On Monday, George Zimmerman’s legal defense team released a higher-quality version of a bloody photo of Zimmerman’s face from the night he shot Trayvon Martin in Sanford. Trayvon Martin was only 17 years old at the time of the shooting.
The released photograph is not new, but it is a higher quality version of the image than one that was released earlier. A grainy, black-and-white version has been available for months. The new, higher resolution image was posted to the Zimmerman legal defense’s online blog.
The photo shows Zimmerman’s face bloodied and his nose swollen. In the photo, he is sitting in the back of a Sanford police car after the incident.
The defense says it intends to publish more new evidence soon.
Geoge Zimmerman should have followed protocol just like the person did in the story below:
A Prince George’s County Police officer has been placed on administrative leave following the shooting of a person, allegedly high on PCP, who threatened to kill the officer in Oxon Hill. Police spokesperson Cpl. Larry Johnson says officers responded to the 5000 block of Barnaby Lane at about 10:22 p.m. Sunday for a report of a suspicious person in the area. Upon arrival, they found a male who was bloody. Johnson says the suspect became combative as medical personnel tried to help him. He says an officer tasered the suspect, but it had no effect on the him. The suspect pulled the taser prongs from his body, then charged at the officer while saying that “he was going to kill him.” The officer shot the suspect one time.
The suspect was taken to a hospital with non-life threatening injuries. Two officers also suffered minor injuries. Johnson says the officer who shot the suspect will remain on paid leave pending the outcome of an investigation.
You see George, when people see “SUSPICIOUS” people, they call the police and let them handle it. I suppose if you were the one that were reporting the suspicious person in the story above, that you would have tried to detain them just like you did Trayvon Martin, and shot and kill the person if he resisted your unlawful attempt to detain him and then you would be claiming self-defense, Right?