Diamondeye wrote:
It seems "exaggerated and overly one-sided" in what way?
Four things, really. First, and most importantly, I find it implausible that a guy with no history of violence would suddenly explode with sufficient rage to repeatedly bash a man's head into the concrete while saying "You're going to die tonight" and reaching for the "victim"'s gun. Sure, every violent criminal has his first violent crime, but there's almost always a pattern of escalation over time, starting with school fights, scuffles, etc. before they graduate to serious battery like this. Martin doesn't have that history. Second, we have the relatively minor injuries to Zimmerman. Yes, his nose was broken, which is consistent with a punch to the face. The "lacerations" on the back of his head, however, consisted of two cuts, one that was 1/4" long and one that was just under 1" long. I've had far more extensive "lacerations" from falling off my bike (hell, I've had shaving nicks that were longer than 1/4"), so I find it hard to reconcile the injuries he suffered with the supposed savagery of the attack he described. Incidentally, during the interrogations, the cops said the same thing, which is part of the reason some of them favored bringing charges long before this became a media storm.
Third, Zimmerman's story about what he himself was doing at that point seemed like a lie in the interrogation. In the first interrogation, he says he was chasing Martin on foot at a run. In the second interrogation he says he wasn't running after Martin, he was just trying to see what the address of the nearest house was. On the call with dispatch, he said he was just stepping out to the street to see where he was and then he was heading back to his car, so the cops could meet him there, then he changed his mind and asked them to call him back and he'd let them know where he was at that point. In the interrogation, he said he wasn't still looking for Martin, he was just trying to figure out where he was. Why not just walk directly back to his car and meet the cops there? You can here him stumbling and pausing in the interrogation, and it sounds like he's trying to come up with what to say rather than just recounting what happened, because if he was still looking for Martin, that puts him on shakier legal ground. If he's lying about that to cover his ***, seems likely he's also lying about the level of the violence involved. And fourth, it's just general human nature to exaggerate and recall events in the light most favorable to one's own position. Even if Zimmerman were trying to provide a balanced, dispassionate account of what happened (and he has every incentive
not to do that), he'd have to be superhuman to not exaggerate in his own favor.
Coren wrote:
Listening to George scream in fear and pain for half a minute on the 911 call makes it seem like to me he felt it was pretty serious. His account might be exaggerated some, but listening to those screams I don't think he's exaggerating intentionally.
I'd buy this. Honestly, my overall impression of the guy is that of a wannabe-cop with a cowardly streak (I mean, those screams were pretty over the top), and I suspect that in his mind, he was being beaten to death by a madman juiced with Venom.
Dash wrote:
I still don't see where you're getting the influenced by racial bias from.
It's basically a combination of two things. First is the fact that all Zimmerman had to go on, and what he's stated as his own reasons for being suspicious - (i) that he didn't recognize Martin; (ii) that he had his hood up; (iii) that he was walking slowly in the rain; and (iv) that there had been recent break-ins in the neighborhood - are not enough, by themselves, to justify such suspicions. Literally all he saw was a guy with a hoodie walking in the rain a little more slowly than average. That's it. No way that's enough to warrant the kind of suspicion Zimmerman displayed. Second is the point I made earlier about study after study showing that people are, on average, predisposed to be suspicious of black people. Combine the two, and it seems quite likely that Zimmerman's level of suspicion was higher than it should have been partly because Martin was black. Hence, racial bias. Nothing you could ever prove in court, obviously, but I think it's a reasonable conclusion for out-of-court, armchair discussion purposes.[/quote]