Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Again, no evidence of this was presented at the trial that I saw. It occurs to me that if you are going to put someone away for manslaughter based on the fact that they were "menacing" or assaulting someone in some manner, you should be able to prove this was the case first.
Yeah, I haven't been following the trial, so I don't really know what evidence has been presented or really even what the prosecution's legal arguments are. To the extent that I'm talking about this case (rather than broad legal generalities), I'm going on:
(a) the basic facts that (i) Martin was just walking down the street when Zimmerman spotted him, (ii) Zimmerman followed him down the road and behind some houses, (iii) Martin indicated to a third party that he felt threatened, (iv) at some point, a confrontation and physical altercation occurred in which Martin had the upper hand and Zimmerman was injured and (v) Zimmerman shot Martin while the latter was on top of the former during that altercation; and
(b) a skeptical but "benefit of the doubt" view of Zimmerman's claims that (i) he lost sight of Martin and turned around prior to the confrontation, (ii) Martin initiated the physical contact and was the aggressor throughout the fight and (iii) Zimmerman genuinely felt he was at risk of death or serious injury when he shot Martin.
Evaluating those facts under the "reasonable person" legal standard, I'm inclined to conclude that (i) Zimmerman's suspicions of Martin were not reasonable, (ii) his following of Martin behind the houses was therefore a reckless and threatening/menacing act, and (iii) Martin was justified in feeling threatened by Zimmerman's actions, but (iv) if Zimmerman really did break off pursuit, then Martin was not justified in initiating violence, and (v) if Zimmerman's account of the fight is true, then he was justified in shooting Martin in self-defense.
However, since Zimmerman's initial actions were reckless/threatening and initiated the entire chain of events, the net legal effect should only be a mitigating one, not a complete defense against any criminal liability. Hence, I'm inclined to go with manslaughter, not murder.