Quote:
Here, the state asks the court to prohibit any mention during trial of “certain facts or opinions associated with Trayvon Martin,” including whether the 17-year-old:
Had ever been suspended from school
Had previously used or communicated about marijuana
Had ever allegedly been in a fight;
Had ever posted or had “screen names” on social media
Had ever possessed or worn a set of false gold teeth
Any aspect of Martin’s school records, or his performance in school
Any text messages Martin sent or received before the day he was shot
Any text messages Martin sent or received on Feb. 26, 2012, “until the relevance and admissibility of the same has been ruled upon by the court.”
The state argues such evidence is irrelevant to the trial and the events surrounding his death.
So the whole contention they're making is that none of this is relevant to the events of Feb 26th and Martin's being shot...
But here's the head-scratch moment for me...
One of the fundamental contentions of Trayvonites, including the persecution as manifested in their initial charging document, and presumably one of the cornerstones of what they'll be arguing at trial, is the notion that Zimmerman's appraisal of Martin was all wrong, unreasonable, baseless, and that his subsequent actions (keeping an eye on him) were therefore unreasonable also and that a normal, average person (juror) shouldn't be able to imagine themselves having had the same suspicions of Trayvon. More importantly, they pretty much MUST argue that Trayvon didn't do what Zimmerman claims he did in terms of launching an assault on him, because if he did, there is no case at all, right? (Which there isn't, btw)
So, admittedly I'm no lawyer... but to me it's mind-boggling for someone to say
"George, you should go to prison for decades because you shot this guy who objectively did beat the crap out of you, because you finding him suspicious was just baseless racist nonsense, and we don't buy how you say the altercation started... he was just a good kid minding his own business." and then tell George, whose life is on the line (just like it was that night)
"oh and you aren't allowed to demonstrate that he wasn't just a good kid minding his own business or that he might have shown signs in other behaviors in his life which make not only your suspicions about him, but what you claim he did... MASSIVELY more plausible."Yea... I just don't get that.
