http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/46759596/ns/local_news-orlando_fl/#.T23O3NmV2xN
Sanford police provided new details Friday in the controversial investigation into the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.
WESH 2 News confirmed with Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee Jr. that the statements attributed to his department in the Sentinel story are accurate.
Among the key points in the report,
the detectives claim it was actually prosecutors who advised them they did not have enough evidence to win a manslaughter conviction.
The investigators said George Zimmerman, the man who shot Martin, told them initially that he did get out of his car to follow Martin on foot, but the 17-year-old came at him.
The two got into a fight, and when they were on the ground, Zimmerman claimed Martin hit him in the face and that Zimmerman began yelling for help, the investigators said.
Police said Zimmerman's account, which was corroborated by witnesses, indicates Martin was the aggressor.
There have also been differing accounts about whom witnesses heard crying for help that night, but the lead detective on the case says he played a recording of that voice for Martin's father and the Miami man said the voice was not his son's.
Investigator Chris Serino, the lead investigator on the case, told the Sentinel that there are no grounds for an arrest as of now because there is no probable cause to dispute his story.