The Zimmerman Trial: Justice for Trayvon! (Let's discuss it)

This fat no neck having bitch Rachel Jeantel is doing an interview with Piers Morgan!
NOW she wanna talk but yet can't help Trayvon on the witness stand!

:angry::angry::angry:
 
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Bro, this might be last post on the board...I feel like I'm about to spazz out hearing that. I felt my BP rise to a level I've never felt before. I wanted to reach through the TV & slap the shit out of her.

man :lol::lol:

i gotta laugh to keep from crying

if she doesn't fit the profile of a bigot i don't know who does.

her husband is an attorney but somehow she don't know shit.

like this case hasn't been discussed and opinions formulated before she got selected.

she said not guilty from jump she was one of the ones convincing the others to back off the other charges.

i bet she understood the law then...

they did what the defense did.

they ignored everything before the act. they ignored EVERYTHING BEFORE THE ACT.

that's what she said

and i can't forgive or forget that.

she fixed her face to say that they both were at fault for what happened... BOTH OF THEM WERE AT FAULT according to her...

are you kidding me

they both should've walked away?

:smh:
 
if the state had prepped their "star" witness she would be on the stand with the likable personality she has now.
 
Didn't matter man, they wasn't convicting that dude.



He called him a nigga too

according to the juror race was never considered so she didn't see trayvon as a person of color lol.

can't believe they ignored everything leading up to the act.

up to the moment he was getting beat and shot trayvon.

everything before that don't matter

:smh::smh:
 
Hey BGOL fam check this out, I have a question!
The juror that just did the interview on CNN.
She said they did an initial vote, right when they first went to deliberate.
She said 3 jurors wanted not guilty, 2 wanted manslaughter, & 1 wanted murder 2.

Question..... how da fuck does someone go from saying yea he's guilty of Murder 2..... to nah he's NOT guilty of anything???

:smh::smh::smh:
 
Hey BGOL fam check this out, I have a question!
The juror that just did the interview on CNN.
She said they did an initial vote, right when they first went to deliberate.
She said 3 jurors wanted not guilty, 2 wanted manslaughter, & 1 wanted murder 2.

Question..... how da fuck does someone go from saying yea he's guilty of Murder 2..... to nah he's NOT guilty of anything???

:smh::smh::smh:

"well my husband is an attorney and he said...."
 
Based on what im being told is being said by this juror to Anderson Cooper, I hope you white woman worshiping coons are truly getting an idea of how they feel about you.

Im told by someone credible watching it that she has said the jury believed "George", his story, worried about his life after trial, considered him guilty of only bad judgment, didn't think he profiled, thought Trayvon started it, and were mad the prosecutor called "George" a murderer.

And those are the white "mothers" a lot of you had faith in.


Disgusting.
 
Commenting on the acquittal of George Zimmerman on charges that he unlawfully killed Florida teenager Trayvon Martin, National Rifle Association board member Ted Nugent labeled Martin a "dope smoking, racist gangsta wannabe" who was "responsible for his bad decisions and standard modus operendi of always taking the violent route."

In a July 14 column for conservative news website Rare, Nugent also claimed that the decision to prosecute Zimmerman was wrongfully influenced by "the race-baiting industry [that] saw an opportunity to further the racist careers of Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, the Black Panthers":


Based on all evidence available to them, the professional law enforcement officers did not hold George Zimmerman on charges later that night. They saw it for what it was: cut and dried self-defense.

And so it was for a few weeks until the race-baiting industry saw an opportunity to further the racist careers of Al Sharpton, Jesse Jackson, the Black Panthers. President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder, et al, who then swept down on the Florida community refusing to admit that the 17-year-old dope smoking, racist gangsta wannabe Trayvon Martin was at all responsible for his bad decisions and standard modus operendi of always taking the violent route.


Nugent also wrote that there has been a "recent surge in black racism increasing throughout Barack Obama's presidency" and that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. "is rolling over in his grave that he sacrificed his life for the cause of judging people by the content of their character instead of the color of their skin, as so many of his own race carry in in self-destructive behavior while professional race mongers blame everything on racism." Nugent added, "The only racism on that night was perpetrated by Trayvon Martin, and everybody knows it."

The jury got it right, and non-racist America rejoices that there is still common sense, honesty and decency aware of identifying justice in this country. America also believes that the entire prosecutorial team should be ashamed of themselves and disbarred for ignoring the obvious and kowtowing to the pure racism that forced the politically correct lie that only black lives killed by non-blacks matter, which is why there are no headlines, no protests, no prosecutions and no Barak Obama or Eric Holder meddling in the nonstop black-on-black slaughter in their gun-free zone of Chicago.

Martin Luther King Jr. is rolling over in his grave that he sacrificed his life for the cause of judging people by the content of their character instead of the color of their skin, as so many of his own race carry in in self-destructive behavior while professional race mongers blame everything on racism. It is painful and heartbreaking to say and write this, but horrifically it is true. Blacks kill more blacks in a weekend in Chicago than the evil, vile Ku Klux Klan idiots did in 50 years. Truly earth shattering insane. And not a peep from Obama or Holder. Tragic.

The only racism on that night was perpetrated by Trayvon Martin, and everybody knows it.


Nugent frequently uses racially charged language in his role as a conservative commentator. In a February 10 column for WND, Nugent wrote that civil rights leaders Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson speak in "ebonic mumbo-jumbo." An ardent defender of the Confederate flag, Nugent wrote in a July 2012 Washington Times column, "I'm beginning to wonder if it would have been best had the South won the Civil War." Nugent has also claimed that "real America" is comprised of "working hard, playing hard, white motherfucking shit kickers, who are independent and get up in the morning."



http://mediamatters.org/blog/2013/07/15/ted-nugent-travyon-martin-was-a-dope-smoking-ra/194872
 
"well my husband is an attorney and he said...."

Based on what im being told is being said by this juror to Anderson Cooper, I hope you white woman worshiping coons are truly getting an idea of how they feel about you.

Im told by someone credible watching it that she has said the jury believed "George", his story, worried about his life after trial, considered him guilty of only bad judgment, didn't think he profiled, thought Trayvon started it, and were mad the prosecutor called "George" a murderer.

And those are the white "mothers" a lot of you had faith in.


Disgusting.

:smh::smh::smh::smh:
 
Bingo!

And that's why she was a perfect juror for the defense. And why the prosecution did a horrendous job at juror selection (which I said that day).

no way do you let her on with her background.

you want unbiased jury members. people who will be piecing the case as the prosecution and defense presents it. not someone who is well versed. she's from the area, there is no way that her husband who is an attorney hasn't discussed it. im willing to be both the prosecution and the defense know her husband.
 
so because georgie got a lil bloody, and Good said he saw a figure which was trayvon on top of GZ striking motion then it had to be GZ voice on the tape.
 
Watching the interview with the prosecutors now and they admit the cops were against them and their witness who got on the stand and said he believed George was wrong for doing so, and was also the main one saying he should be charged initially yet he switched it up at trial.

When asked why they didn't question on this the AG essentially sys she didn't wanna attack her own witness and look bad.


Wow. These people need to be fired.
 
What a slap in the face to the black community

If this were my son I would get killed trying to take out everyone involved
 
john-mcneil-freed.jpg




WILSON, N.C. -- John McNeil had been home in Wilson for less than two days after his release from a Georgia prison when he set about the sad task of burying his wife.

In death, as in the last years of her life, Anita McNeil had waited for her husband of 22 years, her high school sweetheart, the father of their two sons. Her family and friends believe she tried to wait until he was free, but she died of cancer Feb. 2, 10 days before his release.

She was buried 12 days later, on Valentine's Day, with her husband at her graveside.

In their last phone conversation, he told her how much he loved her, and they discussed his plan to plead guilty to manslaughter so he could get home to her before she died.

"I told her how much she meant to me and that I needed her because I feed off her strength and energy," McNeil said in an interview last week.

McNeil, 46, had claimed self-defense in a fatal shooting at his home in Georgia in 2005 but was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. He pleaded guilty last week to the lesser charge of manslaughter and was sentenced to time served and 13 years of probation.

Advocates say Georgia's "stand your ground" law – which allows people to use deadly force if their lives are in danger – should have blocked charges against McNeil.

As her husband fought his conviction, Anita McNeil was fighting breast cancer that spread to her bones. They had last seen each other in September and had last spoken several weeks before she died. Although he knew his wife was sick, McNeil said he had no idea that would be their last conversation.

While in prison, McNeil missed the funeral of his mother, who died in July 2012. He didn't want to be absent for his wife's funeral as well.

And she supported the decision to plead guilty – do what you have to get home, his wife said, because we need you here. After she died, McNeil stuck by the plea because his wife had asked him to do so, regardless of what happened to her.

"I needed to get here for our two sons," he said. "That was one of the requests she made – get home to our sons, they need you."

Their sons, John II and La'Ron, are now grown men, 28 and 26 years old. McNeil, calm and soft-spoken through most of interview, became emotional talking about them.

"I can't even explain or express the feelings and emotions that went through my body" when he saw them again early Wednesday morning, he said. "No matter how old your sons get, you have a responsibility for them. When I saw them, I could only hug them and we cried."

McNeil's case prompted calls from the NAACP and other groups for "stand your ground" laws to apply to all citizens, regardless of race. McNeil is black, and the man he shot was white.

The Rev. William Barber, head of the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP, called McNeil's release "partial justice" and hinted that the case isn't over, despite the guilty plea. "This case is going to revolutionize how we view the criminal justice system," he said.

Growing up in Wilson, McNeil was one of the good kids, never in trouble and a member of the 1984 Wilson Fike High School basketball team that won the state championship. He graduated from Elizabeth City State University and was selling construction equipment in Georgia when he was arrested, nine months after the shooting of Brian Epp, who had built what Anita McNeil described as their dream home.

La'Ron had called his father after seeing Epp in the backyard. McNeil told police in Kennesaw, Ga., that Epp was belligerent and had threatened his son with a knife just before the shooting. A witness testified that Epp came onto McNeil's driveway, ignored a warning shot and charged at McNeil, who then fired a fatal shot. McNeil's appeals attorney has said the men were so close at that point that Epp's body touched McNeil's as he fell.

Police first said he was defending himself, his home and La'Ron. The Cobb County prosecutor eventually pursued charges, and a jury convicted McNeil. The three-story dream home with its five bedrooms went into foreclosure.

McNeil – who didn't deny shooting Epp – caught a whiff of hope in September. A judge ruled in favor of releasing McNeil and cited multiple errors at trial, including that the jury was not properly instructed on a person's right to use force to defend himself, his home or another person from violent attack.

Georgia Attorney General Sam Olens appealed that ruling, setting back the McNeils' hopes. Olens' office said in October that the attorney general filed the appeal at the request of Cobb County District Attorney Pat Head, who said in May that the case is a reminder of the potential pitfalls of self-defense arguments.

McNeil said the prosecutor's appeal was a huge setback for his wife.

"It kind of took something out of her," he said. "She's holding on, but we keep getting delayed, keep getting delayed. She was holding on, trying to hold on. And that's what hurts me to my heart, to know she was trying to hold on. And we couldn't make it so I could see her before she left."

Looking back, McNeil says there's nothing he could have done differently to protect himself and his son, pointing to his retreat, his begging of Epp not to come any closer and the warning shot.

At his wife's burial, McNeil said he prayed for Epp's family. "It's sad when we lose a loved one, no matter the circumstances," he said. "My heart goes out to their family. I pray for them as people pray for me and my family. You sit and say, Lord, I wish this nightmare had never happened. But it did. It's something you live with daily, and you constantly lean on God for his comfort and his guidance."

McNeil said he doesn't know what he plans to do next – perhaps open a business in the hometown that has welcomed him back or go to law school so he can help others. He's certain he'll stay in Wilson, where strangers pay for his meals when he eats out and people stop their cars on streets downtown to shake his hand.

"One of the things that Anita said before her passing was that `I want justice served,'" McNeil said. "That's what this journey is about. It ain't about coming out, celebrating. It's about total justice."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/18/john-mcneil-pleads-guilty-released-bury-wife_n_2711744.html
 
no way do you let her on with her background.

you want unbiased jury members. people who will be piecing the case as the prosecution and defense presents it. not someone who is well versed. she's from the area, there is no way that her husband who is an attorney hasn't discussed it. im willing to be both the prosecution and the defense know her husband.

Yep. Like I said from the jump, it was a setup and both the prosecution and defense were in on it. Straight sham.

Sidebar: if one more muthafucka tries to use Chicago as the poster for crime...especially black on black crime, I'm going to go nuclear!
 
john-mcneil-freed.jpg




WILSON, N.C. -- John McNeil had been home in Wilson for less than two days after his release from a Georgia prison when he set about the sad task of burying his wife.

In death, as in the last years of her life, Anita McNeil had waited for her husband of 22 years, her high school sweetheart, the father of their two sons. Her family and friends believe she tried to wait until he was free, but she died of cancer Feb. 2, 10 days before his release.

She was buried 12 days later, on Valentine's Day, with her husband at her graveside.

In their last phone conversation, he told her how much he loved her, and they discussed his plan to plead guilty to manslaughter so he could get home to her before she died.

"I told her how much she meant to me and that I needed her because I feed off her strength and energy," McNeil said in an interview last week.

McNeil, 46, had claimed self-defense in a fatal shooting at his home in Georgia in 2005 but was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. He pleaded guilty last week to the lesser charge of manslaughter and was sentenced to time served and 13 years of probation.

Advocates say Georgia's "stand your ground" law – which allows people to use deadly force if their lives are in danger – should have blocked charges against McNeil.

As her husband fought his conviction, Anita McNeil was fighting breast cancer that spread to her bones. They had last seen each other in September and had last spoken several weeks before she died. Although he knew his wife was sick, McNeil said he had no idea that would be their last conversation.

While in prison, McNeil missed the funeral of his mother, who died in July 2012. He didn't want to be absent for his wife's funeral as well.

And she supported the decision to plead guilty – do what you have to get home, his wife said, because we need you here. After she died, McNeil stuck by the plea because his wife had asked him to do so, regardless of what happened to her.

"I needed to get here for our two sons," he said. "That was one of the requests she made – get home to our sons, they need you."

Their sons, John II and La'Ron, are now grown men, 28 and 26 years old. McNeil, calm and soft-spoken through most of interview, became emotional talking about them.

"I can't even explain or express the feelings and emotions that went through my body" when he saw them again early Wednesday morning, he said. "No matter how old your sons get, you have a responsibility for them. When I saw them, I could only hug them and we cried."

McNeil's case prompted calls from the NAACP and other groups for "stand your ground" laws to apply to all citizens, regardless of race. McNeil is black, and the man he shot was white.

The Rev. William Barber, head of the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP, called McNeil's release "partial justice" and hinted that the case isn't over, despite the guilty plea. "This case is going to revolutionize how we view the criminal justice system," he said.

Growing up in Wilson, McNeil was one of the good kids, never in trouble and a member of the 1984 Wilson Fike High School basketball team that won the state championship. He graduated from Elizabeth City State University and was selling construction equipment in Georgia when he was arrested, nine months after the shooting of Brian Epp, who had built what Anita McNeil described as their dream home.

La'Ron had called his father after seeing Epp in the backyard. McNeil told police in Kennesaw, Ga., that Epp was belligerent and had threatened his son with a knife just before the shooting. A witness testified that Epp came onto McNeil's driveway, ignored a warning shot and charged at McNeil, who then fired a fatal shot. McNeil's appeals attorney has said the men were so close at that point that Epp's body touched McNeil's as he fell.

Police first said he was defending himself, his home and La'Ron. The Cobb County prosecutor eventually pursued charges, and a jury convicted McNeil. The three-story dream home with its five bedrooms went into foreclosure.

McNeil – who didn't deny shooting Epp – caught a whiff of hope in September. A judge ruled in favor of releasing McNeil and cited multiple errors at trial, including that the jury was not properly instructed on a person's right to use force to defend himself, his home or another person from violent attack.

Georgia Attorney General Sam Olens appealed that ruling, setting back the McNeils' hopes. Olens' office said in October that the attorney general filed the appeal at the request of Cobb County District Attorney Pat Head, who said in May that the case is a reminder of the potential pitfalls of self-defense arguments.

McNeil said the prosecutor's appeal was a huge setback for his wife.

"It kind of took something out of her," he said. "She's holding on, but we keep getting delayed, keep getting delayed. She was holding on, trying to hold on. And that's what hurts me to my heart, to know she was trying to hold on. And we couldn't make it so I could see her before she left."

Looking back, McNeil says there's nothing he could have done differently to protect himself and his son, pointing to his retreat, his begging of Epp not to come any closer and the warning shot.

At his wife's burial, McNeil said he prayed for Epp's family. "It's sad when we lose a loved one, no matter the circumstances," he said. "My heart goes out to their family. I pray for them as people pray for me and my family. You sit and say, Lord, I wish this nightmare had never happened. But it did. It's something you live with daily, and you constantly lean on God for his comfort and his guidance."

McNeil said he doesn't know what he plans to do next – perhaps open a business in the hometown that has welcomed him back or go to law school so he can help others. He's certain he'll stay in Wilson, where strangers pay for his meals when he eats out and people stop their cars on streets downtown to shake his hand.

"One of the things that Anita said before her passing was that `I want justice served,'" McNeil said. "That's what this journey is about. It ain't about coming out, celebrating. It's about total justice."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/18/john-mcneil-pleads-guilty-released-bury-wife_n_2711744.html

This is extremely sad. Fuck these white devils! :angry: seriously!!!!
 
no way do you let her on with her background.

you want unbiased jury members. people who will be piecing the case as the prosecution and defense presents it. not someone who is well versed. she's from the area, there is no way that her husband who is an attorney hasn't discussed it. im willing to be both the prosecution and the defense know her husband.

Agreed, I wonder if she was one of the jury members that was originally eliminated but brought back on?
 
Yep. Like I said from the jump, it was a setup and both the prosecution and defense were in on it. Straight sham.

Sidebar: if one more muthafucka tries to use Chicago as the poster for crime...especially black on black crime, I'm going to go nuclear!

black on black crime gets called out. but mexicans kill each other asians kill each other and whites kill each other.
fuck the media
still no word on baby daphne either



Agreed, I wonder if she was one of the jury members that was originally eliminated but brought back on?

maybe. she was one of the jurors who convinced everyone else to go to not guilty. she came in the deliberation with a not guilty. she knew what was at stake.. she wanted that book deal so her and her attorney husband could cash in.

gotta love it
 
This trial was doomed from get go... From the 6 jurors. To the 6 women jurors.. To the 5 white jurors. Piss poor jury selection:smh: Piss poor prepping of witnesses. IE Shantel talking like she got some sense on tv tonight.:smh:

I still cant believe people were defending her.. She was very detrimental to the case.

Those white women didn't want to hear all that attitude and neck rolling from her, they tuned her ass right out.

B37 was a racist bitch that her husband was already in her head before the trial ever started

..nothing about this shit was fair. Anyone saying this shit was fair and justice was served is just justifying their own racism...


Makes you want to cry..
 
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