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For Sanford and Zimmerman, time to move forward - USA TODAY Posted: 14 Jul 2013 09:08 AM PDT Mark O'Mara and Don West, the attorneys for George Zimmerman, said they were satisfied that justice had been served when the jury reached a not guilty verdict. SANFORD, Fla. -- City Manager Norton Bonaparte and George Zimmerman lawyer Mark O'Mara had some heated moments during Zimmerman's trial. Now that the verdict is in, they agree on at least one thing: It's time to move on. "Last year people were very angry and they came to Sanford to protest because George Zimmerman had not been arrested," Bonaparte said. "Now he has been arrested. He's been through the trial and a jury has found him not guilty. That's the American judicial system and from that we move forward." This central Florida city of more than 50,000 people drew little national attention before February 26, 2012 -- the night Latino neighborhood watch volunteer Zimmerman encountered black teen Trayvon Martin on a quiet street in a gated community here, some 20 miles northeast of Orlando. Minutes later, Trayvon, 17, was dead of a gunshot wound. Months later, Sanford and Zimmerman remained the focus of national protests. During the trial, O'Mara grilled Bonaparte about his decision to play 911 calls from the night of shooting for Trayvon's family in a group setting. "We thought it was a courtesy to let the family hear it before it was on the news," Bonaparte testified. STORY: George Zimmerman found not guilty STORY: 'System has failed': Crowds react to Zimmerman verdict STORY: Black leaders: Zimmerman verdict is 'old South justice' TIMELINE: Zimmerman-Trayvon Martin case In a press conference after the verdict, O'Mara said his client will now need to get on with his life. "I think he's going to be great. I think he is still worried. Hopefully everyone will respect the jury's verdict," O'Mara said. The immediate reaction Saturday night was not so accepting. Scores of protesters outside the courthouse -- and many more across the nation -- exclaimed disbelief as they learned Zimmerman was found not guilty. "The system has failed!" irate demonstrators chanted here. Bonaparte said Trayvon's death brought to the surface several issues the city needed to deal with. "There were issues that had to do with the African American community and the Sanford Police Department that were not being brought to my attention until after Trayvon was shot and killed," Bonaparte said. Bonaparte said he is now using his new awareness to work with new Police Chief Cecil Smith to make sure Sanford's black residents know the police department represents them and is willing to work with them. Natalie Jackson, a Sanford native and lawyer for Trayvon's family, was disappointed in the verdict but said Trayvon's death has led to positive changes in the city where he died. "Sanford is changed for the better," she said. George Zimmerman, the man accused of murdering 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, has been found not guilty of second-degree murder and manslaughter in the case that has gripped the nation. The trial happened, Jackson said, because "people took to social media and 2.2 million Americans signed a petition on change.org and demanded — not in an effort to persecute George Zimmerman -- but in an effort to say a black 17-year-old child should be able to walk home from the store and not be shot." "They may have saved the life of another child." Soon after the verdict, Jackson's mother, Francis OIiver, curator of a museum dedicated to a black neighborhood in Sanford, expressed a similar sentiment. "When the verdict came in, it seemed like the bottom fell out of my heart," Oliver said. "I went numb." But Oliver said the people were heard. She noted that Zimmerman was arrested, that former Sanford police chief Bill Lee was fired, and that the new police chief has begun sending out officers to meet people in their neighborhoods. For Zimmerman, the removal of the court's ankle monitor may not mean the end of the odyssey. Robert Zimmerman Jr., Zimmerman's brother, spoke to CNN after the verdict and expressed concern for his brother's safety. "He will be looking around his shoulder the rest of his life," he said. O'Mara acknowledged that people who think Zimmerman killed Trayvon for racial reasons could react violently. "He has to be cautious and protective of his safety," O'Mara said. Zimmerman could even face more criminal charges -- the NAACP is leading a push for federal civil rights charges. Zimmerman may have to go into hiding and be unable to live a normal life for some time, said Jose Baez, the defense attorney who successfully defended Casey Anthony, a Florida mother accused of killing her daughter in a high-profile capital murder case. "The end is not near for George Zimmerman," he said. |
House Republicans press new immigration tactic: Obama won't enforce border ... - Fox News Posted: 14 Jul 2013 08:43 AM PDT Congressional Republicans pressed ahead Sunday with their emerging stance on immigration reform, arguing President Obama delaying the implementation of his health care law raises major concerns about whether he'll enforce border security measures in immigration laws. "We cannot fix with laws things the president refuses to do," Iowa Republican Rep. Steve King told "Fox News Sunday." Though well known as one the House's most conservative members, King has emerged as perhaps the chamber's most vocal opponent of the Senate's immigration bill, which includes $40 billion toward additional security along the U.S.-Mexico border and a path to citizenship for at least some of the roughly 11 million illegal immigrants now living in the United States. House Republicans appeared to emerge with the new strategy after a closed-door meeting Wednesday, which was preceded by the Obama administration saying earlier this month that it will delay the start of the so-called employer mandate part of the president's signature health care law until after the 2014 elections. "If the president can selectively enforce ObamaCare, what's to say he cannot selectively enforce border security?" House Minority Leader Eric Cantor said ahead of the meeting. New York Democratic Rep. Steve Israel urged King and other House members opposed to existing immigration reform legislation not to use the president's delay on ObamaCare -- and arguments his administration currently doesn't enforce border security -- to block immigration reform. "You shouldn't use this as an excuse," he told Fox News, pointing out 68 of the Senate's 100 members agreed this summer to reform legislation and that President George W. Bush and the majority of Americans want the federal government to fix the country's broken immigration system. He also said Democrats would work with House Republicans if they wanted to approach immigration reform by passing the legislation in pieces. King also argued Sunday that it was a "mistake" to think the 2012 presidential election in which Obama won roughly 71 percent of the Hispanic vote was a referendum on immigration. Democrats want immigration for a "political issue," he said. |
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