Try.
Judicial Watch announced today that it has obtained documents proving
that the Department of Justice played a major behind-the-scenes role in
organizing protests against George Zimmerman. Zimmerman is on trial for
second-degree murder in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in
February 2012.
Judicial Watch filed a Freedom of Information Act request with the
DOJ on April 24, 2012. According to the documents JW received, a
little-known DOJ unit called the Community Relations Service deployed to
Sanford, FL, to organize and manage rallies against Zimmerman.
Also, you might remember that Martin's phone was being examined, which came to this:
The State of Florida vs. George Zimmerman took a wild turn
late Tuesday evening, as defense attorney Don West got in a heated
conversation with Judge Debra Nelson just before 10:oo p.m. Nelson had
just expressed her intent to block testimony and evidence recovered from
deleted messages on Trayvon Martin’s cell phone.
A forensic expert discovered more than 600 items on Trayvon’s cell
phone, including texts and photos between Trayvon and other people with
specific references to criminal activity — particularly fighting, drugs,
and firearms.
Now why would a (honest)judge want to block this?
The forensic expert testified that he recovered multiple
conversations between Trayvon Martin and specific family members and
friends discussing multi-round street fights and schoolyard fights in
which Trayvon Martin had participated. Martin’s half-brother, Demetrius
Martin, even asked Trayvon when he would teach him how to fight. Trayvon
Martin’s family appeared to know Trayvon was a street fighter.
Most troubling, Conner found multiple conversations — between four
and six — where Trayvon discussed attempting to buy black-market guns.
The guns Martin discussed acquiring included a Smith & Wesson
Sigma pistol and a .38 Special revolver. One conversation showed Martin
trying to sell a .22 revolver, suggesting he was already in possession of it.
And don't forget this:
The state hid this evidence until right before the beginning of the trial, when the prosecution’s Wesley White came forward to present testimony that the state was hiding and may have destroyed evidence. The defense has had no time to recover this data and to depose every witness.
Just about everybody on the prosecution side, and probably the judge as well, should be investigated and- from the looks of things- disbarred and prosecuted for their actions in this.
The D'ohJ? Needs to be cleaned out, top to bottom.
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