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Judge Revokes Zimmerman's Bond
WLS AM Chicago ^ | 1 June 2012 | Unknown

Posted on 06/01/2012 11:50:10 AM PDT by Lurker

ORLANDO, Fla. (WLS) - Prosecutors asked a judge Friday to revoke the bond of the neighborhood watch volunteer charged with killing 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

Prosecutors said in a motion that 28-year-old George Zimmerman and his family misled them about his finances when testifying during a bail hearing that allowed him to be released from jail on a $150,000 bond. Prosecutor Bernie De la Rionda asked for the revocation during a hearing to help determine if prosecutors and the defense can stop the public release of certain documents in the case.

During the bond hearing in April, Zimmerman's relatives testified they had limited funds. Zimmerman's attorney said several days later that he had discovered his client had raised more than $200,000 from a website. At the time of the hearing, about $135,000 had been raised, and that money wasn't disclosed at the bond hearing.

"This court was led to believe they didn't have a single penny," said Prosecutor Bernie De la Rionda. "It was misleading and I don't know what words to use other than it was a blatant lie."

Defense attorney Mark O'Mara said it was an innocent misunderstanding and that Zimmerman wasn't using that money for his expenses and wasn't sure what he could use the money for. He said Zimmerman used the houses of his parents and grandmother as collateral for the bond.

Prosecutors also said in the motion that Zimmerman didn't disclose he had a second passport. Zimmerman turned his passport over to the court at the bond hearing as a measure that would prevent him from fleeing the country.

Zimmerman is pleading not guilty to second-degree murder and claims self-defense. Zimmerman shot Martin last February during a confrontation at a gated community of townhouses in Sanford, Fla., where Zimmerman lived and where Martin was visiting his father's fiancee.

The delay in an arrest for 44 days prompted protests nationwide and led to Sanford's police chief stepping aside so emotions could cool down.

At Friday's hearing, De la Rionda and O'Mara also asked a judge to stop the public release of witness names and statements made by Zimmerman to police officers. Those documents normally are part of the public record under Florida law.

"What's occurring, unfortunately, are cases are being tried in the public sector as opposed to in the courtroom," De La Rionda told Circuit Judge Kenneth Lester. "We are in a new age with Twitter, Facebook, and all these things I've never heard of before in my career.

Everybody gets to find out intimate details about witnesses that never occurred before. Witnesses are going to be reluctant to get involved."

A consortium of more than a dozen media groups, including The Associated Press, asked the judge to ignore the request, saying such records are presumed to be publicly available under Florida law.

Rachel Fugate, an attorney for the Orlando Sentinel, cited the Casey Anthony trial as an example of a highly publicized case in which a jury was able to be seated despite intense media coverage. The Florida mother was acquitted last year of killing her 2-year-old daughter.

"Discovery in Florida has traditionally been open ... and Florida hasn't encountered problems seating juries and giving defendants fair trials," Fugate said.

O'Mara said Friday on a website that he doesn't expect the case to be ready for trial until next year.

O'Mara said he expects to call on 50 witnesses who need to be deposed before he decides whether to file a "stand your ground" motion which would ask for a hearing before a judge without a jury. At the hearing, Zimmerman would argue self-defense under the Florida law which gives wide latitude to use deadly force rather than retreat in a fight if people believe they are in danger of being killed or seriously injured.

The Associated Press Contributed To This Report


TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: blackkk; georgezimmerman; saintskittles; trayvon; trayvonmartin; zimmerman; zimmermanbondrevoked
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To: Lazamataz

The judge gave him 48 hours to report to jail.


141 posted on 06/01/2012 7:55:55 PM PDT by sport
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To: Cboldt

I figured the passport issue would be easily explained. The Paypal, maybe not so much.

Unless you’ve had a long standing account, where these kinds of transactions are typical, Paypal can, and does limit when and how much is transfered. They can hold funds for 30 days.

It’s entirely possible there may have been $135k in the account, on the day of the bail hearing, with George having access to only a fraction of the funds.


142 posted on 06/01/2012 7:58:49 PM PDT by moehoward
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To: dragnet2

What “government babble”? All I’m saying is that, if/when Zimmerman is acquitted of the charges currently pending against him, he is not going to then be charged with perjury. How is that “government babble”? What are you talking about?


143 posted on 06/01/2012 8:01:11 PM PDT by Conscience of a Conservative
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To: sport
Our nation is crawling with millions of illegal aliens, but zim is ordered to jail....Maybe he'll be killed, thus avoiding and embarrassing trial for the government.

Every black in jail, will have a duty to kill him. It was so unfortunate...

It's a win win for the prosecution. Concoct anything that comes up....hopefully, he'll be silenced before trial.

144 posted on 06/01/2012 8:02:13 PM PDT by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: Conscience of a Conservative

Kill him...Set um up...It’s the only way out for government .


145 posted on 06/01/2012 8:04:28 PM PDT by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: shadowland; Yehuda; Tax-chick; hal ogen
What this information suggests to me, is a very fearful man, distrustful of his government’s intention to protect him, readying for the possibility of having to abscond to save his life.

1. He has a bounty on his head ‘dead or alive.’
2. Eric Holder has refused to do a thing about the threats from the New Black Panthers.
3. Obama has spoken sympathetically in regards to a person he had to defend his life against, and who could have been whacked out on ghetto ‘lean.’(Google it)

I have no idea what is going on in Zimmerman’s mind right now, but I’d suspect much of it is not pleasant viewing.
Yours is an excellent summary - a perfectly reasonable hypothesis.

What would the average citizen do - how would his mind process waking up to such a bizarre, upside-down, evil reality?

I mean, one day GZ is involved in a violent, deadly confrontation with a thug, the police and local authorities appear to have sorted everything out, but then... days (weeks?) later the race-baiters rewrite the narrative, and a wailing and gnashing of teeth commences.

Mr. Zimmerman finds himself metaphorically shoved into a boxcar and deposited upon the threshold of hell, with jackboots of justice-for-trayvon crushing his skull and kicking him through the gate. All the while the President of these United States stands in authority at the scene, nodding with approval.

I can see why any human about to be sacrificed upon the altar of Obamanation would default to the basic instinct of survival. There's no reasoning with animals.

146 posted on 06/01/2012 8:09:25 PM PDT by Ezekiel (The Obama-nation began with the Inauguration of Desolation.)
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To: skeeter

Sympathetic to hell! The AG is in cahoots with the bounty hunters.But that is what the voters want, that is what the majority of those that voted in 2008 voted for.


147 posted on 06/01/2012 8:21:01 PM PDT by sport
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To: dragnet2
I agree with your assessment.

Zimmerman's goose was cooked when the "justus"bros mistook him for being White because of his name. Then the "lynch zimmerman" mob of self hating Whites and members of this forum formed.

I can't say if it would have happened in Sanford or Miami but at least one individual can thank Zimmerman forsaving their life, because as sure as the sun rises in the Rast, obama's son would have killed one or more persons before he turned 21.

148 posted on 06/01/2012 8:32:26 PM PDT by sport
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To: Cboldt

Thanks for the response.

Seems like an odd way to do things...but the judicial system is odd I guess.


149 posted on 06/01/2012 8:33:33 PM PDT by berdie
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To: sport
I agree with your assessment. Hell bells...You know damn well what is going on here.

I'm done...This is all concocted shit, knowing they have zip against zim.. So bring in all the big gov attacks...He didnt do this and that...Get his ass back in jail....Maybe something will happen...He's dead...Whooops...no trial...

150 posted on 06/01/2012 8:38:45 PM PDT by dragnet2 (Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
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To: dragnet2

They did not have shit against him all along. If the self hating white Liberals had not teamed up with the msm and America’s favorite race baiters and certain members of this forum, Zimmerman would be walking around now.But the msm and race baiters saw this incident as a way to attack Florida’s “Stand Your Ground Law” and the others in monkey see, monkey do fell in line. Add in Florida’s current politicians not having any guts and it ends up in Zimmerman getting royally screwed. Not for what he done, but who he did it to.


151 posted on 06/01/2012 8:52:35 PM PDT by sport
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To: Conscience of a Conservative
I don't like what? The guy lied to the court. Now, he's going to face the consequences of lying (probably in the form of a higher bond and an admonishment from the judge).

The Big Banks routinely lied to the courts about foreclosure documents. Where did you stand on that issue?

Jon Corzine is a criminal. How come he's not under arrest?

If "the courts" were on fire, I wouldn't relieve myself on them to put it out.

152 posted on 06/01/2012 9:17:42 PM PDT by kiryandil (turning Americans into felons, one obnoxious drunk at a time (Zero Tolerance!!!))
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To: Melas
If this were a case involving an outspoken liberal who had hidden assets from the court during an arraignment or bail hearing, FReepers would be howling with outrage no matter how minor the actual crime he was facing. Yet somehow, Zimmerman seems to get a pass from many.

Claptrap. I've always maintained the courts are corrupt, self-serving clownshows.

I'm not out to "get" outspoken liberals. They have a right to their opinions, and since the entire American legal system is corrupt, their rights are at risk in front of the court clownshow, too.

Martha Stewart, an outspoken liberal, was shafted by the thugs in the legal system.

Wall Street & the Big Banks commit dozens of crimes worse than hers daily. If Stewart wanted to hide some assets from the lawless thugs in the courts, I'd be all for it.

153 posted on 06/01/2012 9:25:58 PM PDT by kiryandil (turning Americans into felons, one obnoxious drunk at a time (Zero Tolerance!!!))
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To: GVnana
I distinctly recall reports that Zimmerman had raised money from donations. If I know it, how can this court pretend they didn't know it?

Oh, now you want old judges and prosecutors to have to learn how to use the Intertubes to get information?

For shame! It's discrimination against doddering old fools, that's what it is!

154 posted on 06/01/2012 9:44:16 PM PDT by kiryandil (turning Americans into felons, one obnoxious drunk at a time (Zero Tolerance!!!))
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To: ladyjane
While Zimmerman is out on bail his lawyer can delay the trial until after the election. The prosecutor doesn’t want that to happen.

I think this is right on target. If Zimmerman's legal team can delay until after the election, the pressure will be off and it will probably go away quietly. Obviously if they can get him back into jail that would be harder to do.

155 posted on 06/01/2012 9:56:45 PM PDT by Dan Cooper
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To: Krankor

How long was he in jail before he was on bond? Why now since it’s been several weeks since he was in jail. Did he run?!


156 posted on 06/01/2012 10:52:49 PM PDT by snarkytart (http://www.freerepubli224%2C1)
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To: All

Just remember - no matter how unfair to Zimmerman - he was a registered Democrat. So win-win.


157 posted on 06/01/2012 11:06:00 PM PDT by Royal Wulff
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To: kiryandil
Jon Corzine is a criminal. How come he's not under arrest?

O/T, but good question.

Bernie Madoff's "victims" are not victims in the same class with Corzine's victims. People who invested with Bernie knew or should have known that something was not right. In the case of Corzine, that's not true. That makes Governor Corzine a worse person than Madoff.

158 posted on 06/01/2012 11:15:13 PM PDT by cynwoody
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To: moehoward
-- I figured the passport issue would be easily explained. --

Basically, there are two old passports. One of them had been reported lost, so technically already expired when given to the judge in April, but on its face, it expired May 2012. The other one was obtained in 2004 and expires sometime in 2014.

No way he got the 2004 passport anticipating a need to flee in 2012.

O'Mara, on CNN, said that the 2004 passport has been in his possession since April.

O'MARA: On the 26th when I first talked to George, coincidentally I was talking to him about the money and the check. He told me about a second passport. That they had found when they left the state. They gathered up all their belonging. Left the state. Uncovered the second passport.

He told me about that. He forwarded to me in a fed ex package the second passport and the check at one time. As it turns out, we have good documentation that it came to me on the 26th. On the 27th I did a notice of filing to give that to the court file. We were at court and literally it was left in my pleading file until this morning when Bernie, the prosecutor first said to me, we found out about this second passport. I said, hold on, I have it. And I've had it since the 27th or 26th of April. My apologies, but it's always been here.

CNN Anderson Cooper, June 1, 2012
159 posted on 06/02/2012 3:33:06 AM PDT by Cboldt
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To: berdie
-- Seems like an odd way to do things...but the judicial system is odd I guess. --

There is almost always a good reason for any given legal policy - not that the policy always fits the circumstance at hand.

An accused is entitled to bail he can afford. If bail is set too high, then the accused is imprisoned until guilt is established. Intuitively, that's okay for those who are guilty in fact, and are found guilty. Why have bail at all, for them, just jail 'em.

But if bail is set so high that few people can pay it (say, 100 million dollars, across the board), then everybody swept up by the state sits in jail until trial. So, the general rule is a setting of bail so high that if the defendant doesn't appear voluntarily, he "loses everything." At the same time, he is allowed to put his "everything" up as security for his promise to appear.

If bail is set low, then it isn't much incentive to appear voluntarily - although fleeing is a serious offense of its own right.

Anyway, sliding scale, or accounting for defendant's assets, is common in "big bail" cases. Not so much for misdemeanor crimes, where bail is set low enough (no sliding scale) that almost everybody can afford to pay it. No sense in bothering a judge to find the amount of bail for 200 DUI's a week, etc.

160 posted on 06/02/2012 3:47:09 AM PDT by Cboldt
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