George Zimmerman Defense Getting Set For Another Bond Hearing

George Zimmerman Defense Getting Set For Another Bond Hearing

 

 

George Zimmerman is back behind bars after the judge in the case ordered him back to jail.  George's attorney says he dreaded going back to jail and that he's "frustrated that he had to prove his own innocence."

 

George Zimmerman attorneys posted on his defense website:

 

Zimmerman's defense team will file a motion today for a second bond hearing. While Mr. Zimmerman acknowledges that he allowed his financial situation to be misstated in court, the defense will emphasize that in all other regards, Mr. Zimmerman has been forthright and cooperative. 

At the point of the bond hearing, Mr. Zimmerman had been driven from his home and neighborhood, could not go to work, his wife could not go back to a finish her nursing degree, his mother and father had been driven from their home, and he had been thrust into the national spotlight as a racist murderer by factions acting with their own agendas. None of those allegations have been supported by the discovery released to date, yet the hatred continues.

It must be noted that, when attempting to interpret George's actions regarding the funds, that he did disclose the existence of the funds five days after the bond hearing, during his first conversation with the defense about the fund.

When the defense team learned of the funds, we disclosed this to the court and to the State Attorney's Office, and the money was transferred to the Legal Defense Fund, which is now independently managed.

Of the original $204,000 raised by Mr. Zimmerman's fund, approximately $150,000 was transferred to the Legal Defense Fund. $30,000 was used to make the complicated transition from private life in Sanford, FL to a life in hiding as a defendant in a high-profile court case.

The balance of approximately $20,000 was kept liquid to provide living expenses for the first several months as the legal process unfolds.

Since the independently managed Legal Defense Fund was established on May 3, supporters have contributed more than $37,000.

Of this amount, $2,000 has been designated for household expenses. Less than $300 has been designated for fund management and fees associated with maintaining the conditions of the bond. None of the funds have yet to be allocated to legal expenses. Neither Mr. Zimmerman or the defense team has direct access to the independently managed Legal Defense Fund.

 

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Trayvon Martin Updates: George Zimmerman Back In The Pokey

Trayvon Martin Updates: George Zimmerman Back In The Pokey

 

 

 

George Zimmerman had his bail revoked by the judge in Florida this past Friday and he was given 48 hours to turn himself into jail.  George Zimmeran's Legal Website Reports:

 

George Zimmerman has returned to Central Florida, arriving late Saturday evening. On Friday, June 1, the court revoked Mr. Zimmerman's bond, ordering him to return to custody within 48 hours. The defense team has coordinated with the Sanford Police Department to ensure Mr. Zimmerman's security when he turns himself in before today's 2:30 PM deadline.

While out on bond, Mr. Zimmerman has been living in a secure, undisclosed location as there are significant threats against his life.

Mr. Zimmerman's lawyers will request a new bond hearing where they can address the court's concerns regarding the representation of funds available at the time of the original hearing on April 20. The defense team hopes that Mr. Zimmerman's voluntary surrender to Sanford police will help demonstrate to the court that he is not a flight risk. Furthermore, the vast majority of the funds in question are in an independently managed trust, and neither Mr. Zimmerman or his attorneys have direct access to the money.

On May 8, Mr. Zimmerman waived his right to a speedy trial to allow the defense team the time needed to prepare for trial. It is anticipated, though not certain, that the case will not be ready for trial until some time into 2013, and the next bond hearing will determine whether Mr. Zimmerman will wait those many months in jail or not.

 

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Back In The POKEY: George Zimmerman Bail REVOKED

Back In The POKEY: George Zimmerman Bail REVOKED

 

 

 

George Zimmerman, the man charged with killing Trayvon Martin as he walked from the 7 -11 returning to his dad's home, has had his bail revoked,  Huffingtonpost reports:

 

 

SANFORD, Fla. — Trayvon Martin's shooter must return to jail, a judge ordered Friday in a strongly worded ruling that said George Zimmerman and his wife lied to the court about their finances to obtain bond in a case that hinges on jurors believing his account of what happened the night the teen was killed.
 
Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder for the February shooting. The neighborhood watch volunteer says he shot Martin in self-defense because the unarmed 17-year-old was beating him up after confronting Zimmerman about following him in a gated community outside Orlando.
 
Zimmerman was arrested 44 days after the killing, and during a bond hearing in April, his wife, Shellie, testified that the couple had limited funds available. The hearing also was notable because Zimmerman took the stand and apologized to Martin's parents.
 
Prosecutors pointed out in their motion that Zimmerman had $135,000 available then. It had been raised from donations through a website he set up and they suggested more has been collected since and deposited in a bank account.
 
Shellie Zimmerman was asked about the website at the hearing, but she said she didn't know how much money had been raised. Circuit Judge Kenneth Lester set bail at $150,000. The 28-year-old was freed a few days later after posting $15,000 in cash – which is typical – and has since been in hiding.
 
Prosecutor Bernie De la Rionda complained Friday, "This court was led to believe they didn't have a single penny. It was misleading and I don't know what words to use other than it was a blatant lie." The judge agreed and ordered Zimmerman returned to jail by Sunday afternoon.
 
"Does your client get to sit there like a potted plant and lead the court down the primrose path? That's the issue," Lester said. "He can't sit back and obtain the benefit of a lower bond based upon those material falsehoods."
 
 
The judge questioning Zimmerman's truthfulness could undermine the defendant's credibility if it is brought up at trial, which could happen, and may complicate how his defense presents him as a witness, said Orlando-area attorney Randy McCLean, who is a former prosecutor.
 
Witness accounts of the rainy night Martin was shot are spotty. There is no video of the fight, though photos prosecutors have released showed Zimmerman with wounds to his face and the back of his head. His recollection of what happened is key.
 
"The other key witness, unfortunately is deceased," McClean said. "Basically, Zimmerman is going to be asking the jury to believe his version of the facts … As the case stands now, his credibility is absolutely critical to the case."
 
The defense countered that Zimmerman and his wife never used the money for anything, which indicated "there was no deceit." His attorney, Mark O'Mara, said it wouldn't be a problem to bring Zimmerman back into custody by the deadline.
 
The judge said he would schedule a hearing after Zimmerman is back in custody so he could explain himself.
 
Police in Sanford did not immediately arrest Zimmerman, citing Florida's "stand your ground" law that gives wide latitude to use deadly force rather than retreat in a fight if people believe they are in danger of being killed or seriously injured.
 
Zimmerman's credibility with the judge would be important if O'Mara tries to get a judge without the jury to dismiss the charges based on the law, said Orlando defense attorney David Hill.
 
"If he was in on something that was not truthfully revealed to the judge, when there is a `stand your ground' hearing, of course you're going to second-guess him," Hill said.
 
Both McClean and Hill said O'Mara would be able to challenge the admissibility of the bond revocation at trial by questioning its relevance.
 
Benjamin Crump, an attorney for Trayvon Martin's parents, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton, said his clients have always said Zimmerman should remain in jail until trial, which O'Mara said he believed wouldn't be until next year.
 
Crump was asked if he thought that if Zimmerman would be willing to lie about his finances that he would be willing to lie about what happen the night Martin was killed.
 
"We fully expect that the special prosecutor will make George Zimmerman's credibility be front and center in this entire case," Crump said. "And whatever dishonesty that comes forth by George Zimmerman that they can prove, you can best believe it will become the issue of this case."
 
Prosecutors also said although Zimmerman surrendered a passport at the bond hearing, he had a second one he didn't report that he and his wife during jail conversations spoke about keeping in a safety deposit box.
 
However, Lester dismissed that concern as the equivalent of someone who has lost a driver's license, applies for a new one and then finds the old one.
 
Also at Friday's hearing, De la Rionda and O'Mara asked a judge to stop the public release of witness names and statements made by Zimmerman to police officers. Those documents normally are part of the public record under Florida law, and the judge agreed.
 
Lester said he would order the release of the documents once he has reviewed them and redacted items that aren't subject to disclosure under the state's public records law.
 
A consortium of more than a dozen media groups, including The Associated Press, asked the judge to ignore the request, saying such records are presumed to be publicly available under Florida law.
 
The revocation of Zimmerman's bond also puts pressure on O'Mara to not delay the trial, McClean said.
 
"When your client is out on bond, the pressure is much lighter to rush to trial … because your client is sitting at home," he said. "When your client is sitting at the Seminole County Jail, your client is going to want this resolved."
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Trayvon Martin Update: George Zimmerman Gets Bail

Trayvon Martin Update: George Zimmerman Gets Bail

 

 

 

George Zimmerman appeared in court today before Circuit Court Judge Kenneth Lester.  Huffingtonpost reports:

 

A Florida judge has granted bail for George Zimmerman, the Florida neighborhood watch captain accused of second-degree murder in the shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.
 
Circuit Judge Kenneth Lester set Zimmerman's bond at $150,000, but said he would not be released today, pending deliberations about the terms of the release.
 
The bail hearing featured dramatic testimony from Zimmerman, who took the stand and offered an apology to Martin's parents.
 
"I wanted to say that I am sorry for the loss of your son," Zimmerman said, adding that he did not know how old Martin was or that he was unarmed.
 
"I thought he was a little bit younger than I am," he said. "I did not know whether he was armed or not."
 
Assistant prosecutor Bernie De La Rionda requested that the judge set no bail or require a bond of $1 million, arguing that Zimmerman's past history of violence and the evidence against him in the shooting of Martin made him a threat to the public.
 
"Our position is that he will still be a danger to the community," De La Rionda said.
 
 
O'Mara asked for bail of just $15,000 and requested that Zimmerman be allowed to leave the state while on bond.
 
Judge Lester ordered O'Mara to confer with state prosecutors and the Seminole County Sheriff's Department on the terms of Zimmerman's confinement, and to request an additional ruling if an agreement could not be met.
Circuit Judge Kenneth Lester says Zimmerman cannot have any firearms, drink alcohol or use drugs and must observe a curfew. Zimmerman will also have to wear an electronic monitoring device. The judge says Zimmerman will not be released Friday.

 

 

In another turn of events, ABC News exclusively obtained a photo of George Zimmerman with a bloody head, which was reported to have been taken 3  minutes after he shot and killed Martin.  Some speculate that this could give credability to Zimmerman argument that Trayvon "bashed" his head into the concrete.  ABC News reports:

 

The exclusive image shows blood trickling down the back of Zimmerman's head from two cuts. It also shows a possible contusion forming on the crown of his head. The original police report that night notes that the back of Zimmerman's head was wet, and that he was bleeding from the nose and head.

Zimmerman told police that night that he shot and killed the teenager in self-defense after Martin punched him and pounced on him. Zimmerman told police that Martin then bashed his head into the concrete sidewalk during the altercation that took place in the tidy middle-class development of the Retreat at Twin Lakes in Sanford, Fla.

Zimmerman was treated at the scene by paramedics, then cuffed and driven in a police cruiser to the Sanford police station. He was questioned for hours and later released. In police surveillance video obtained last month by ABC News, Zimmerman's wounds are not apparent, and there were no bandages on his head.

Zimmerman was not admitted to a hospital or given stitches the night of the incident.

The person who took the photograph of a bloodied Zimmerman, asking not to be identified, told ABC News exclusively that they did not see the scuffle that night, but did hear it. The person recalled seeing Martin's prostrate body on the wet grass and said the gunpowder burns on Martin's gray hoodie were clearly visible.

The photographer said that after the shooting, Zimmerman asked the photographer to call his wife. When the photographer asked him what to say, Zimmerman blurted out, "Man, just tell her I shot someone."

Investigators have seen the photo.

Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump is skeptical.

"How bad could it have been if they didn't take him to the hospital [and] didn't stitch him up," he said in a statement to ABC News in response to the image. "The special prosecutor has seen all the evidence and still believes George Zimmerman murdered Trayvon Martin."

Zimmerman's attorney, Mark O'Mara, said his client has spent enough time behind bars.

"He needs to get out. He should not be in jail," O'Mara said. "I want him out because I need him out. He wants to get out. His family wants it out. It should happen."

 

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Trayvon Martin Updates: Judge Steps Aside

Trayvon Martin Updates: Judge Steps Aside

 

 

The judge that was appointed in the Trayvon Martin case has stepped down.  Huffingtonpost reports:

 

The judge who was set to preside over the trial of George Zimmerman in the killing of Trayvon Martin has stepped aside.
 
Jessica Reckseidler's recusal from the trial comes after Mark O'Mara, Zimmerman's attorney, suggested that her husband's job as a partner to Mark NeJame, a CNN legal analyst covering the trial, represented a conflict of interest.
 
NeJame was initially contacted by Zimmerman's family to represent him, but NeJame suggested O'Mara.
 
The new judge in the case will be Kenneth R. Lester, Jr., who has presided over several much-covered cases, including ordering the release of a schizophrenic woman from a state mental hospital after she was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the shooting deaths of her parents and sentencing an ax murderer to death after he killed a 71-year-old man. According to the Orlando Sentinel, Lester is popular among attorneys and is known for acting quickly.
 
The judge who would have been next in line to handle the Zimmerman case after Jessica Reckseidler could not take on the case because he had previously worked with O'Mara, Zimmerman's attorney.
 
Zimmerman is facing second-degree murder charges in the killing of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed 17-year-old whom he shot on February 26 in Sanford, Fla. after an altercation. Zimmerman was not initially arrested or charged in the shooting. After weeks of public outcry calling for a reinvestigation of the case, Zimmerman was arrested and charged on April 11.
 
The case has become a flashpoint in the national conversations around gun laws and racial profiling.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

George Zimmerman Update: George Zimmerman Will Be Charged With 2nd Degree Murder

George Zimmerman Update: George Zimmerman Will Be Charged With 2nd Degree Murder

 

 

 

Special Prosecutor, Angela Corey, just announced that George Zimmerman will be charged with 2nd Degree Murder.   Zimmerman admitted to shooting Trayvon Martin, an armed African-American teen on the night of February 26, 2012.  Zimmerman claimed self-defense and wasn't arrested or charged with any crime up until this moment.  It sparked national outcry among many, especially the African-American community.  Many felt he Trayvon was racially profiled by Zimmerman for being Black and wearing a hoodie.  The Sanford police have been accused of sloppy police work. 

 

 Zimmerman is already in custody already but the location was not disclosed.  Corey said charges will be laid out in a court of law.

 

 

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Trayvon Martin Update: George Zimmerman Expected to Be Charges

Trayvon Martin Update: George Zimmerman Expected to Be Charges 

 

 

George Zimmerman is expected to be charged today.  The special prosecutor, Angela Corey, announced that she will make the announcement at 6p.m. EST.  Zimmerman shot and killed Travyon Martin, an unarmed 17-year-old African American teenager on the night of February 26, 2012.  Zimmerman claimed self-defense based on Florida's controversial "Stand Your Ground" Law.

 

Yesterday, George Zimmerman's former attorneys held a press conference saying they would no longer be representing Zimmerman because they had lost contact with him and he had went against counsel's advice.  They did point out however, they still believe he had a right to defend himself.  Story Developing….

 

 

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Trayvon Martin Update: Lawyers Drop George Zimmerman

Trayvon Martin Update: Lawyers Drop George Zimmerman 

 

 

 

Craig Sooner & Hal Uhrig, George Zimmerman's attorney's held a press conference to announce that they will no longer be representing him due to his ignoring their legal advice. They also say they have lost contact with him.  The lawyers also say Zimmerman spoke with Sean Hannity from Fox News but say Zimmerman would not reveal what he said to Hannity.

 

"George called Sean Hannity of Fox News off the record and he was unwilling to tell us what was said," attorney Hal Uhrig said.

 

Huffingtonpost reports:

 

Sonner said that Zimmerman had stopped responding to their phone calls, and that they did not know exactly where he was, although they thought that he was no longer in Florida.
 
Sonner also said that Zimmerman reached out to the special prosecutor in the case, against their wishes. "We were a bit astonished and had some conversation back and forth with the prosecutor's office," Uhrig said."They told us what we expected, '[that] we’re not going to talk to a criminal or [defendant] without counsel.'"
 
Zimmerman admitted to shooting Trayvon Martin, an unarmed 17-year-old, on February 26 in the gated community where the teenager's father lived in Sanford, Fla. Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch member, called 911 and told a police dispatcher that Martin, who was walking back to his father's home from a convenience store, "looked suspicious." After an altercation, Zimmerman shot Martin in the chest. He told the local police that he shot Martin in self defense, and was not arrested or charged. Protestors around the country have held rallies calling for Zimmerman's arrest, and the Sanford police department has come in for withering criticism for its handling of the initial investigation.
 
 

 

 

In the town of Sanford, a Sanford Police Car was shot at 4:30 this morning.  CBS News Reports:

 

(CBS News) SANFORD, Fla. – Shots were fired at a Sanford police car parked near the scene of the Trayvon Martin shooting. According to authorities, the cruiser was found Tuesday morning with bullet holes in it and at least window blown out.
 
Police said no one was inside the cruiser, which was parked across the street from the Retreat at Twin Lakes apartment complex, near the front of Bentley Elementary School.
 
CBS affiliate WKMG reports witnesses said they heard six shots. At least two bullets struck the patrol car.
 
Sanford police said the cruiser had been parked in front of Bentley Elementary for the past couple of weeks at the request of school officials who had concerns about safety issues.
 
Police removed the car from the scene, and an investigation is ongoing.

 

 

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