The seated man is George Zimmerman's great-grandfather, who was a black Peruvian.
The woman behind him is his daughter, who was half-black.
The baby seated in his lap is George Zimmerman's mother.
Obviously, a man with his family history; a man, who took an African-American girl to his senior prom; a man, who tutored black children; a man, who took in black people when they were homeless; a man, who led the community effort to prosecute the son of a white police officer, who had beaten a black, homeless man, and had escaped any investigation or charges; a man, who went to black churches to organise and to urge action; and a man, who has blacks in his family and whom the FBI investigated and could find no basis for the allegations of racism and animus in his life, is a flaming creepy-assed cracka, David Duke wannabe!
Obviously, a man with his family history; a man, who took an African-American girl to his senior prom; a man, who tutored black children; a man, who took in black people when they were homeless; a man, who led the community effort to prosecute the son of a white police officer, who had beaten a black, homeless man, and had escaped any investigation or charges; a man, who went to black churches to organise and to urge action; and a man, who has blacks in his family and whom the FBI investigated and could find no basis for the allegations of racism and animus in his life, is a flaming creepy-assed cracka, David Duke wannabe!
(h/t CNN)
(CNN) -- George Zimmerman gave a scathing review of the Sanford Police Department and accused its chief of engaging in a cover-up during a public meeting in January 2011.
Zimmerman's anger stemmed
from the case of Sherman Ware, a black homeless man who was beaten by
the son of a white police lieutenant.
Since Zimmerman shot and killed unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin in February
-- in what he insists was self-defense -- Zimmerman's family has
pointed to his efforts to "get justice" for Ware in response to people
around the country who have accused him of racially profiling the
17-year-old. Zimmerman is Hispanic; Trayvon Martin was black.
Last year in September,
Zimmerman wrote an e-mail to Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee saying, "In
the past, I have not had a positive perspective of Sanford Police
Department, due primarily to the Sherman Ware incident."
A video from the night of
Ware's beating showed Justin Collison hitting the young man. Collison
ended up pleading guilty to misdemeanor battery.
Zimmerman's outrage over the incident was clear at the public meeting the previous January.
"I would just like to
state that the law is written in black and white. It should not and
cannot be enforced in the gray for those that are in the thin blue
line," he said at the hearing. CNN obtained a recording this week.
He mentioned Brian
Tooley, who was Sanford's police chief at the time of the Ware incident.
"I'd like to know what action the commission intends on making in order
to repeal Mr. Tooley's pension. I'm not asking you to repeal his
pension. I believe that he's already forfeited his pension by his
illegal cover-up and corruption and what happened in his department."
While Zimmerman is not
heard specifically mentioning Ware in the recording, the official
minutes from the hearing state that citizen demands included "a full
review of the Sherman Ware cover-ups on behalf of" Sanford police.
Public outcries of police misconduct forced Tooley into early retirement. He was not charged with illegal activity.
Despite his previous
frustration with police, the September e-mail included thanks to Lee and
praise for the department's "professionalism."
The e-mail, eight months
after the public meeting, shows a significant shift in Zimmerman's
relationship with police, months before officers responded to the
Trayvon Martin shooting.
However, a spokesperson
for Lee said in a e-mail to CNN that the police chief "has never met Mr.
Zimmerman and does not know him."
"The email Chief Lee
received in 2011 was not unique among the numerous complimentary emails
Chief Lee has received from Sanford residents," Sara Brady wrote. "As is
his practice, Chief Lee responded to a positive comment from a citizen.
Based on comments that Mr. Zimmerman is reported to have made in a
public forum before Chief Lee was hired, it is not likely that Mr.
Zimmerman would have endeared himself to members of the police
department."
Zimmerman, a
neighborhood watch volunteer, is charged with second-degree murder in
the death, which sparked nationwide protests and inflamed public passions over race relations and gun control.
Critics of the case have
questioned his relationship with police, noting that Zimmerman worked
closely with officers as part of his work with the neighborhood watch
program he started.
The January 8, 2011,
recording from the meeting at Sanford's City Hall is a reminder that the
relationship wasn't always positive.
"I also have had the
opportunity to take ride-alongs with the city of Sanford Police
Department and what I saw was disgusting," Zimmerman said at the time.
"The officer showed me his favorite hiding spots for taking naps. ... He
took two lunch breaks and attended a going-away party for one of his
fellow officers."
Sanford Police Capt.
Robert O'Connor told CNN that the department does not have specific
details about when Zimmerman rode with police or whom he rode with, "if
in fact he ever did ride with SPD."
In the September 18,
2011, e-mail, obtained by CNN after a records request, Zimmerman said he
had "a completely new perspective" after working closely with the
department's community volunteer coordinator.
He praised the volunteer
coordinator's quick responses to e-mails and phone calls, saying she
went "above and beyond to help launch a neighborhood watch" and calling
her "a testament to the highest level of professionalism of (the
chief's) administration."
"I have high hopes for, and restored faith in your administration and the Sanford Police Department in its entirety," he wrote.
Sanford interim Police
Chief Richard Myers declined comment to CNN, but told the Miami Herald
newspaper in a written statement, "Based upon the questions being posed,
it would be inappropriate for any of us to speculate or conclude
anything gleaned from the recording or any e-mail documents.
"Neither the city
manager nor the interim police chief were with the City of Sanford at
the time the recording was made, and neither were here during the tenure
of the former chief cited in one of the questions," the statement said.
"As a police chief I embrace the notion that transparency helps build
public trust, but in this case, the need to preserve the sanctity of a
criminal prosecution for both the prosecutor and the defense requires us
to eschew making any comments that could taint the process."
Documents released last week showed a cordial relationship between Zimmerman and the police.
Beginning in August
2011, Zimmerman exchanged e-mails with the Sanford police department at
least three times, the documents show. A rash of burglaries that began
in July prompted the watch captain to ask the police department to host a
neighborhood watch presentation for members of the community.
Zimmerman's e-mails with
Sanford police show a pleasant, even friendly, relationship. In an
e-mail dated September 19, Sanford police volunteer coordinator Wendy
Dorival thanked Zimmerman for his "kind words" sent to the chief. He
responded, "It was with great pleasure that I sent that e-mail, you
deserve the recognition!"
Police records indicate
that five burglaries were documented in the neighborhood where Zimmerman
lived in less than three months, starting in mid-July.
Five months before the
Martin shooting, at the neighborhood watch meeting on September 22,
Sanford police distributed contact cards and hosted a presentation on
crime-prevention and security measures, according to the documents. Some
of the fliers distributed read, "Report suspicious persons ...
activities ... or vehicles." Another reads, "Know your neighbor" --
going on to issue advice on how to "profile" your neighborhood block.
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