george zimmerman. the common sense that tells you if he was the neighborhood watch coordinator, not anyone, the coordinator who lived there for four years he d know the name of twin trees lane. the common sense that tells you if he was so afraid of the real suspicious guy with his hands in his waistband, he d never have got out of the car. that s not what happened. the common sense that tells you if he really was soft, didn t know how to fight, in his own
neighborhood watch coordinator and violate its corner stone principle and expect you to absolve him of his guilt. that was prosecutor john guy. weigh into that. that was one of the main issues from the very beginning is whether or not he had any right to follow, to pursue or defend himself as some have suggested he was doing in this case. that s where the prosecution has to go because the reality is their position is that but for him leaving the car, none of this would have happened and that started this whole process into motion. that s where the blame needs to lie. what the defense had to do is segregate that. if somebody didn t get up in this morning all of this could be set into motion. the issue is really did the
what s that? and let me suggest to you again, in the end, this case is not about standing your ground. it s about staying in your car. like he was talked to do. like he was supposed to do. and he can t now cloak himself with the noble cause of a neighborhood watch coordinator, violate its cornerstone principle, and expect you to absolve him his guilt. he changed his story. this is where he told detective singleton he first saw trayvon martin. and this is where showed him on the walk-through. watch the walk-through again. why did he lie about that?
the common sense that tells you that if he was the neighborhood watch coordinator, not anyone, the coordinator, who had lived there for four years, he would know the name of twin trees lane. the common sense that tells you if he was so afraid of the real suspicious guy with his hand in his waistband, he would have never got out of the car. but that s not what happened. the common sense that tells you, if he really was soft, didn t know how to fight, in his own words, he wouldn t have been able to get wrist control of trayvon martin. those were his words. he wouldn t have been able to move his hand off his mouth.
he didn t want to know about stand your ground. didn t want the police to know he knew about it. stand your ground? what s that? and let me suggest to you, in the end with, this case is not about standing your ground. it s about staying in your car. like he was taught to do, like he was supposed to do. and he can t now cloak himself with the noble cause of a neighborhood watch coordinator, violate its cornerstone princip principle, and expect you to absolve him of his guilt. he changed his story.