talk about the difference in the way these two teams approach things. it is totally different but they are all looking at the same forensics. you have eyewitness tem, 12 people, a lot of concentration right now on his mental state and his mental illness. there will be a lot of investigations, family background, a lot of experts interviewing him, information correlated to his computer, what sites, any information that will give you any kind of intelligence on what he was thinking. you know what i m always curious about in a situation like this, should we continue to use the word alleged? because it is not a question as to whether or not he was the triggerman. right. well, legally, we use alleged because until you are found guilty in a court of law, obviously, that s the final determination. so, obviously, you have all of these witness accounts. you are right. so we know that this was the person. i don t know what kind of admissions he has made. obviously, if you have those admissi
triggerman and as long as he wasn t the master schemer then she was willing for us to go ahead and make deals with him and skyers so that we could convict the others. the indictment charged melvin walker and david ramsey with murder. walker for shooting brown and ramsey, who also worked at ex-sheriff dorsey s private security firm, for being the armed lookout ready to kill anyone who intervened. walker was the triggerman. and skyers got rid of the gun. and cuffy drove the getaway car. cuffy s plea changed everything. i will accept your plea of guilty as to counts 12, 13 and 14. the trial in the state murder case against ramsey and walker began in the spring of 2002. it was held right in dekalb county. cuffy was the state s star witness. i do, sir.
a special prosecutor in florida announced that his killer will be charged with second-degree murder. george zimmerman will be in court for the first time today to answer to that charge. abc s matt gutman has the very latest from sanford. reporter: for the first time in 45 days, a brief glimpse of george zimmerman being driven into the seminole county jail in sanford, florida, the same town where he shot unarmed 17-year-old trayvon martin that chilly february night. it is the search for justice for trayvon that has brought us to this moment. reporter: this is the mug shot of 28-year-old george zimmerman. the noticeably thinner triggerman in trayvon martin s shooting. he could face up to life in prison if convicted. today we filed an information charging george zimmerman with murder in the second degree. reporter: state special prosecutor angela corey announced the aggressive charge against zimmerman for shooting and killing trayvon martin as he walked to a relative s home in t
first story really differ with the second story. the first story he was responsible for the murder of the individual. second one he was there but, fred his rap sheet started when he was 10 years old. this guy that was put behind bars for life. there is no question that these guys are bad kids. they have committed murders. that is why we re even having this conversation in the first place but they re still kids and they should be severely punished. i get that but all i m saying this is at some point they should be eligible for parole. jenna: what point? fred would you be okay, 30 years, something like that. how about 30 years from now? let me tell you, the first case the guy who burned the kid i m not sure he could be rehabilitated. second kid was not the triggerman. ultimately 25 years from now why shouldn t owe have a chance to prove he is productive member of society. jenna: final thought from you, lis. if we take this away and say juveniles can not serve life in prison you think
soldiers gather around to watch it. the first time we watched the video, i think we all said the exact same thing that i said on the video. oh because even though we d watched the scene unfold in real life, you still don t see it coming. that s a lot of like patting on the back like, glad you made it through. the only reason that i think we didn t get blown up was the triggerman was a little slow or didn t have his timing right. i think maybe we were moving faster than he anticipated. the entire squad spends the next five days scouring the area of the explosion for the insurgents responsible for the attack. although they never find the men who planted the ied, they do eventually secure this area of mosul and rebuild the road for safe passage. it s one of those things where it s very personal when you get attacked. i ve had a lot of ieds blow up on my vehicle, even on my door of my vehicle. i ve had snipers shoot at me. this one wasn t directed at my