WHY FEDS WON'T PROSECUTE ZIMMERMAN
Exclusive: Jack Cashill reveals defendant himself has history as civil-rights activist
NOTE:
Jack Cashill is working closely with the investigative
journalists/bloggers at The Conservative Treehouse, and I'm told is
writing a book about the corruption at ALL levels unearthed in this
case. this article was published just two hours ago, and I'm fairly
certain this is a preview of the blockbuster Jack's preparing.
Although one should never underestimate the moral bankruptcy of Barack Obama’s Justice Department, a federal prosecution of George Zimmerman on civil rights charges is highly unlikely.
As
Eric Holder and company have known from the beginning, Zimmerman makes
about as unlikely a racist poster child as America could produce. They
would just as soon keep this information to themselves.
A
notorious procrastinator on issues unfavorable to the White House like
“Fast and Furious,” Holder did not take long to jump into the the
Zimmerman case.
On March 19, 2012,
ABC reported that
the FBI, the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and the U.S.
Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida would all
investigate Trayvon Martin’s death.
By
Monday, April 2, FBI agents were already in Florida questioning
individuals in an Orwellian “parallel investigation” that focused less
on Zimmerman’s actions that fateful night than on his thoughts, past and
present.
Did
he really say “coon” on his call to the dispatcher? Had he ever told a
racial joke? Were the suspicious persons he reported to the police
disproportionately black?
In
contemporary America words often matter more than action. An L.A. jury
set a double-murderer free in no small part because a detective on the
O. J. Simpson case, Mark Fuhrman, used the word “n—er” 10 years earlier.
Team
Trayvon and its allies in Obama’s Justice Department hoped the FBI
would find some similar offense in Zimmerman’s past. They did not
succeed.
The
agents’ larger mistake, the Justice Department’s really, was their
failure to understand that if the civil rights of anyone had been
abused, that person was Zimmerman.
Serino
had been feeling the heat to make an arrest, and he said as much to the
FBI. The police officer who concerned him most was Arthur Barnes, who
was “friendly” with Tracy Martin, Trayvon’s father.
Former
Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee said much the same. As he told CNN after
testifying at Zimmerman’s trial, black city manager Norton Bonaparte
asked him “several times” in the weeks after the shooting, “Can an
arrest be made now?”
Bonaparte
was not the only one prodding him. “It was related to me that they just
wanted an arrest,” said Lee. “They didn’t care if it was dismissed
later.”
The
need to satisfy this community pressure led the brass of two police
departments, the State of Florida and the U.S. Department of Justice to
conspire to arrest Zimmerman, himself a minority. If that were not a
civil rights violation, it would be hard to identify what a violation
was.
Like
everyone else the FBI talked to, Serino viewed Zimmerman as “not a
racist.” Wrote the agents, “Serino believed that ZIMMERMAN’S actions
were not based on MARTIN’S skin color rather based on his attire, the
total circumstances of the encounter and the previous burglary suspects
in the community.”
The
most revealing of the FBI interviews was with Zimmerman’s one-time
fiancée, herself Hispanic, with whom he lived for a period of time.
Although
not at all hesitant to document his imperfections, the young woman
thought Zimmerman to be “last person in the world” she would expect to
be involved in the shooting of Trayvon Martin.
He “never exhibited any biases or prejudices against anyone,”
she told the FBI, “and did not use racial epithets of any kind.”
The
detail that the Justice Department would most like to keep under wraps
was Zimmerman’s involvement in a December 2010 incident in which a
police lieutenant’s son named Justin Collison sucker punched a black
homeless man named Sherman Ware outside a bar.
Although
Ware suffered a concussion, and there was video evidence of Collison’s
action, no action was taken against Collison for nearly a month.
Zimmerman
and his wife, Shellie, were upset at the lack of media attention the
case was getting. So they printed fliers demanding that the community
“hold accountable” officers responsible for misconduct. They then drove
the fliers around to area churches and passed them out on a Sunday
morning.
This
meeting was recorded on video. As a result of the publicity, Police
Chief Brian Tooley, whom Zimmerman blasted for his “illegal cover-up and
corruption,” was forced to resign, and Collison was arrested.
After
the shooting, all of Zimmerman’s civil rights activism was quickly
forgotten. Even the sister of Sherman Ware joined the mob demanding
Zimmerman’s arrest.
“I stand for justice,”
she insisted at a Trayvon rally March 19 at the Seminole Criminal courthouse, “for Trayvon, for Sherman Ware.”
The
local NAACP, with whom Zimmerman worked on the Ware case, turned its
back on him as well. Ware’s attorney, Natalie Jackson, was a key player
on Team Trayvon.
When
in early April 2012, the Zimmerman family talked publicly about
George’s involvement in the Ware case, Jackson denied that he had handed
out any fliers and dismissed the family’s attempt to establish
Zimmerman’s commitment to racial justice.
“It’s
a PR strategy, a propaganda campaign,” said Jackson. “His friends and
family are doing him a big disservice by race-baiting.”
He might more accurately have quoted another Anglo-Irishman, Oscar Wilde, “No good deed goes unpunished.”
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