Trayvon Martin is still in our hearts and minds as the trial date for George Zimmerman nears. While many wait with trepidation for the outcome of a trial that would have never happened were it not for the black community calling out the Sanford, Florida Police for their shoddy handling of the case, his mother has taken to the airwaves to call for justice and changes in the law that allow Zimmerman and others to get away with such tragic crimes.
NPR
One year ago Tuesday, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was shot and killed in Sanford, Fla., — a death that would reignite the national debate about race relations and raise questions about the “stand your ground” laws on the books in Florida and 29 other states.
Martin, was African-American. The man who shot him, George Zimmerman, is white with Hispanic roots on his mother’s side. Zimmerman says he acted in self defense. Martin’s family and supporters say the self-styled neighborhood watch volunteer profiled the teenager and followed him.
On Monday’s edition of Tell Me More, Trayvon’s mother tells host Michel Martin that what happened to her son should not be “about black and white.”
She is hoping, Sybrina Fulton said, not only for “justice” in her son’s case, but also for changes in stand your ground laws — so that “you cannot follow, pursue [or] chase anyone … be the aggressor … shoot and kill them … and then go home to your bed.” Fulton is pushing for a “Trayvon Martin” amendment to add those conditions to stand your ground laws.
Zimmerman’s trial on a charge of second-degree murder is set to start on June 10. An important hearing comes first. On April 29, a judge is due to hear arguments about whether Zimmerman should be able to claim self defense immunity because of Florida’s stand your ground law.
Benjamin Crump, the attorney representing Trayvon’s family, tells Michel that if the judge rules in Zimmerman’s favor in that April hearing, the criminal case will effectively be over.
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