Zimmerman on Trial for Shooting a Good Boy
This Monday we should hear opening arguments in the George Zimmerman case. Zimmerman is accused in the shooting death of teen thug Trayvon Martin inside a gated community last year in Sanford, Fla.
I have no doubt that responsible news media will use an actual, non-photoshopped image of Trayvon Martin seen here to the right in a photo taken from his Twitter-page where he encouraged one of his fellow thugs to commit murder with the tweet, “Plzz shoot da #mf dat lied 2 u!”
Leftist and race-baiting media will use photos of Martin when he was a tiny innocent child or the altered hoodie shot (1) where he almost looks white.
The race-baiters will again take to the streets insisting that Trayvon was a good boy. Blogger W.R. Chandler, although not referring to Trayvon Martin, has this to say about good boys:
Buckhorn Road, 24 May 2006, He's really a good boy
The other day in the Natomas neighborhood of Sacramento, there was an officer-involved shooting in a shopping center during lunch time. A Sacto PD officer followed a car full of armed robbers and their accomplices to this shopping center right after one of the perps had held up a teenager at a bus stop a mile or two away. As soon as the driver of the suspect vehicle saw the cop approach, he gunned the car and hit the cop's cruiser, then hit the cop. The cop jumped onto the hood of the perp's vehicle and had no choice but to open fire. He pumped 8 shots through the windshield, killing the driver and injuring the front seat passenger. This all happened in front of a huge audience of diners at an In-N-Out Burger and people in the parking lot.
I read a follow-up article about the incident in today's front section of the Sacramento Bee. Family members of the dead suspect and the injured suspect were interviewed. They said the grating words I often hear from family members of criminals. Here is a sample from the article. See if you can find what grates me:
At the North Sacramento home [Eugene] Gallegos (the dead suspect) shared with his siblings and grandmother, a steady stream of friends and relatives Tuesday filed through the front door.Rosie Aldana, who had helped rear her grandson, said she didn't believe he was solely responsible for veering the car into the officer on Monday.
She said he was likely prodded by those in the car to "go, go, go" and succumbed to the pressure.
"That was out of character for him," Aldana said, surrounded by family, "That's why it's so hard to take this."
Late Monday, relatives told Aldana they had seen newscasts of the maroon Chrysler that Gallegos bought three weeks ago now riddled with bullets.
Gina Gallegos, who nicknamed her brother "Chitho" when he was a toddler, said Gallegos had a good heart and took care of the family, but at times kept bad company."He hung around with some of the wrong people," she said...
That was the interview with the family of the dead suspect. Let's see what the family of the injured suspect, Saul Rabago, had to say?
On Tuesday night, Marisol Rabago said she planned to see her brother in jail to prepare for his court appearance.Her brother just turned 19, she said, and recently made a commitment to his family that he would try to change for the better.
"Two weeks ago, he said, 'Give me 25 days,' " Marisol Rabago recalled. "He got a job and was starting to come back to family events, dinners; we started to believe."
But when he got paid Friday, the family said he slipped out of sight. They last saw him Saturday night, before spotting him on the news Monday evening.
"He's not a bad kid," Marisol Rabago said. "He was just at the wrong place, with the wrong people...
Family members of both perps essentially said the same thing: OK, so my relative held up a teenage boy with a gun and robbed him, then tried to kill a police officer, but he really is a good boy.
Sorry to rain on your delusional parade folks, but NO! They are NOT good boys! They were nasty little thugs who, of their own free will, did bad things to good people.
This case should not be going to trial. That night, when the original prosecutor in the case saw George Zimmerman's face and head, he rightly decided Zimmerman had the right to defend himself against a much taller (Trayvon was a strapping 6-foot-3 former Optimist League football player) in-your-face gang-member-wannabe:

Police photo of George Zimmerman taken the night he killed Trayvon Martin from the State of Florida 9th Supplemental Discovery
Photo Credit: Wikipedia
But as I have written before, most prosecutors are evidence-tampering, perjury-suborning, jury-rigging, self-serving bastards who have no desire in furthering the interests of justice but only to advancing their careers, no matter what innocent party they have to persecute and prosecute.
And so it is with the Zimmerman case - scumbag, low-life prosecutor Bernie de la Rionda held back from the defense more than a thousand photos on Trayvon's cellphone (2) which included photos of marijuana, possibly underage naked girls, a hand holding a gun, and some deleted texts about a gun transaction. Sad to say, this is normal behavior for prosecutors in this country. These photos are not proof that Trayvon deserved to be shot, but they do suggest that Trayvon wasn't the drug-free, college-bound, decent, never-in-trouble youth that racists want us to believe; you know, he was such a good boy.
Let's see how this jury does with this case. Hopefully if there is any justice left in this country, Zimmerman will be found not guilty.
Notes
(1):
Left: The real Trayvon Martin - right: the fake, sweet-looking good boy Trayvon Martin as altered by the real racists in the media:
(2):
CBSNews, 6 Jun 2013, George Zimmerman Trial: Judge to weigh possible prosecutor sanctions post-trial
A court information technology director took the stand at a pre-trial hearing in the George Zimmerman case Thursday and testified that he found more than 1,000 additional photos -- including photos of marijuana and a hand holding a gun - and some deleted text messages and on Trayvon Martin's phone.
Defense attorney Mark O'Mara has maintained that prosecutors didn't turn over the information, and has asked the court to sanction prosecutors. During a hearing Thursday, a judge ruled that the issue of possible sanctions should be taken up after trial.
...
Fourth Judicial Circuit Information Technology Director Ben Kruidbos said that he discovered the additional texts and photos that weren't included in a report sent to the defense team after requesting a source file from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. The photos, he said, included images of marijuana, a hand holding a gun, naked girls that appeared to be underage, and a clump of jewelry on a bed.
Deleted text messages, he said, appeared to be referencing a gun transaction.