People know me here. I walk to the store. A white man unknown to me, starts to ghost me. I feel a little uncomfortable so I walk another direction. The man is in touch with law enforcement who tell him to stay put. He doesn't. I then see this man out of his car. He asks what I'm doing here. Knowing the best way not to become a victim is to not act like one, I come on strong. "Who the hell are you and what business do u have here"? If you are law enforcement, Identify yourself now or F off!" This man gets in my way, we struggle, I get the best of him. He shoots me.
Is that what happened, wha happened?
People know me here. I walk to the store. A white man unknown to me, starts to ghost me.
Okay.
I feel a little uncomfortable so I walk another direction.
How far in the other direction do you walk? Do you walk south 70 yards or so clear to your residence and out of danger, have a conversation with your girlfriend and then walk back north to confront the man? You do realize that in the eyes of the law, that would not be a continuation of the original interraction; it is the start of a new one where you are now the aggressor?
The only way this would have flown is if Zimmerman walked south looking for Martin and confronted him in the vicinity of Brandy Green's residence per Ms Jeantel's testimony. Any scenario where Martin goes back looking for Zimmerman makes Martin the bad guy. The prosecution obviously knew this. It's just difficult to prove given the fact that the fatal altercation took place in the vicinity of Zimmerman's vehicle, not in the vicinity of Brandy Green's residence.
The man is in touch with law enforcement who tell him to stay put. He doesn't.
The 911 non emergency dispatcher is not law enforcement. And they did not tell him to stay put. During the prosecution phase of this trial, there was actual testimony to the effect that 911 dispatchers never tell people what to do or not do.
Here is the relavant portion of the transcript:
Dispatcher:OK, which entrance is that he’s headed towards?
Zimmerman:The back entrance.
Dispatcher: Are you following him?
Zimmerman: Yeah.
Dispatcher: OK.We don’t need you to do that.
Zimmerman: OK.
Zimmeraman's story is that he went east to check a street sign. Walking at a 90 degree tangent to Martin's last known location is not following him especially if it puts buildings between them.
I then see this man out of his car. He asks what I'm doing here.
Again, how did you get back into speaking distance with this man after the two of you lost track of each other? Did he follow and approach you or did you go back looking for him because he made you mad?
Knowing the best way not to become a victim is to not act like one, I come on strong.
In a state like Florida, that is exactly the best way to become a victim. In concealed carry/stand your ground states, every person you see on the street is potentially armed. 'Coming on strong' to a stranger when you could have simply gone home and called the police yourself is a very big first step towards a situation where the stranger will have a viable claim of self defense.
"Who the hell are you and what business do u have here"? If you are law enforcement, Identify yourself now or F off!" This man gets in my way, we struggle, I get the best of him. He shoots me.
And your family mourns you. Assuming the case is prosecuted and goes to trial, they will look for indications that he actually participated in a fight. They will look for trauma to his hands and to your face. They will look for your DNA on his hands. If they don't find any, you do realize how this will look once you're dead and can't tell your side of the story?