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Doug Bandow

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The Death of Trayvon Martin: Confronting the Problem of Enduring Racism

Posted: 03/28/2012 3:07 am

America is a land of liberty and opportunity, and has admirably served as "a city upon a hill" in the words of Puritan John Winthrop, who led the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the New World. The U.S. continues to attract freedom-seekers from around the world.

Yet America's greatness has come at a cost. Indeed, the nation founded on the principle of individual liberty enshrined slavery in its founding document. Although the U.S. has come far in the 150 years since the great civil war which destroyed that system, racism lives on.

It is a legacy which white Americans like me can never truly understand.

The point is not that America is pervasively racist or uniquely flawed. Nor does the existence of racism justify creating a political spoils system which creates new injustices. However, those who love America the most, and who are most determined to preserve a free society which protects individual liberty, must address America's flaws.

Last month in Sanford City, Florida a 17-year-old African-American, Trayvon Martin, was walking in a gated community back to his father's girlfriend's home after purchasing a bag of Skittles and can of iced tea at a nearby Seven-Eleven. He had been watching a basketball game and went out to buy a snack. A hispanic neighborhood watch volunteer, George Zimmerman, saw Martin and suspected the latter of criminal activity. A confrontation occurred during which Zimmerman shot and killed the teen. Although Martin was unarmed, the 28-year-old Zimmerman claimed self-defense.

The latter was not charged with any crime. Protests have erupted across Florida and the nation. The Sanford police chief took a leave of absence after a city council vote of no confidence. The state attorney has convened a grand jury, Florida Gov. Rick Scott has appointed a special prosecutor, and the Justice Department has launched an investigation.

It is virtually impossible to dispassionately assess the killing. "He said, she said" controversies are notoriously hard to resolve. Of the two most important witnesses to the Martin killing, one is dead, while the other has an incentive to lie.

Moreover, no one should be convicted in a media trial. Nor should prosecutions be launched in response to public demonstrations or internet petitions, like that being circulated by Martin's parents on change.org "calling for Zimmerman's prosecution and trial."

Indeed, the protests took an ugly turn with the involvement of the notorious race hustler (and "Reverend") Al Sharpton, who 25 years ago promoted the fraudulent claim of rape by 15-year-old Tawana Brawley. Her claim was discredited and he lost a suit for defamation. At the time he told one of his allies: "We beat this, we will be the biggest niggers in New York." Since then the shameless racial demagogue has raced from controversy to controversy.

However, there is little question that Trayvon Martin would still be alive if he was white.

African-Americans long have suffered at the hands of the criminal justice system. Abuses during the Jim Crow era were legion in the South. Minorities faced racial profiling and discrimination in the North. Despite years of progress, African-Americans remain double victims: most likely to suffer from crimes and most likely to be suspected of committing crimes.

John McWhorter, an African-American columnist with the New York Daily News, acknowledged America's progress but noted: "police brutality and insensitivity against blacks remain, as I have often argued, the main obstacle to racial healing in this country. I analogize it to a chimney left standing amid the smoking ruins of a house. No one sees the chimney as evidence that the fire never happened. Yet we can't rebuild till we get that chimney torn down."

At a meeting held in at the Olive Street Baptist Church in Sanford after Martin's killing, local residents detailed violent and sometimes deadly run-ins with law enforcement officials. The frustration was palpable.

Reported the Washington Post: "The stories kept coming, as if it were hoped that they would provide some kind of salve for those who knew and loved Trayvon. People were testifying, a ritual in the black church. The facts about each case were impossible to parse on the spot, and possibly lost forever. But the sentiment behind the stories was unmistakable: Bad things had been done to others with the same promise as Martin. Too many questions had gone unanswered."

What we know about Trayvon Martin's death suggests that he was the victim of racial stereotyping if not animus. From his SUV Zimmerman called 911 to report a "suspicious person." He said that "this guy looks like he's up to no good or he's on drugs or something. ... He's got his hand in his waistband. ... These assholes always get away. ... Shit, he's running." An audio expert reported that Zimmerman also muttered "f***ing punks" under his breath. (The recording is indistinct; other listeners believe Zimmerman said "f***king coons.")

Contrary to the instruction of the 911 operator, Zimmerman apparently shadowed Martin, who called his girlfriend. She reported that Martin "said this man was watching him." Zimmerman got out of his vehicle after which she heard Martin ask: "Why are you following me." Apparently a fistfight ensued, followed by Zimmerman shooting Martin. Other calls came into 911 during which a voice is heard saying "no, no," while one caller reported someone screaming "Help! Help! Help!" In dispute is to whom the voice belonged.

Zimmerman claimed that Martin attacked him and the police explained their failure to charge the former based on Florida's "Stand Your Ground" self-defense law. The measure grants people the right to fight rather than run, but does not treat every claim as legitimate. The law requires that someone "reasonably believes" use of deadly force "is necessary ... to prevent death or great bodily harm."

Unfortunately, the police, who previously have been accused of coaching a witness to fulfill the law's terms, appeared to accept Zimmerman's account on faith and ignored standard investigative procedures. Zimmerman was shorter but had a 110 pound weight advantage over Martin, who carried snacks, not a weapon. Even if Martin started the fight and punched Zimmerman, as claimed by the latter, that would not necessarily generate a reasonable belief in the threat of "death or great bodily harm."

Moreover, Zimmerman is responsible for the violence. By following the teen Zimmerman evidently frightened Martin; the latter probably had a far better self-defense claim than Zimmerman. It would be a dubious bootstrap to allow the person who sparked a violent confrontation without cause then to claim to be acting in self-defense. Former Republican state senator, Durell Peaden, who cosponsored the "Stand Your Ground" legislation, argued that when Zimmerman "said 'I'm following him,' he lost his self-defense." Added Peaden: "There's nothing in the Florida law that allows him to follow someone with a damn gun."

Finally, Zimmerman's record was not "squeaky clean" as the police originally reported. He'd been previously arrested for resisting arrest and assaulting a police officer; the charges later were dropped. Zimmerman also had been the subject of several complaints from neighbors about his aggressive tactics while acting on neighborhood watch. Neighbor Frank Taaffe defended Zimmerman, but admitted: "I think he had fed-up issues. He was mad as hell and wasn't going to take it anymore." Zimmerman's two 911 calls regarding Martin were his 47th and 48th phone calls to the emergency service, suggesting zealousness or paranoia, or, more likely, a combustible combination of the two.

All told, Zimmerman apparently was angry and confrontational, suspicious of blacks in his neighborhood, and determined to prevent a potential malefactor from escaping. He followed Martin for no apparent reason other than the fact the latter was an African-American teen. Zimmerman ignored the advice of the 911 operator, caused Martin to fear for his safety, and needlessly created a violent confrontation. Without question Zimmerman exercised bad judgment and made a series of bad decisions; if Martin made a mistake, it was to fight, but then, he may have reasonably believed that doing so was necessary for his self-defense.

One still should not pronounce Zimmerman guilty of a crime from afar, but it's hard to see how he does not bear some legal culpability. Certainly his conduct deserves official and serious legal review. His case also should be handled like any other. Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump asked: "Do we really believe that if Trayvon Martin would have pulled the trigger, he would not be arrested?" What if a black teen had shot and killed an unarmed white neighborhood watch volunteer in Sanford, Florida? One suspects that to ask the question is to answer it.

The criminal law is no place for a public relations railroad. However, a liberal society governed by the rule of law cannot allow someone to be killed simply because he is a black teenager. It also is important that an entire segment of American society not see itself as disenfranchised, even threatened, by its government.

Trayvon Martin's death is a tragedy for everyone involved. Even if Zimmerman did a bad deed, he likely didn't intend evil. But justice requires holding him responsible for killing Martin, who appears to have been guilty of nothing other than being the wrong race and wrong age in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Thankfully, the era of Jim Crow is over. Unfortunately, the prejudices behind that time have not entirely dissipated. Which means Americans still have work to do.


This post first appeared at Forbes online.

 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopcoca
07:50 PM on 04/01/2012
What I just read was void of emotion, factually in line even with the historical references, void of race baiting and just overall well written.

http://virginiaspennstatescandal.blogspot.com That's a case involving an African-American child who alleges to have been sexually assaulted by a white man. She too is a victim of the racial injustice and police corruption that Bandow spoke of. It stops when the media helps to expose more cases of it forcing state governments to be proactive in ensuring equal justice for all.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rksu747
07:26 PM on 04/01/2012
1) It makes sense for the parent of Trayvon Martin to want Zimmerman to be arrested and prosecuted.
2) Your personal issues with Al Sharpton have no bearing on this matter and listing his past mistakes/misjudgments does not advance your point. I don't follow his work closely but he appears to have grown to be a lot more concerned about creating a better world for all the people suffering, not just blacks.
3) I think it is cowardly for you to quote a fair question posed by the attorney for the Martin's and give a cynical comment as an answer.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madupont
Let's just say, I'm from Wisconsin.
11:24 AM on 03/31/2012
"Even if Zimmerman didn't intend evil,...": we first heard of this case when he described the victim to his so-called supervisor who apparently played along with, let's say "humored" Zimmerman's mistaken conclusion that he was some kind of a Watch control in a system that played along with his false self-assessment of his role/that he had a duty to perform this responsibility in a gated community:the Retreat at Twin Lakes, which is not, I repeat: NOT a member of the Watch communities association. This was reported in an article on the Trayvon Martin killed by George Zimmerman case, at The Daily Beast earlier in this week which began on-line posting about March 25th. which is accessed by a small press-bar near the beginning of the main article and therefore easy to overlook unless and until you come back to it and learn the facts of Watch Associations.
Therefore when you hear him ordered to stand-down by a brief command coached rather as a suggestion: " I wouldn' do that...", when Zimmerman states he will get out of the car to go after the suspect,you are hearing the reply of a policeman. Why did they humor this paranoid psychopath; was it because his father,now retired, had been a judge; who has since become prominent in this case for false assertions?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlairCase
01:17 AM on 03/31/2012
It not against the law for neighborhood watch volunteers to shadow people walking theough neighborhoods. This happens all the time. You have the right to be angry if someone is following you, but you don't have the right to attack them. The person most to blame is the person who started the fist fight. There were two eyewitnesses. Both say Zimmerman was on the botton and yelling for help. One is an adult who says Martrin was pounding Zimmerman's head against the sidewalk. The other is a 13-year-old who mother now says that police may have coached her son by nodding their heads as the youngster gave a statement. However, the boy hasn't chasnged his statemens, which match the other eyewitness statement. According to the coroner, Martin was six-feet-tall and weighed 160 pounds. Zimmerman is 5'9" and the video relases by the Sanford police make it obvious that he didn't outwight Martin by 110 pounds, if he outweighed Martin at all. Paramedic treated Zimmermans injuries before he was taken to the police statation. His family says he was later treated by a doctor for a broken nose. Contrary to what you read on the blogs, the police did take his gun and clothing, which might or might not be bloody, as evidence. There is physical evidence and eyewitness statements to go along with the "he said" defense.
11:05 AM on 04/01/2012
The media is largely to blame for the misperceptions in this. They are using their lies of ommission to paint a false narative where a hispanic man is a white supremesist and a 17 year old hoodlum is a 12 year old innocent kid. At the rate they are getting younger with the pictures of the kid, he may have been a newborn in a couple of weeks. They would show him as a fetus but they wouldn't want anyone to believe life begins before birth. The edited audio of the 911 tapes that the media has presented has gone from biased to outright lies:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/post/nbc-to-do-internal-investigation-on-zimmerman-segment/2012/03/31/gIQAc4HhnS_blog.html?hpid=z6
Jamgrae
Aliyah
12:46 AM on 04/02/2012
So, according to you, a 17 year old boy, walking down the street to get home, eating a box of skittles is a hoodlum....and the killer has lies painted about him because he's supposed to be a white supremist according to the media. What kind of drugs are you on, it can't just be marijuana....is it crack? There is NO hoodlum record for Trayvon Martin, there is NO arrest record for Trayvon Martin, there is just the media saying that a boy was killed by a guy (hispanic as some whites like to push) with an arrest record that makes the Pope weep. And top that off, the video can not be believed because the media is biased and the voice experts are all liers...because you say so. For some reason, I'm detecting that both Zimmerman, and you have alittle problem with African American kids. Maybe you wished it was YOU who followed Trayvon instead of Zimmerman, that maybe YOU would have had a better lie to give as the reason you killed a boy on his way going home.
07:21 PM on 03/30/2012
I have to strongly disagree with your next to last paragraph. Trayvon Martin was not the wrong color or in the wrong place at the wrong time - He was a young man that had left his father's house to get snacks & was walking back home. George Zimmerman was the one that was in the wrong place at the wrong time & carrying a concealed weapon. George Zimmerman was wrong to be carrying that gun in his role as neighborhood watch - in my opinion, he carried it for exactly the outcome he achieved. This rests solely on Zimmerman who is Hispanic & most probably a racist - but that does not necessarily make this a race issue - he may well have challenged any race he came across in his quest to be a neighborhood hero - or whatever reason he felt it necessary to prowl the streets with that weapon.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madupont
Let's just say, I'm from Wisconsin.
11:51 AM on 03/31/2012
The police should not have encouraged him in his fantasy( I say that and use that word because he has a record of alcoholic acting out in mistaken personal assessment of what he thinks is going on in a public place while he was drunk and had entered a bar where he creates some mayhem and has to be taken into custody. Knowing this, it is the police who make the mistake of leading him on in the belief that he is somebody allowed to patrol his community although this was entirely a voluntary conclusion on his part which becomes a noticeably repeated dementia in his conduct, an habitual inclination to patrol other people in the community which has, by the way,a 20% African-American residency. Having heard his assessment over the car-radio descriptive of how he perceives and what he thinks that he is seeing, the police would have had to tell him more than "I wouldn't do that..." to prevent a crime in which they have inadvertently cooperated by humoring a serious mental case of racial paranoia who spent his early adulthood addicted to alcohol which futher altered his perceptions of reality.
09:54 PM on 03/31/2012
Thank you for the info about his problem with alcohol - I hadn't heard or read that - I have read some about Zimmerman's brushes with the law & his violence - In my opinion, he seemed to have a big problem with people that didn't view him as "authority" - who didn't immediately bend to his will - also makes me wonder if his father being a judge - a true authority figure was an "issue" with Zimmerman the son . I totally agree that the police seemed to be too lax in how they dealt with him - this again makes me wonder if his father's perceived power as a judge still held sway. A lot of mistakes early on - what a shame....
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05:22 PM on 03/30/2012
When do we as a nation bring about a resolution to the problem of racism in America particularly against blacks? When the death toll of unarmed black children struck down by people who 'exercise bad judgment' reaches into the hundreds, thousands, millions?
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Allosaur2010
Rubio: Castro's Sleeper Agent!
06:57 PM on 03/29/2012
I've been reading a book about the Afghan War. Under the military's rules of engagement, Zimmerman is the one who would have been gunned down by the Army, wandering around with a gun and stuff. Martin wouldn't even have been interrogated.
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jbon911647
We are all Green, Baby!
08:45 PM on 03/30/2012
Wrong AO, what's the point?
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madupont
Let's just say, I'm from Wisconsin.
12:32 PM on 03/31/2012
Well, ask ourself why the son of a former Judge retired in Virginia. and who was previously arrested for public drunkeness which was in his case habitual and may or may not have been treated, was not serving in Afghanistan, or Iraq for that matter?

We know why Martin wasn't; because his grade point was so above average that his parents were planning on his attending further education by entering college. Obama wasn't kidding about that could have been his son. Having been elected President of the Harvard Law Review by his predominantly white classmates at Harvard was a godsend that put him in a position to rescue another professor who founded the Dept.of African and African-American Studies at Harvard detained by the Cambridge police captain who attended the Latin School and therefore did not recognize Prof.Henry Louis Gates,jr. as a faculty member at Harvard.
GHO
Sooner or later you run out of other peoples money
10:44 AM on 03/29/2012
How and when did "we" decide this was a race issue and hate crime? Amazing how many "witnesses" there are out there who know exactly what happened despite being hundreds of miles away.

I am not convinced that Zimmerman behaves any differently if Martin is white. This guy strikes me much more as some sort of lame wannabe cop out looking for glory. Why pursue Martin after 911 operator said not to? Because he's black? Maybe, but isn't it more likley Zimmerman had stars in his eyes, saw his name in headlines for making his daring citizens arrest?
(Little did) he know how many headlines he'd end up making)
This guy called 911 over 40 times. He sounds a lot more like someone glory-hounding than a racist out looking to harrass blacks.

Unfortunately, the media and the race-baiters are determined to make it all about race.
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Allosaur2010
Rubio: Castro's Sleeper Agent!
06:49 PM on 03/29/2012
The incident is an abomination. The fact that Martin was black just makes it a nuclear abomination.
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jbon911647
We are all Green, Baby!
08:24 AM on 04/01/2012
Was the Shawn Tyson incident an abomination as well?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SmittyT
09:59 AM on 03/29/2012
This case is a perfect example of America's serious problem with racism and racist beliefs. The Sanford Police Department, State Attorney, and even the governor's handling of this case shows just how deep institutional racism is when all of them collaborate to protect a cold blooded killer instead of seeking justice for a black family. Zimmerman's paranoid, stereotyping, and racist beliefs about blacks led him to commit murder. Even some of the comments on blogs and other media outlets clearly show that for some, it's hard for them to imagine Trayvon as a typical, middle-class black teenager minding his business. Instead, in order to reconcile their own racist views, they have to create this false narrative of him being a thug, a bad kid, and the attacker in order for all of this to make sense even though, the evidence suggest otherwise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Miriam Breslauer
03:24 AM on 03/29/2012
According to the police video tape that was taken after the shooting, Zimmerman had no blood or bruises on him. That makes the argument that Martin fought back unlikely.
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11:17 PM on 03/28/2012
Example of blatant vigilante racism.

Spike Lee apologized on Wednesday for retweeting a tweet thought to contain Trayvon Martin shooter George Zimmerman's address that turned out to be an elderly couple's residence.
Lee wrote:
Lee retweeted the erroneous information to his 240,000-plus followers last Friday. The original tweet--posted the same day by Marcus Davonne Higgins, a 33-year-old from Los Angeles, using the Twitter handle @Maccapone--was sent to several celebrities including Lee, 50 Cent and LeBron James. Higgins urged friends on Facebook to "REACH OUT & TOUCH" Zimmerman."
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/cutline/spike-lee-apologizes-george-zimmerman-address-tweet-015514123.html
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Maezeppa
Happy-Happy Joy-Joy
11:51 PM on 03/28/2012
It's so awful when "liberals" and "the left" use the tactics of the far right.  I apologize on all our behalf.
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02:34 AM on 03/29/2012
Don't apologize to ME. I am to the left of liberal dogma, at least in economic matters.
Jamgrae
Aliyah
01:11 AM on 04/02/2012
An apology would be in order here...but it should come from Spike himself. I can understand why Spike is furious that Zimmerman wasn't arrested, most Americans are furious and puzzled, but Spike could have placed an innocent person in harm's way. If Zimmerman gets to court, and is found guilty (in my opinion, he will be) then his punishment will be that his rich "daddy" couldn't save him this time from his brushes with the law, and that he will be housed with people who look just like the boy he killed...."suspicious looking" and all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pgurlatl
libby chic geek
02:53 AM on 04/10/2012
A tweet over actual murder is still no comparison.
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11:08 PM on 03/28/2012
Now if only Martin's parents did this to their son, we all be better of now.
.http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/dad-makes-12-old-son-hold-m-thief-194449726.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
yliza
Living Life during Interesting Times
08:21 AM on 03/29/2012
Stop blaming the victim and trying to smear the poor kid.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nunuit505
10:38 PM on 03/28/2012
This crime was precipitated by several factors,some of which accompany very many incidents of this nature. There is no question that Z violated the victims right to use a public thoroughfare for normal to and fro conveyance, wherein the perpetrator acted as stalker, and in an aggressive manner created a situation of entrapment of the victim, for no apparent cause. This in itself creates a firm case against Z., because by doing so, he created a condition for the victim to react in a manner that is consistent with human nature when imperiled. FL laws are totally irrelevant in the disposition of this case, which was, without question, a homicide without warrant or just cause.
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madupont
Let's just say, I'm from Wisconsin.
02:01 PM on 03/31/2012
Thank you !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
montanasian
Still trying to make it up the learning curve.
10:34 PM on 03/28/2012
Actually this article is a little more reasonable than most I have read which are more polarized and dismisive of any clear and sensible reasoning.
Zimmerman made one poor decision after another after which the ball kept rolling to the fatality of Trayvon. I believe he is culpable for he set this in motion and took it upon himself and thus I agree that he probably lost his self defense stance. Small decisions with tragic results. Even though, maybe not as evil as Zimmerman is portrayed, the coat of death hangs at his doorstep.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Maezeppa
Happy-Happy Joy-Joy
11:52 PM on 03/28/2012
Yeah, and from the CATO Institute no less. Mostly they suck.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mrbarolo
03:06 AM on 03/29/2012
True. The fairly rigorous fairness of this piece surprised me.
10:29 PM on 03/28/2012
Doug,

Great article. However, if a person follows you, should you be allowed to pummel them? If that is what happened, we have a draw. If it is not what happened, Zimmerman is in trouble. Your article is the most fair that I have read. The police supposedly has 6 witnesses.

I applaud you for not overplaying the race card.
02:26 PM on 03/29/2012
"Following" is not the same as "chasing".

If someone was following or chasing me in the rain at night, I would be very frightened and I would run.

According to Trayvon's gf - that's what he did.

But then, according to her, Zimmerman then cornered Trayvon... at that point, when the "flight or fight" response kicks in, you'd fight - since fleeing obviously didn't work.

Why wouldn't Trayvon have the right to get away from Zimmerman? Zimmerman had no authority to follow him at all!

This whole thing makes me so sad. And I still cannot believe Zimmerman hasn't been arrested.
11:27 PM on 03/29/2012
LOL. You went from following to chasing.. to cornering.. to Trayvon having the right to get away from Zimmerman.
04:24 PM on 03/30/2012
Since a person is dead, Bill a more pertinent question is if a person follows you (4 whatever reason) and you decide to "pummel" them, should they be allowed 2 SHOOT u? How can it be a "draw" if a dishonorable coward brings a gun to a fist fight? I hate 2 break it 2 u, but Zimmerman is "in trouble" even if evidence proves that TM "pummeled" him because GZ should not have been following TM. If GZ had heeded the directive not to persist in his pursuit of TM, he would not have gotten the alleged "pummeling" that u seem 2 think justifies him shooting an unarmed boy.