Zimmerman Prosecutor Worse Than Jury?
By William Boardman, Reader Supported News
21 July 13
 
istening to the lead prosecutor's final argument in the Zimmerman case, it's 
hard to believe he really wanted a conviction. 
Lead prosecutor Bernie de la Rionda lost focus 
from the moment he opened his mouth and began: "A teenager is dead. He 
is dead through no fault of his own. He is dead because another man made 
assumptions…." 
Not only is de la Rionda's voice flat, his tone 
subdued and resigned, he begins by presenting the victim as an 
abstraction, characterizing him in a neutral, almost dismissive way as 
"a teenager," who also happens to be dead, which everyone knew before 
the trial started. As narrative hooks go, this one is barbless. 
The prosecutor adds that this teenager "is dead 
through no fault of his own," as if the question before the jury was 
what did Trayvon do to deserve killing? Why even address the question of 
Trayvon's fault when you're supposedly trying to convict Zimmerman? 
Even if there's good reason to expect the defense to try to put Trayvon 
on trial, why put it at the top of your summation as if it's a credible 
question? 
And then he says Trayvon is dead "because another 
man made assumptions?" Really? Isn't Trayvon dead because another man 
shot him? Doesn't that other man have a name? Isn't Zimmerman the one on trial 
here? Isn't that him over there, 27 years old, 5 feet 7.5 inches 
tall, 204 pounds? 
They Pay TV Anchors Millions a Year to Ratify the People in Power  
Despite de la Rionda's passionless prose and 
torpid performance, some have praised his work. On ABC News, Diane 
Sawyer said that "prosecutors gave it all they had." If that was all 
they had, they didn't have much. 
Why did the prosecutors eschew an approach more relevant to conviction, 
something simple and direct, like: 
George Zimmerman killed an unarmed, innocent teenager who was trying to go home.
George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin with a single shot to the chest, a 
single shot at close range that killed Trayvon Martin in a matter of minutes. 
Having shot Trayvon Martin, George Zimmerman did nothing to try to save the 
life of the boy dying at his feet. 
This is cold-blooded. 
If We're Not Careful, We Run the Risk of Persuading the Jury  
But de la Rionda says nothing this forceful and 
direct. He waffles slowly through the general narrative, sort of trying 
to seem like he's building some sympathy for Trayvon. But it's late in 
the trial and the prosecution has done little to bring Trayvon alive for the 
jury – much less than it did to humanize Zimmerman. In the closing, de la 
Rionda doesn't even know how old Trayvon is. If the prosecutor 
doesn't care enough about a dead child to know his age, why should a 
jury care more? 
When de la Rionda talks about Zimmerman's words 
for his wife on the phone shortly after the killing – "Tell her I killed him" – 
the prosecutor has a chance to nail Zimmerman's almost 
sociopathic lack of feeling. Instead, de la Rionda says only, "That's 
kind of matter of fact." No, it's chilling and possibly incriminating. 
And then he spends minutes on an irrelevant 
diversion, talking about how Zimmerman had decided to start a 
neighborhood watch because of all the alleged crime that had gone on, 
and he compliments Zimmerman for that. The prosecutor says that wasn't 
an act of ill will (he didn't say how he knew that). He says this was a 
"good thing" and that Zimmerman arming himself was a "good thing," and 
so on, none of which helps the prosecution, of which de la Riondi is 
nominally the lead. 
His presentation had no discernible organization, 
no flow, numerous diversions, enough meandering to allow one to wonder 
if it could be deliberately unconvincing. He spent ten minutes reviewing 
Zimmerman's recorded statements to no compelling point, while 
punctuating the recitation with the comment, "That's good," about one 
Zimmerman action or another. 
Why Wouldn't the State Support the Players on Its Team? 
At another point he spent close to ten more 
minutes denigrating state's witness, Rachel Jeantel, who was 18 and on 
the phone with Trayvon Martin at the moment he was shot. The denigration was in 
the form of a defense of or an apology for her being Haitian, 
unable to read cursive, and "not that well educated." He did not explain how 
well educated a high school student should be. And he did not 
explain why the prosecution failed to prepare this important witness 
properly. (In a television interview after the trial he said by way of 
excusing the verdict, "We don't get to pick our witnesses.") 
Again and again de la Riondi cycled through blocks of evidence, like the many 
inconsistent and inconclusive 911 phone 
calls, without coming to any coherent conclusion. Instead, again and 
again and again, he'd finish a topic by telling the jury, "You decide." 
This was a virtual refrain – "you decide" – a refrain that, when added 
to the fuzzy presentation of evidence, just reinforced doubt, whether 
reasonable or unreasonable. 
His closing argument lasted more than two hours 
and slowly wound down with more than three minutes of near silence, as 
de la Riondi had the jury look at slides that outlined the prosecution's case 
in text, as he occasionally and unconnectedly commented. Whatever 
energy his presentation might have built up was dissipated, and he 
closed with a few sentences that were repetitions of things he'd said 
before. He closed by saying the defendant was guilty of 2nd degree 
manslaughter, without even using his name – a closing that ended not 
with a bang but a whimper. 
Many legal commentators have criticized the 
prosecution's handling of this case, but few have done so as sharply as 
Jarvis DeBerry in the New Orleans Time's Picayune (nola.com), where the 
headline on his July 16 column read, "Did George Zimmerman's prosecutors try to 
get him off?" 
Based on his conversation with a former prosecutor who is a current defense 
attorney, who chose to remain anonymous, 
DeBerry wrote that this lawyer who's tried hundreds of cases said "he's 
never seen prosecutors who want to win make the series of missteps that 
the Florida prosecutors made. So he's convinced they lost on purpose." 
The lawyer argued that the prosecutors should have sought a change of venue for 
the trial, since the potential conflicts 
it presented had already led to recusals of one county prosecutor and 
two judges, as well as a probably tainted jury pool. 
He faulted the prosecution for its jury selection, failing to get even one male 
juror or one black juror, and for failing 
to use their challenges to remove clearly unsympathetic jurors. The 
now-infamous juror B37 went unchallenged, even though she revealed 
during jury draw that she remembered "riots in Sanford" that never 
happened. 
The lawyer was incredulous at the inept 
preparation of Rachel Jeantel, as the prosecution allowed her to take 
the stand and testify in a manner that was sometimes unclear and 
potentially alienating, especially to a jury of six non-black women. 
The lawyer was generally critical of the degree to which the prosecution went 
about making the case for the defense, in 
particular playing Zimmerman's interview with Sean Hannity on Fox News. 
If the prosecution had omitted it, the defense would have been prevented from 
playing it by the rules of evidence. "If it hurts your case, let 
the other guy do it," the lawyer said: "They didn't want to win this 
case." 
And Then There Was the Controversial State Attorney in Charge 
Running the prosecution team was elected state 
attorney Angela Corey, who was appointed by the governor as special 
prosecutor for this case after the local prosecutor's recusal. Corey is a 
controversial figure in Florida legal circles and was accused of filing a 
"perjurious affidavit" in the Zimmerman case by attorney Alan 
Dershowitz of Harvard Law School in 2012. Corey was criticized by others for 
charging Zimmerman with 2nd degree murder since, they argued, there wasn't 
enough evidence to prove it. 
In a news conference after the verdict, Corey didn't address the verdict 
directly. She began by saying: 
We are so proud to stand before you and to tell you that when we announced the 
charges 15 months ago, we also promised that we 
would seek the truth for Trayvon Martin and due process for George 
Zimmerman, that we would get all of the facts and details of this very 
difficult case before a jury, and that we chose to do it that way 
because we felt that everyone had a right to know everything about this 
case…. 
We believe we brought out the truth on behalf of Trayvon Martin.
In a later television interview, when asked to 
describe Zimmerman with a single word, she hesitated for a long time, 
then said softly, "Murderer," and gave a small, sad smile. 
So the Plan Was to Lose by Over-Playing the Effort to Win? 
Why is she spitting in the jury's eye like this 
after the verdict? Legally, Zimmerman is not a murderer, though he is a 
killer. More perplexing, how does this apparent belief in Zimmerman's 
guilt fit with a plan to get "all of the facts and details" of the case 
before a jury? With all the facts and details, and no prosecution 
narrative to hang them on, could any jury be expected to convict? 
But this is not a woman who doesn't know how to 
win a conviction in a seemingly difficult case. In 2010, Marissa 
Alexander fired a single shot into the ceiling in the midst of an 
argument with her abusive husband. A 32-year-old African American mother of 
three, Alexander said it had been a warning shot and claimed 
protection under the Stand Your Ground law. She had no prior criminal 
record. 
She was charged, tried, and convicted by 
prosecutor Angela Corey. Alexander is currently serving a 20-year 
sentence, not for killing or harming anyone, but for outing a bullet in 
the ceiling. According Corey, Alexander wasn't afraid when her husband 
was in a rage and threatening her. 
According to Corey, the Zimmerman case was never about race. 
There's no way to know with certainty what the 
prosecutors were trying to accomplish, consciously or not. But it's 
clear what they have accomplished, and it doesn't look like justice. 


http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/18516-focus-zimmerman-prosecutor-worse-than-jury


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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