Thousands PROTEST across the US against Zimmerman VERDICT
Thousands
took to streets across the US on Sunday, as protests against the
acquittal of George Zimmerman entered their second day. Zimmerman, a
former neighborhood watch volunteer, shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon
Martin in 2012.
The Justice Department said Sunday that it will
restart its investigation into last year's killing to consider possible
separate hate crime charges against George Zimmerman. The news follows
huge public outcry and calls from civil rights leaders to reopen the
inquiry.
"Experienced federal prosecutors will determine whether the
evidence reveals a prosecutable violation of any of the limited federal
criminal civil rights statutes within our jurisdiction...and whether
federal prosecution is appropriate in accordance with the department's
policy governing successive federal prosecution following a state
trial," a Justice Department spokesman said in a Sunday statement.
Massive
"Justice for Trayvon" marches took place in New York City, Boston, San,
Francisco, Los Angeles and other cities across America on Sunday. At
least five people were arrested in New York, RT's Marina Portnaya
reported.
US President Barack Obama has called for peaceful reaction,
urging Americans to respect the verdict of the jury, which cleared
George Zimmerman of the murder of Trayvon Martin.
"I know this case
has elicited strong passions. And in the wake of the verdict, I know
those passions may be running even higher. But we are a nation of laws,
and a jury has spoken," the president said in a statement.
In New York
City, a few thousand people marched from Union Square to Times Square.
Demonstrators blocked traffic while chanting slogans. Police tried and
failed to funnel the crowd into controlled lanes.
Some 500
protesters of different ethnic backgrounds took to the streets of
Boston, with police describing the rally as "very orderly."
"Morally
it cannot be right, that a child cannot go about his business and go to
the store," 57-year-old Maura Twomey told Reuters. "Racism is not just
an issue for the black community. It's for all of us."
Hundreds
protested in San Francisco and Los Angeles, with RT's Ramon Galindo
reporting that demonstrators shut down the I-10 interstate highway.
On
Saturday, large spontaneous demonstrations broke out after the jury
announced the not-guilty verdict.
Demonstrators in Oakland, California
smashed windows in protest. There were also reports that small fires
burned throughout the city, and that a police vehicle was damaged.
Twenty-nine-year-old Zimmerman was acquitted on Saturday of all
charges relating to the fatal shooting of Martin. The former
neighborhood watch volunteer could have been sentenced to life in prison
for second-degree murder or up to 30 years for manslaughter if he was
found guilty.
Martin, 17, was shot over a year ago by Zimmerman, who
claimed he acted in self-defense. The prosecution argued that Zimmerman
was guilty of second-degree murder, stating that he racially profiled
the unarmed teen and assumed he was a criminal when he saw him walking
through a gated community in Sanford. They claimed that Zimmerman
tracked the boy down and started the fight that led to the shooting.
Kaffirs throwing a temper tantrum when they don't get their way so what else is new?
ReplyDeleteI agree with verdict
ReplyDeleteOf course you do, Racist.
DeleteScrew you idiot racism is what the riots are all about..a bunch of racist rioting over be
Delete