the when you answered the questions and gave for the first time that you heard this little get off on april 2nd, the phone cut offer right after you heard get off? you could hear grass sounds, wet grass, and you could hear trayvon saying get off, get off, and i was saying trayvon, and the phone hung up. the phone ended. the phone had ended. ended. ended. so what are you saying is that after you heard something hitting somebody then you heard
mischaracterization as to the prior statements she made. i think that that response was because you asked her to describe what she meant by wet grass. objection sustained. you may ask the next question. and what i am focusing on now is how long did that take for you to hear all of that stuff going on before the phone cut off? i don t know, sir. i wasn t timing it, sir. your sense of it? i know you weren t timing it. you never said that before. how long do you think it took since you were so concentrating on that? objection. asked and answered. you may answer the question. i don t know, sir.
there s him getting arraigned, arrested. on the right side of the screen, george zimmerman. listen to a couple minutes of rachel jeantel, the key star witness for the prosecution. what happened next? it was like wet grass sound. what do you mean grass sound? like grass, wet grass. so i have no ax to grind in this case whatsoever, but when the star witness said i heard grass over the cell phone, you have to ask the question, is she credible or not. kimberly? i would cry if that was my witness for the prosecution. wouldn t you have known? obviously, but apparently that s the star witness, they overcharged this case from the beginning, but whatever. talk about america s got
grass, until you heard the get off, until the phone disconnected. how long did that take? i don t know, sir. i was not timing it. well, in fact, i take it that you were in your house trying to fix up your hair. trust me. trust me, i had stopped. yesterday, didn t you say that when this conversation was taking place you were fixing your hair? yes. as trayvon was waiting for the rain to slow down from the mailing area. that s what i said. at what point then, if any, in this conversation did you pay particular attention when i had called back. when he was sort of whispering in the low voice after he said he lost the man?
also related that she heard the sound that she ascribed to wet grass. that was one of those moments yesterday when all of the sudden my antenna went up, and that sounds like the sort of thing you pull from a police report or a media report. and again, phone callers to me said you re being too harsh on her. well, there is two different languages being spoke here. rachel jeantel speaks the language people outside of the courtroom speak. in a courtroom, you have to be very, very precise. what was the sound? you didn t know he was hit because you couldn t see anything. you re making assumption. most of news normal conversation make assumption all the time. she is not familiar with the courtroom and the rules of evidence, and of course don west. alex, listen to this. let s everybody watch a bit of her testimony so we know what i m talking about. are you saying that the sound of west grass, as you describe it yesterday, as you describe it today, you re saying you believe that it was pe