UPDATE: Trayvon Martin case: Zimmerman Faces 2nd-Degree Murder Charge

My heart is a bit more at ease knowing that he is facing 2nd Degree Murder but I still think this racist bastard needs to be sentenced to death.

LA Times reports — George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, faces a second-degree murder charge for shooting Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager in Sanford, Fla., the special prosecutor in the case announced Wednesday.

In a televised news conference, State Atty. Angela B. Corey outlined the charges in the case that has sparked national demonstrations calling for Zimmerman’s arrest.

“I can tell you we did not come to this decision lightly,” Corey told reporters. “We do not prosecute by public pressure.”

She said her office had filed information with the charge.

Zimmerman, who has maintained he acted in self-defense, was in custody, Corey confirmed, though she gave no details. He had been in hiding since the shooting after his family said he had received death threats.

Martin, 17, was returning from a convenience store run on Feb. 26 — he had bought a bag of Skittles candy and an iced tea — when he caught Zimmerman’s eye. Zimmerman, 28, was driving out of his gated community in Sanford on his way to the supermarket when he called the Sanford Police Department to report a young black male acting suspiciously, possibly on drugs, he said.

The police dispatcher asked Zimmerman whether he was following the youth. When Zimmerman replied that he was, the dispatcher told him: “We don’t need you to do that.” Moments later, Zimmerman — armed with a 9-millimeter weapon — got out of his car.

Zimmerman has said he shot Martin in self-defense after the youth struck him in the face, knocked him down and began pounding his head into the ground. But many believe Zimmerman was the aggressor, emboldened by his status as the self-appointed neighborhood watch captain.

Coverage of the case was largely limited to local media until the call between Zimmerman and the dispatcher was made public, along with a 911 call that one resident made just before the shooting. In the background of that call, someone can be heard yelling for help. Martin’s parents insist that voice belonged to their son. Zimmerman has said the voice was his.

The phone calls and steady stream of new evidence, not to mention potential evidence, have turned many Americans into armchair CSI experts.

But the case itself struck a chord — and not just within the African American community. Many Americans consider it cut-and-dried evidence of the social injustices that blacks in this country have long faced.

The intense media attention has been propelled in part by outrage in the social media world. Twitter has been flooded with tweets linked by the hashtag #Trayvon. And an online petition at Change.org demanding Zimmerman’s prosecution has received more than 2.2 million signatures — the single biggest reaction the online petition platform has ever had.

In the wake of such scrutiny, as well as marches, protests and rallies held across the country, the U.S. Justice Department and the FBI have launched probes into the case, and Corey was assigned to review the matter. The case even gained the attention of President Obama, who called for a thorough investigation.

And, no surprise, the case has also stirred up a backlash against the media attention.

A recent survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found that many people — including a majority of Republicans and 43% of whites surveyed — said the media had gone overboard in their coverage.

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Trayvon Martin Case: Special Prosecutor Will SkipThe Grand Jury

LA Times reports — The special prosecutor in the Trayvon Martin case announced Monday that she will not take the case before a Florida grand jury — but will continue pursuing her investigation.

The news release issued on behalf of Florida State Atty. Angela Corey cautioned the public not to read too much into the move.

“The decision should not be considered a factor in the final determination of the case,” it said.

The Seminole County Grand Jury was scheduled to convene Tuesday to hear evidence in the death of Martin, a hoodie-wearing unarmed black 17-year-old who was shot Feb. 26 in Sanford, Fla. The case has captivated the nation, with neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman, 28, saying he shot Martin in self-defense and with black activists demanding Zimmerman’s arrest.

The decision to bypass the grand jury was unexpected. Grand juries are often used in politically controversial cases as a buffer, protecting prosecutors and politicians from controversy. But there can also be a backlash to grand jury proceedings, because they occur outside the public’s view.

In the meantime, protests continue.

A student protest is slated for Monday afternoon at Valencia College in Orlando, according to the Orlando Sentinel. And a handful of protesters — many of them students wearing hoodies — succeeded in shutting down the Sanford Police Department on Monday as part of a call for civil disobedience. The department sent out a news release saying it had temporarily closed its offices rather than tangle with protesters who had barricaded the front door.

Critics have suggested the Police Department is guilty of racism because  authorities didn’t pursue charges against Zimmerman. But some inside the department say law enforcement officers did try to pursue charges — but were overruled by local prosecutors. That controversy contributed to the decision by Florida Gov. Rick Scott to appoint Corey as a special prosecutor in the case.

Perhaps the only guarantee in this case is that Corey’s decision will be denounced in some corners. “Whatever she decided, it is going to be controversial,” University of Florida law professor Kenneth B. Nunn told The Times.

Martin was returning from a convenience store run when he crossed paths with Zimmerman.

The volunteer had stepped up to be the neighborhood watchman in his gated community, intending to help combat a months-long rash of burglaries and other crimes. Zimmerman was on his way to the supermarket when he called the Sanford Police Department to report a young black male acting suspiciously, possibly on drugs.

Within minutes, Martin was dead of a gunshot wound. Zimmerman has said that he fired on Martin in self-defense after the youth struck him in the face, knocked him down and began pounding his head into the ground. But many believe Zimmerman was the aggressor, and note that he continued to follow Martin even after the police dispatcher told him it wasn’t necessary.

Many marches, protests and rallies have been held in the weeks since the shooting. Some participants contend that Zimmerman should be charged with a hate crime because, they say, the shooting was motivated by Martin’s race. Civil-rights leaders such as the Revs. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton have shown up in Florida to call for justice in the case.

Representatives for Zimmerman, whose father is white and whose mother is Peruvian, insist he is not a racist.

President Obama has even weighed in, calling for a thorough investigation. In addition to the state probe, the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI have also launched inquiries into the incident.

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Theme: Esquire by Matthew Buchanan.

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