More Flori-duh Justice

signalmankenneth

Verified User
The city manager of Sanford, Fla., says George Zimmerman wasn’t arrested despite his confession that he fatally shot Trayvon Martin because police were legally barred from doing so.

“Zimmerman provided a statement claiming he acted in self defense, which at the time was supported by physical evidence and testimony,” Sanford City Manager Norton Bonaparte Jr. wrote in a letter released publicly Wednesday evening. “By Florida Statute, law enforcement was PROHIBITED from making an arrest based on the facts and circumstances they had at the time.”

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The city manager of Sanford, Fla., says George Zimmerman wasn’t arrested despite his confession that he fatally shot Trayvon Martin because police were legally barred from doing so.

“Zimmerman provided a statement claiming he acted in self defense, which at the time was supported by physical evidence and testimony,” Sanford City Manager Norton Bonaparte Jr. wrote in a letter released publicly Wednesday evening. “By Florida Statute, law enforcement was PROHIBITED from making an arrest based on the facts and circumstances they had at the time.”

florida-shooting.jpg

trayvon-threatened-3.gif


trayvon-watching-0.gif


perlin-Gunman.GIF

I posted about this a couple of weeks ago, it is good to see that the media has finally woken up.
 
I am just watching a documentary by Werner Herzog about prisoners on Death Row, called unsurprisingly Death Row. An inside look at a maximum security prison in Texas featuring interviews with the inmates. Has anybody else seen it? One very surprising thing that was exposed is that there wasn't a right previously to force a state to turn over DNA evidence until one of the prisoners established a right to sue the authorities.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1843894/
 
I am just watching a documentary by Werner Herzog about prisoners on Death Row, called unsurprisingly Death Row. An inside look at a maximum security prison in Texas featuring interviews with the inmates. Has anybody else seen it? One very surprising thing that was exposed is that there wasn't a right previously to force a state to turn over DNA evidence until one of the prisoners established a right to sue the authorities.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1843894/

This might just be in Texas, does anybody know different?
 
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