RangerDave wrote:
You're just spinning in a remarkably dishonest fashion. He followed him down the street for a bit in his car. He then got out of his car and followed him on foot - at a jog - behind a row of houses. Whether or not he thought Martin was suspicious doesn't render "untrue" those undisputed facts.
Gee, maybe that had something to do with the fact that Martin had no business being there, and even less business going back behind a bunch of houses?
DFK! wrote:
It rings true because a reasonable person would find Zimmerman's behavior threatening. Hell, in the road rage thread, you said you'd draw a **** gun on someone who got out of their car and approached you in a threatening manner and shoot them if they got within 20 feet of you.
Which is not even remotely the same as finding a person following you threatening, when you're going behind a bunch of houses in a gated community you have no business being in, in the first place. It is not reasonable for Martin to find Zimmerman's behavior threatening given that he had no business between any houses, much less in the gated community in the first place.
RD wrote:
So correct my facts if you think I'm misstating them. Thus far, you have failed to point out any error in my understanding of the case. You're just sputtering.
You are misstating the facts by representing Martin as simply "walking down a street."
DFK! wrote:
The idea that following Martin as Zimmerman did was anything but unreasonable is what's **** stupid.
No, in fact it's not, and the fact that you think "unreasonable" is even
relevant Zimmerman following Martin calls into question your entire ability to evaluate this case.
A person does not need to be reasonable in suspecting criminal activity unless they actually interfere with the other person in some way.
Quote:
I never said you can't defend yourself after following someone; not did I say it gives the followee just cause to bash in your brains. However, it absolutely does expose the follower to recklessness/negligence-based charges and limits their available defenses at trial.
Except that it does not, in any way. You are trying to extend the concept of "reasonableness" to a place that it has never been held to go. It does not expose anyone to recklessness or negligence charges; it is not reckless or negligent in any way to attempt to follow a suspected criminal in order to report them to police; in a large part because it is not reasonable for the person being followed to start defending themself based on that fact alone.
Quote:
You have the right to walk down the street; you do not have the right to behave in a threatening and/or reckless manner. Following Martin behind those houses can legitimately be characterized as the latter, so stop pretending that Zimmerman's right to walk around and "observe" people in public is the end of the analysis.
Stop pretending that Zimmerman's behavior can legitimately be characterized in that manner. That is absolutely false. Martin had no business there, and his going behind the houses rather than remaining on a primary street only increases the reasons Zimmerman had to be suspicious of him.
[quote"]I never said this had anything to do with a right to privacy, so go snap at whoever it is who did if you're in the mood to be a dick. My point is about the threatening/reckless/negligent behavior of the follower, not the privacy of the followee.[/quote]
And your points are wrong. You are trying to take the concepts of reasonableness, negligence, and recklessness and extend them into territory they have never been held to extend into. Martin's level of suspicion that Zimmerman meant him harm was no higher and no more reasonable than Zimmerman's level of suspicion that Martin was into mischief. The difference is that Zimmerman called the police, and Martin decided to start a fight.
You have been hanging your hat on the idea that the black kid
just had to be in the right since this started, and it's gone beyond ridiculous.