to from the previous experience in his own neighborhood, and as de la rionda was pointing out, slamming the bag of skittles on to the table inside the courtroom, talking about when trayvon martin was at 7-eleven. he says all this 17-year-old kid was doing was buying skittles. he said he wasn t even stealing them. he paid for them with money. wearing a hoodie. the clerk doesn t think he is suspicious. the clerk is not in fear of this guy. but yet when he gets to the neighborhood, george zimmerman, cop wannabe, profiled him, followed him, got involved, and ultimately took a 17-year-old s life, which, as bernie de la rionda at the beginning of his two-hour closing argument said, we don t have this young man here anymore and it s through no fault of trayvon martin. it s because that man over there, the defense table, made assumptions and he was wrong. can and he killed a young man. stay with us. there was a dramatic skittles
and bernly de la rionda making the jury question whether george zimmerman, number one, was truly following trayvon martin longer than he admitted to police, and also whether he actually pulled out his pistol long before he says he ultimately did. bernie dela ron darks the lead prosecutor for the state, the number one prosecutor out of the jacksonville office, who ultimately 15 months ago to this day charged george zimmerman with second degree murder. he said basically all of this starts months ago with previous crimes in the neighborhood, and previous suspicious characters, getting away, and that was part of the reason why george zimmerman created the neighborhood watch. de la rionda pointing out that he has made several assumptions about trayvon martin. number one, up to no good. on drugs or something, suspicious. lumps him into the group of a-holes that always get away. this group of punks he referred
episode. the drama with the foam dummy. take us through the emotions. was there any emotion out of zimmerman? out of the jury? in the emotion out of either of the family members? the jury was very intensely riveted, especially in the first hour, as de la rionda got very animated, raising his voice. quoting mr. simple zimmerman as he was cussing in the phone call, raising his voice. so the jury not taking as many notes as during the trial when they were listening to testimony, but this time they were just really riveted and following along and basically watching a story unfold, which in a large part is exactly what closing arguments are for the attorneys. as for george zimmerman, he sat there, pretty much stone-faced at the defense table, despite all of these what zimmerman may consider outlandish accusations against him and his motives. he sat there basically