Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin. He had turned 17 years old three weeks before his death. His parents had divorced in 1999.[17] He was a high school junior in the Miami area of south Florida.[18][19] Martin lived with his mother and older brother in Miami Gardens, Florida. On the day he was shot, he was visiting his father and his father's fiancée at her townhome in The Retreat At Twin Lakes in Sanford, Florida.[20]

George Zimmerman

George Zimmerman
George Michael Zimmerman[21] was born on October 5, 1983, in Virginia,[22] the son of American Robert Zimmerman Sr. and Peruvian Gladys Zimmerman.[23][24] Zimmerman's voting record identifies him as Hispanic.[25][26] In 2009, he moved with his wife to The Retreat At Twin Lakes in Sanford, Florida, where the shooting occurred.[27][28] He was employed as an insurance underwriter prior to the shooting.[29]
Zimmerman had completed a Sheriff department's introductory course in citizens' law enforcement.[30][31] At the time of the shooting, he was working toward an associate degree at Seminole State College.[32] After the shooting, his enrollment was withdrawn by the college due to safety considerations arising from the controversy.[33]
Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee said that Zimmerman had cooperated with investigators.[34] Zimmerman's attorney first made a statement about his client on March 24, 2012.[35]

Zimmerman's role in the neighborhood watch

At the time the homeowners association decided to organize a neighborhood watch, Zimmerman was the only volunteer[34] and was then chosen as the neighborhood watch coordinator by his neighbors, according to Wendy Dorival, Neighborhood Watch organizer for the Sanford Police Department.[36] The February 2012 homeowner association newsletter requested that crime victims "call our captain, George Zimmerman" after calling the police.[3] “He [Zimmerman] once caught a thief and an arrest was made,” said Cynthia Wibker, secretary of the homeowners association.[34]
Police had been called to The Retreat at Twin Lakes 402 times from January 1, 2011, to February 26, 2012.[34] Crimes committed at The Retreat in the year prior to Martin's death included eight burglaries, nine thefts and one shooting.[34] The City of Sanford posted a "George Zimmerman 911 Call History" listing 46 event reports naming George Zimmerman as the caller between 2004 and the night of the shooting.[37][38][39] The calls from Zimmerman have since been reported by numerous media sources, including the Orlando Sentinel[40] and the Miami Herald,[41] as occurring between 2011 and 2012 due to a typo on the first page of the police report.[42]
Zimmerman was a criminal justice student and also licensed to carry a firearm.[34] Sanford police chief Bill Lee stated that neighborhood watch volunteers are not encouraged to carry a gun but have a Constitutional right to do so.[34] Lee further stated, "Mr. Zimmerman was not acting outside the legal boundaries of Florida Statute by carrying his weapon when this incident occurred."[43]
Sanford Police volunteer program coordinator Wendy Dorival told the Miami Herald she met Zimmerman in September, 2011 at a community neighborhood watch presentation. Dorival stated she gave a warning in regard to vigilante behavior at that meeting: “I said, ‘If it’s someone you don’t recognize, call us. We’ll figure it out,’ ” Dorival said. “‘Observe from a safe location.’ There’s even a slide about not being vigilante police. I don’t know how many more times I can repeat it.”[34]

Police

Chief of police Bill Lee
Chris Serino is a Sanford Police homicide detective and was the lead investigator for the police on the night of the shooting. On the night of the shooting, Serino stated in an affidavit that he was unconvinced by Zimmerman’s version of events.[44] Based on Serino's affidavit, police sought an arrest warrant for Zimmerman. That request was denied by the Office of the State Attorney for insufficient evidence.[44][45]
Bill Lee, Chief of Police at the time of the shooting, received criticism for his role in the case. The Sanford city commission, including the Mayor, passed a motion of no confidence in regards to chief Lee, and his handling of the case.[46] On March 22, 2012, Lee announced that he had temporarily stepped down from his position as chief of police, stating "my involvement in this matter is overshadowing the process."[47]

State Attorneys

State Attorney Norm Wolfinger
State Attorney Angela Corey
Norm Wolfinger is the State Attorney responsible for prosecutions in Brevard County and Seminole County,[48][49] where the shooting occurred. Wolfinger was the State Attorney initially responsible for the case.
On March 22, 2012, Florida Governor Rick Scott announced that State Attorney Angela Corey would be investigating the case instead of Wolfinger.[50] Corey has stated that her office, rather than a grand jury, will decide whether to press charges against Zimmerman.[51]

Shooting

The shooting occurred at The Retreat at Twin Lakes, which is a private gated community of 263 townhouses in Sanford, Florida.[28] Martin was staying there at his father's fiancée's townhouse[20] when he left to walk to a convenience store where he bought a can of Arizona Iced Tea and a bag of Skittles.[52][53] While walking back, Martin was seen in the gated community by Zimmerman,[54] who was in his vehicle on a personal errand.[55] Martin was shot 70 yards from where he was staying.[56] (See Aerial view of points of interest.)

Zimmerman cell phone call to police

Zimmerman called the Sanford Police Department police at the non-emergency number at approximately 7:00 p.m., February 26, 2012[57] to report what he considered to be suspicious behavior by Martin, which he described as "just walking around looking about" in the rain.[58] The police dispatcher tape recorded him saying, "This guy looks like he is up to no good or he is on drugs or something." He further stated that the person he was observing had his hand in his waistband, was holding something in his other hand, and was walking around slowly in the rain looking at houses.[59] On the recording of the call, Zimmerman is heard commenting "these assholes they always get away." [60][61] After the audio of the call was released, CNN[62] and other reports alleged Zimmerman had exclaimed "fucking coon," two minutes and twenty-one seconds (2:21) into the call although the transcript of the call states "unintelligible". [63][64] Other reviewers offered alternate interpretations of what was said.[citation needed]
The dispatcher recommended that he not take any action, and informed him that police were on the way. Zimmerman reported that Martin had started running. The dispatcher asked him if he was following Martin and he affirmed that he was. The dispatcher informed him that this was not necessary, saying, "We don't need you to do that."[65] Zimmerman affirmed "OK" and said he would meet the police by the mailboxes. However, before hanging up he said “Actually, could you have him call me, and I’ll tell him where I’m at?”[66]
2:07 minutes into the police call Zimmerman says "he's running". 2:37 into the call Zimmerman tells the dispatcher, "he ran". After he can't tell the dispatcher the address of his current location, the dispatcher asks Zimmerman for his apartment number. Zimmerman tells him the numbers of his street address and then at 3:35 adds "Oh crap, I don't want to give it all out. I don't know where this kid is". Zimmerman appears to hang up at the 4:05 mark, almost two minutes after the comment that Martin was running. The recording ends at 4:11.

Martin cell phone call from girlfriend

According to phone company records,[67] Martin was speaking on a cell phone at the time of the incident. Martin's girlfriend came forward, identifying herself as the other person in that conversation; she was interviewed by an attorney, who has made a statement, and her parents have requested her anonymity. On March 28, 2012, ABC News reported that they had obtained phone records that show she called at 7:12 PM and remained on the phone with Martin until moments before he was shot.[68] The girl said that Martin expressed concern about a strange man following him, and she advised him to run. She says she heard Martin say "What are you following me for?" followed by a man's voice responding "What are you doing here?" She said that she heard the sound of pushing and that Martin's headset suddenly went silent, leading her to believe that he had been knocked down. She attempted to call him back immediately, but was unable to reach him.[69]

Sanford Police arrival and investigation

Timothy Smith, the first officer to arrive at the scene, reported finding Zimmerman standing near Martin, who was lying face down in the grass and unresponsive.[70][71] At that time, Zimmerman stated to Smith that he had shot Martin and was still armed. Zimmerman was handcuffed and his weapon removed from him. Smith observed that Zimmerman's back was wet and covered with grass and he was bleeding from the nose and the back of his head.[70][72] Ricardo Ayala, the second officer to arrive that night observed Martin lying face down in the grass and attempted to get a response from him. At this time, Sgt. Anthony Raimondo arrived and together with Ayala began CPR. Paramedics from Sanford Fire and Rescue arrived and continued CPR, finally declaring him dead at 7:30 p.m. Other officers who had arrived by this time secured the crime scene and made contact with neighbors in the area and obtained statements from witnesses at the scene.[70] Zimmerman was treated and released by paramedics while still at the scene of the incident.[70][72] After placing Zimmerman in his police vehicle, Officer Smith heard Zimmerman say, "I was yelling for someone to help me, but no one would help me."[70][73] Zimmerman was then transported to the Sanford Police Department where he was questioned by investigators.[70]
Martin's body was taken to the morgue where he was tagged as a John Doe.[74] The Washington Post reports that not until Trayvon's father, Tracy Martin, called to file a missing-person's report on Feb. 27, did police officers go to his fiancée's condo with photographs of his dead son's body. However, the police department's "Partial Report Only", completed at 3:07 a.m., Feb. 27 lists Trayvon Martin's full name, city of birth, address and phone number.[75]

Witness accounts

An eyewitness to the confrontation just prior to the shooting stated that Martin was on top of Zimmerman and punching him, while Zimmerman was yelling for help. This witness, who identified himself as "John", stated to Fox News Orlando that "the guy on the bottom, who had a red sweater on, was yelling to me, 'Help! Help!' and I told him to stop, and I was calling 911. He went on to say that when he got upstairs and looked down, Martin was lying in the grass, and the witness believed Martin to be dead.[76][77] Martin’s mother said she recognized the shouting for help was from her son. Zimmerman says he was the one calling out.[78]
A 13-year old boy walking his dog saw a man on the ground shortly before the shooting and identified him as wearing red.[79][80][81] His mother later disputed the testimony and claimed that the police pressured him into choosing what color the man was wearing, and that her son couldn't see any details in the dark. She also stated that the police waited five days before requesting to even question her son and said the police told her they didn't believe the shooting was self-defense.[82][83]
A neighbor who heard some of the incident, Mary Cutcher, appeared with her roommate on AC 360 and stated that she believes "there was no punching, no hitting going on at the time, no wrestling" just prior to the shooting, and admitted that she neither saw the shooting nor the preceding altercation.[84][85][86] Cutcher and her roommate heard the pair in their backyard and a "very young voice" whining, with no sounds of a fight. They heard a gunshot; the crying stopped immediately, and they saw Zimmerman on his knees straddling Martin on the ground.[84][86] The police say she gave an official account to them at the time of the incident that supported Zimmerman's story.[87] However, Cutcher and her roommate maintain that their account of the incident to the police did not agree with Zimmerman's, and they demanded the police retract that incorrect statement.[85]
On March 30, 2012, a new eyewitness said that it was dark and he saw two men on the ground fighting, then heard the shooting, and saw Zimmerman walk away with no blood on him.[88] Police records confirm only a single shot was fired.[89]

Sanford Police Station

After arriving at the police station, Zimmerman was turned over to the custody of investigations and placed in an interview room where he was interviewed by Investigator D.Singleton.[90][91] The gun, a black Kel-Tec PF-9, 9mm semi-automatic pistol, that was confiscated from Zimmerman at the scene, was placed into evidence.[91][92] While in custody at the police station, Zimmerman was not administered a drug or alcohol test.[93]
The lead homicide investigator on the case, Chris Serino, recommended charging Zimmerman with manslaughter. Serino filed an affidavit the night of the incident, saying he was unconvinced by Zimmerman's account, but was informed by State Attorney Wolfinger's office that there wasn't enough evidence to obtain a conviction. [9] Zimmerman was eventually released without charges.[93]. TheGrio.com reported that Wolfinger met with police leaders on the night of the shooting while Zimmerman was still in police custody,[94] but Wolfinger denied it.[95]

Zimmerman's account of events

That night, and in later meetings, Zimmerman described in detail, and re-enacted for police, what he says took place:
He was on his way to the store to do some errands when he spotted Trayvon Martin walking through his neighborhood. He followed Martin, but lost track of him. He was returning to his SUV when Martin approached him from the left rear and confronted him. Martin asked him, "Do you have a problem?"[96] He replied "No", and Martin then said, "Well, you do now",[96] while Zimmerman reached for his cell phone. Martin then punched him in the face, knocking him down, and began beating his head against the ground. Zimmerman called out for help, while being beaten, before shooting Martin once in the chest at close range, in self-defense.[96][97]
In an interview with CNN, Zimmerman's brother, who was not present at the altercation, reiterated this account, adding that during the struggle Martin saw Zimmerman's firearm and attempted to disarm him while saying "you die tonight", which prompted Zimmerman to fire in self defense.[98]

Surveillance video

ABC News obtained a surveillance video of Zimmerman being escorted into the Sanford police station after the shooting. An officer is seen pausing to look at the back of Zimmerman's head, but ABC originally claimed that no abrasions or blood can be seen in the video.[99] The Daily Caller disputed this claim, and posted a still from the ABC video which it said shows what may be an injury on the back of Zimmerman's head.[100] MSNBC reported, "We were able to zoom into the back of his head and there is some sort of abrasion..."[101] Zimmerman's brother, Robert Zimmerman Jr., told CNN that medical records will prove that his brother was attacked and that his nose was broken by Martin.[102] A neighbor reportedly saw the bandages on Zimmerman less than 24 hours after the incident.[103] ABC later reported that it had "re-digitized" the video, and that this version showed "what appear to be a pair of gashes or welts on George Zimmerman's head."[104]

Phone recordings

Recordings of eight calls to the police made on the night of the shooting were released by the Sanford police on March 17, 2012.[59][105] Early press reports incorrectly indicated that the recordings included the sound of a single shot followed by a voice pleading or begging for help, and then a second shot, after which the voice immediately stopped. Later reports indicate that gun was fired only once.[106] Zimmerman told police at the scene that he had cried out for help.[107] The statement was corroborated by an eyewitness who said that Martin was on top of Zimmerman, beating him, as Zimmerman called for help.[76] One witness, who had only heard but not seen the events, believed Martin was the one calling for help, and said that the police tried to get her to change her testimony to their assertion that it was Zimmerman calling for help.[108]
Two experts on forensic voice analysis, contacted by the Orlando Sentinel, concluded independently that the screams in the background of the 911 recordings were not from Zimmerman.[109] However, there was some dispute as to the reliability and ultimately the admissibility in court of voiceprint analysis in this setting.[110][111]

Aftermath

Trayvon's father Tracy Martin, family attorney Benjamin Crump and mother Sybrina Fulton, at the 'Million Hoodies' protest in Union Square, New York
Zimmerman has not been charged with any crime, because he asserted the right of self-defense, and investigators said they could find no evidence disproving that assertion.[112][6] The night of the shooting, some of the Sanford police accepted Zimmerman's account at face value,[113] but the lead homicide detective wrote in an affidavit that he did not believe the story and wanted to charge Zimmerman with manslaughter.[9] The State Attorney's office and Police Chief Lee said they did not have enough evidence to arrest Zimmerman. "In this case Mr. Zimmerman has made the statement of self-defense," Lee said. "Until we can establish probable cause to dispute that, we don't have the grounds to arrest him." In response to criticisms of the investigation, Lee responded that "We are taking a beating over this," and defended the investigation.[114] "This is all very unsettling. I'm sure if George Zimmerman had the opportunity to relive Sunday, Feb. 26, he'd probably do things differently. I'm sure Trayvon would, too."[34]
According to Zimmerman's father, in the wake of the controversy, George Zimmerman received death threats and moved out of his home.[115] The New Black Panther Party has offered a $10,000 reward for the "capture" of George Zimmerman,[116] and has announced that it was hoping to raise enough money within the next week to increase the reward to one million dollars.[117] This was condemned by the city of Sanford.[116] Film director Spike Lee retweeted an erroneous address which forced a family out of their home to avoid harassment after they received hate mail and unwanted visits from reporters.[118][119][120] Lee was criticized for his retweet[121][122] and he later issued an apology.[123]

Investigations and other official statements

Multiple investigations are ongoing.
On March 20, the Justice Department announced that they were opening investigations into the incident.[124] The state governor, Rick Scott, has asked the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to investigate the shooting.[125][126]
On March 20, 2012, State attorney Norm Wolfinger announced that a Seminole County grand jury would be convened on April 10, 2012 to investigate the death of Martin.[127][16][128] However, State attorney Angela Corey, who was assigned to the case by Governor Rick Scott, stated her office, not a grand jury, will decide whether to press charges in the shooting death of Martin. Angela Corey stated that, “I always lean towards moving forward without needing the grand jury in a case like this,” “I foresee us being able to make a decision, and move on it on our own.”[51]
Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi made a statement on March 20 regarding the case:
"I am both devastated and deeply troubled that young Trayvon Martin lost his life in a shooting. When someone loses his life at the hands of another, there cannot be any questions surrounding the circumstances of the death. ... I have spoken to FDLE Commissioner [Gerald M.] Bailey, whose agency is now involved, and I know that a complete and thorough review of the facts will be conducted. FDLE has skilled investigators of the highest caliber, and no stone will be left unturned in this investigation. While the Seminole County State Attorney's Office has the sole authority regarding a charging decision by law, I will remain vigilant in ensuring that questions are answered."[16]
President Barack Obama, speaking to reporters on March 23 after federal investigators were deployed to Sanford, said, "When I think about this boy, I think about my own kids, and I think every parent in America should be able to understand why it is absolutely imperative that we investigate every aspect of this," and, "If I had a son, he would look like Trayvon."[14]
The FBI has opened a parallel investigation into if Martin's civil rights were violated, and is interviewing witnesses, and looking into Zimmerman's background. [129]

Allegations of racial profiling

Supporters of Trayvon Martin rally in Union Square during a "Million Hoodie March" in Manhattan on March 21.

Against Zimmerman

The shooting prompted allegations that Zimmerman was motivated by racism.[5][69] Critics disparaged what they perceived to be Zimmerman racially profiling Martin,[5][6][130][115] and an abridged phone call that aired on NBC's Today show incorrectly implied that Zimmerman had volunteered the race of Martin to police officers without prompt.[131]
Thousands of people attended rallies around the country to demand Zimmerman's arrest,[11] including a gathering on March 22 of civil rights leaders including Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III, Dick Gregory, and others.[12]
Since Martin was killed while wearing a hoodie, donning a hoodie was seen as a sign of protest, and many cities across the U.S. staged "million hoodie marches" or "hundred hoodie marches". Additionally, some professional athletes, including Carmelo Anthony and the entire Miami Heat roster, tweeted photos of themselves wearing hoodies. Fox News Channel host Geraldo Rivera encouraged young people of color to stop wearing hoodies,[132] comments for which he later apologized.[133]

Defense of Zimmerman's character

In an open letter, Zimmerman's father, Robert Zimmerman, defended his son against allegations that his actions were racially motivated, stating that Zimmerman was half Hispanic, was raised in a multiracial family, and "would be the last to discriminate for any reason whatsoever", saying that the portrayal of his son as a racist "could not be further from the truth". Zimmerman's lawyer Craig Sooner stated that Zimmerman is not a racist, and that he had mentored black youths in the past.[134] Joe Oliver, a former television news reporter who is acquainted with Zimmerman,[135] noted "I'm a black male and all that I know is that George has never given me any reason whatsoever to believe he has anything against people of color."[136]
In a letter to the NAACP, an anonymous individual claiming to be one of Zimmerman's relatives brought up the case of Sherman Ware a black homeless man who was punched by the son of a police officer in Sanford. The letter states that Zimmerman distributed flyers protesting the attack, and helped to organize a city hall meeting regarding the incident.[137]

Against the Sanford police

For not arresting Zimmerman, the Sanford police have faced heavy criticism, protests, and allegations of racial bias.[5][69] Over 2.2 million people have demanded Zimmerman's arrest via a Change.org petition by Martin's mother.[138] The NAACP wrote U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder expressing "no confidence that, absent federal oversight, the Sanford Police Department will devote the necessary degree of care to its investigation" and requesting that personnel be detailed to Sanford to review the case without bias.[6] Lee repeatedly defended the investigation, stating that the Sanford police did not feel they had conducted a racially biased investigation and welcomed a review of their efforts.[108][130] Allegations were also made that the Sanford police were protecting Zimmerman.[107] A witness who reported that she heard Martin cry out for help and subsequently saw Zimmerman standing over Martin's body, said that police only took a brief statement from her, despite her attempts to provide more detail.[107] Lee told reporters that they could not arrest Zimmerman because no evidence contradicted his story, and that to do so would leave the police open to litigation.[130] He also said that although 911 did instruct Zimmerman not to pursue Martin, those instructions are only recommendations that do not carry the force of law.[6]
Three out of the five members of the Sanford city commission, including the Mayor, passed a motion of no confidence in regards to the police chief Bill Lee, and his handling of the case; however, the vote is advisory only. One member of the council, Mark McCarty, then asked for Lee to step down. The City Manager, Norton Bonaparte Jr., stated that he would not make a decision regarding Lee until more information from the investigation was available.[46]
On March 22, 2012, Lee announced that he had temporarily stepped down from his position as chief of police, stating "my involvement in this matter is overshadowing the process." Lee further stated that,"I do this in the hopes of restoring some semblance of calm to a city which has been in turmoil for several weeks." Lee also insisted his agency did a fair and thorough investigation and he could not lawfully arrest Zimmerman because evidence backed up his claim of self-defense. [47]

Legal issues

Self-defense laws in the United States, particularly regarding justifiable homicide, vary by state. Florida law, as of 2005, includes a "stand your ground" provision, under which a person does not have to retreat before using deadly force if he reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm, in most circumstances.[139] In many states, such laws protect people in their own homes, but Florida's version extends the no-retreat premise to vehicles and public places. In at least 17 states, including Florida, there is no duty to retreat, before using deadly force.[140][141] After the shooting, media reports had indicated that Zimmerman most likely would use the Stand Your Ground provison in Florida's self-defense law. However, Craig Sonner, attorney for George Zimmerman, on March 23, 2012, stated that the Stand Your Ground law was not applicable in this case, but that this was still a case of self-defense. According to Durell Peaden, one of the sponsors of the Florida law, the law does not say that a person has a right to confront another. "When [Zimmerman] said 'I'm following him', he lost his defense."[142] However, the same article goes on to state, "Peaden and Baxley said they didn’t know all the facts of the case, so their interpretations of what happened could change if new information arises during the investigation."[142]
On March 28, 2012, a Miami-Dade judge ruled that Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law provided self-defense protection in a case where the defendant had chased his assailant after seeing him steal a radio from the defendant's truck. The court ruled that Greyston Garcia could not be prosecuted after chasing a thief and stabbing him to death with a knife when his assailant swung a heavy bag at his head. The judge stated that Garcia "was well within his rights to pursue the victim and demand the return of his property".[143][144]

Media coverage

For the first 10 days after Martin's death, the story was only covered by the Florida media.[145] On March 8, 2012, CBS News acting on a tip it received from the network’s local bureau in Atlanta, Georgia, obtained an exclusive interview with Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton that was broadcast on CBS This Morning.[145][146] Benjamin Crump, the family's attorney, who had been retained to pursue legal action and to persuade the news media to cover the case, arranged for the interview to take place.[145]
Also on March 8, The Huffington Post, The Young Turks, and TheGrio.com, affiliated with NBC News, started to cover the case as well.[145][147][148][149] The next day on March 9, 2012, ABC World News featured the story on their nightly broadcast.[150] CNN first reported on the case on March 12, 2012, and by the end of that week, radio hosts and bloggers were also reporting on the story.[145][151] National coverage started to increase the week of March 12 and intensified after March 16, when tapes of 911 calls were released to the public.[145][152] Having the 911 calls which the police had previously declined to release, was an important development because it gave radio and TV reporters more material for them to report on. [145][152] An editorial by the president of IFC described how Martin became a "missing white girl" (a cause célèbre for modern media), saying that minorities were underreported in American news reporting, and "if not for several black journalists, including Trymaine Lee of the Huffington Post, Ta-Nehisi Coates of the Atlantic, Charles M. Blow of the New York Times, and Reverend Al Sharpton of MSNBC, it is doubtful anyone would know who Trayvon Martin is and was."[153]
The Project for Excellence in Journalism is reporting that media coverage of the Trayvon Martin case has become the first story in 2012 to be featured more than the presidential race. According to the Project, the varying types of media have focused on the case in different ways. An article in the Tampa Bay Times wrote that, "on Twitter, people are outraged at Zimmerman and want justice, while on cable news and talk radio people are discussing the state's laws for self-defense and gun control and on blogs the focus has been on race."[154] The article further states that the story had a bigger focus on MSNBC and less on Fox News.[154]

Accusations of media bias

NBC alters 911 recording

After playing a recording of Zimmerman's 911 call, NBC was accused of selectively editing it to make Zimmerman appear racist. On the recording played by NBC, Zimmerman was heard saying, "This guy looks like he’s up to no good. He looks black." In the original 911 recording, however, Zimmerman actually said, "This guy looks like he’s up to no good. Or he’s on drugs or something. It’s raining and he’s just walking around, looking about." The 911 operator was then heard asking, "OK, and this guy - is he black, white or Hispanic?" Zimmerman answered, "He looks black."[131] The Washington Post wrote that NBC's alteration "would more readily paint Zimmerman as a racial profiler. In reality’s version, Zimmerman simply answered a question about the race of the person whom he was reporting to the police. Nothing prejudicial at all in responding to such an inquiry... it’s a falsehood with repercussions. Much of the public discussion over the past week has settled on how conflicting facts and interpretations call into question whether Zimmerman acted justifiably or criminally... To portray that exchange in a way that wrongs Zimmerman is high editorial malpractice..."[131] Sean Hannity said of this editing, "They forgot the dispatcher’s question! How could NBC, in good conscience, do that?", to which Brent Bozell responded, "This isn’t bias, this isn’t distortion, this is an all-out falsehood by NBC News."[155] NBC admitted that "there was an error made in the production process" and apologized.[156]
NBC released a statement saying "During our investigation it became evident that there was an error made in the production process that we deeply regret. We will be taking the necessary steps to prevent this from happening in the future and apologize to our viewers"[157] NBC declined to provide any information regarding who was involved, or how the issue occured, or to detail what actions were taken as a result.[158] Several journalists have said the statement was not enough, and called for NBC's parent company Comcast to do additional investigations, and for information regarding how the issue occurred to be released. [159][160][161]

Publication of outdated photographs

Associated Press reported that at the time of the shooting, Martin was older than "the baby-faced boy in the photo that has been on front pages across the country," and that Zimmerman wasn't "the beefy-looking figure in the widely published mugshot," and that these outdated photos "may have helped shape initial public perceptions of the deadly shooting."[162] In the initial photographs, Trayvon appeared 13 and Zimmerman appeared much younger and more broad than the most recent published images. [163]