R.I.P Trayvon

B-29: A Hispanic nurse on an Alzheimer's ward who has several children and lived in Chicago at the time of shooting. She’s married. She said she doesn't watch the news, preferring reality television: “Right when we got here, I got cable... I love my reality shows.” During jury selection, she said she was arrested once in Chicago.

B-76: A white, middle-aged woman who said Zimmerman had an “altercation with the young man. There was a struggle and the gun went off.” Has been married 30 years, and is unemployed. She formerly worked with her husband in his construction company. Her 28-year-old son is an attorney in Seminole County. She also has a daughter, 26, has been a victim of non-violent crime and rescues “a lot of pets.” The state tried to strike her, but was denied.

B-37: A middle-aged white woman who has worked for a chiropractor for 16 years and has many pets. She described protests in Sanford as “rioting.” Her husband is an attorney. She has two daughters: A 24-year-old dog groomer and a 27-year-old who attends the University of Central Florida. B-37 used to have concealed weapons permit, but let it lapse. Her husband also has one.

B-51: A retired white woman from Oviedo who has a dog and 20-year-old cat. She knew a good deal about the case, but said “I'm not rigid in my thinking.” She has been in Seminole County for nine years, is unmarried and has no kids. B-51 previously lived in Atlanta, and used to work in real estate. She also ran a call center in Brevard County which she said had 1,200 employees.

E-6: A young white woman and mother who used to work in financial services. She used this case as an example to her two adolescent children, warning them to not go out at night. She has lived in Seminole County for eight years, and is married to an engineer. E-6 was arrested in Brevard County, but said she “was treated completely fairly.” Her husband has guns. The state tried to strike her from the jury, but was denied.

E-40: A white woman in her 60s who lived in Iowa at the time of the shooting. She heard national news reports and recalls the shooting was in a gated community and a teenager was killed. She described herself as a safety officer, is married to a chemical engineer and loves football. She has a 28-year-old son who’s out of work. She said she’s very well versed in cell phone technology, and has been a victim of crime.






Here are the alternates.


These are the alternates:

E-54: A middle-aged white man with a teenage stepson who wears hoodies. He recalled seeing photos of Zimmerman's head and face that show injuries. E-54 loves golf and genealogy, and said he’s been married for five years to a technical engineer. He grew up in Seminole County and has a teenage stepson.

B-72: A young, possibly Hispanic man who does maintenance at a school and competes in arm wrestling tournaments. He said he avoids the news because he does not want to be “brainwashed.” B-72 grew up in Chicago, is single and an alumni of Phi Beta Kappa. He is very physically active, having participated in high school football, track and weightlifting. Of arm-wrestling he said, “I could talk about it all day.”

E-13: A young white woman who goes to college and works two jobs, one of them as a surgical assistant. She heard the shooting was a “racial thing.” She said she could be a fair juror “just because I don't really know that much.” She is single, has lived in Seminole County for 17 years and attends church. She also owns and rides horses.

E-28: A middle-aged white woman who has worked as a nurse for 26 years. She knew little about the case and has no opinion about Zimmerman's guilt. She has lived in Seminole County since 1985, and has been married for 28 years; her husband is a teacher. Has two adult children: 27, 23 yo kids, theme park.

http://orlandosentinel.com/#section/.../p2p-76383217/
 
B-29: A Hispanic nurse on an Alzheimer's ward who has several children and lived in Chicago at the time of shooting. She’s married. She said she doesn't watch the news, preferring reality television: “Right when we got here, I got cable... I love my reality shows.” During jury selection, she said she was arrested once in Chicago.

B-76: A white, middle-aged woman who said Zimmerman had an “altercation with the young man. There was a struggle and the gun went off.” Has been married 30 years, and is unemployed. She formerly worked with her husband in his construction company. Her 28-year-old son is an attorney in Seminole County. She also has a daughter, 26, has been a victim of non-violent crime and rescues “a lot of pets.” The state tried to strike her, but was denied.

B-37: A middle-aged white woman who has worked for a chiropractor for 16 years and has many pets. She described protests in Sanford as “rioting.” Her husband is an attorney. She has two daughters: A 24-year-old dog groomer and a 27-year-old who attends the University of Central Florida. B-37 used to have concealed weapons permit, but let it lapse. Her husband also has one.

B-51: A retired white woman from Oviedo who has a dog and 20-year-old cat. She knew a good deal about the case, but said “I'm not rigid in my thinking.” She has been in Seminole County for nine years, is unmarried and has no kids. B-51 previously lived in Atlanta, and used to work in real estate. She also ran a call center in Brevard County which she said had 1,200 employees.

E-6: A young white woman and mother who used to work in financial services. She used this case as an example to her two adolescent children, warning them to not go out at night. She has lived in Seminole County for eight years, and is married to an engineer. E-6 was arrested in Brevard County, but said she “was treated completely fairly.” Her husband has guns. The state tried to strike her from the jury, but was denied.

E-40: A white woman in her 60s who lived in Iowa at the time of the shooting. She heard national news reports and recalls the shooting was in a gated community and a teenager was killed. She described herself as a safety officer, is married to a chemical engineer and loves football. She has a 28-year-old son who’s out of work. She said she’s very well versed in cell phone technology, and has been a victim of crime.






Here are the alternates.


These are the alternates:

E-54: A middle-aged white man with a teenage stepson who wears hoodies. He recalled seeing photos of Zimmerman's head and face that show injuries. E-54 loves golf and genealogy, and said he’s been married for five years to a technical engineer. He grew up in Seminole County and has a teenage stepson.

B-72: A young, possibly Hispanic man who does maintenance at a school and competes in arm wrestling tournaments. He said he avoids the news because he does not want to be “brainwashed.” B-72 grew up in Chicago, is single and an alumni of Phi Beta Kappa. He is very physically active, having participated in high school football, track and weightlifting. Of arm-wrestling he said, “I could talk about it all day.”

E-13: A young white woman who goes to college and works two jobs, one of them as a surgical assistant. She heard the shooting was a “racial thing.” She said she could be a fair juror “just because I don't really know that much.” She is single, has lived in Seminole County for 17 years and attends church. She also owns and rides horses.

E-28: A middle-aged white woman who has worked as a nurse for 26 years. She knew little about the case and has no opinion about Zimmerman's guilt. She has lived in Seminole County since 1985, and has been married for 28 years; her husband is a teacher. Has two adult children: 27, 23 yo kids, theme park.

http://orlandosentinel.com/#section/.../p2p-76383217/
:x Good lawwd
 
I actually think it would've been worse for the prosecution if they selected men tbh
Sounds like the women will favor the defense. (If anybody would care to explain why?)

but I guess some of them being Mothers has to help the prosecution.

I also didnt know they had jurys that small
 
"She described protests in Sanford as “rioting"
Smh
This pretty much lets me know a " not guilty" verdict will be read
 
Sounds like the women will favor the defense. (If anybody would care to explain why?)

but I guess some of them being Mothers has to help the prosecution.

I also didnt know they had jurys that small

"12 jurors are required only for criminal trials involving capital cases"


Hopefully, Trayvon mom gets up there and starts crying.

"This year my son was going to graduate
This year my son was going to to prom
This year my son would have begun college
but none of this happened because last year my son was murdered"



She better work them mothers.
 
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"12 jurors are required only for criminal trials involving capital cases"


Hopefully, Trayvon mom gets up there and starts crying.

"This year my son was going to graduate
This year my son was going to to prom
This year my son would have begun college
but none of this happened because last year my son was murdered"



She better work them mothers.

Hell yeah she better.
 
son did I just count 5 white jurors and 1 hispanic all women jurors? What in the world :x I don't like how this sounds already
 
Welp.

Gotta love American "justice". :lol: :lol:

The folks on the defense team are happy as pigs in **** right now.
 
Idk 6 women GZ molested his cousin, slapped his girl around that resulted in a restraining order, pushed a old lady down, convinced his wife to lie, and cut his own mothers electricity off

So his rep with women is not angelic

If and when they bring all that up could be a bad look for GZ

Like shoefreak said if TM mom turns on the waterworks that most def will hit home

I just don't trust the jurors with the attorney husbands they in the club and will probe away at them til its over but hopefully it will be for the right side
 
Two of the 6 jurors have ties with attorneys. GZ's dad is a judge.. I just don't like that sort of "coincidental" stuff that now makes it seem a tad rigged in the defenses favor.
 
Yeah I didn't know their backgrounds before hand...but like y'all were saying hopefully the mothers can empathize with TMs mom....this will be interesting though
 
Two of the 6 jurors have ties with attorneys. GZ's dad is a judge.. I just don't like that sort of "coincidental" stuff that now makes it seem a tad rigged in the defenses favor.

His dad wasn't even a judge in Florida. And he wasn't the type of judge most people think about. He was a magistrate judge...he was at the bottom of the totem pole. His powers were limited. If he had any influence or power...it wouldn't spread outside of his own jurisdiction in Virginia.
 
Idk 6 women GZ molested his cousin, slapped his girl around that resulted in a restraining order, pushed a old lady down, convinced his wife to lie, and cut his own mothers electricity off



Old lady?


Disgusting.

I dont think all of this will be brought up in court, but hopefully they will hear this through the media or something.

They are being sequestered
 
His dad wasn't even a judge in Florida. And he wasn't the type of judge most people think about. He was a magistrate judge...he was at the bottom of the totem pole. His powers were limited. If he had any influence or power...it wouldn't spread outside of his own jurisdiction in Virginia.

Maybe I was reaching there. None the less, most of those affliated with attorneys, especially family, get a glimpse daily how cut and dry many of these cases are. They get that "attorneys" frame of mind. The lack of outside the box thinking can spread from family members who are attorneys to others. Maybe either woman has a skewwed perspective from their loved one talking about a case where so and so got off even with solid evidence... I just feel they could find people away from the law/courts completely. Instead one third of the jurors have a glimpse of the justice system first hand (maybe one of them is a family court attorney... Regardless, one bad case can phase your whole mindset.

But thats just me.
 
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Maybe I was reaching there. None the less, most of those affliated with attorneys, especially family, get a glimpse daily how cut and dry many of these cases are. They get that "attorneys" frame of mind. The lack of outside the box thinking can spread from family members who are attorneys to others. Maybe either woman has a skewwed perspective from their loved one talking about a case where so and so got off even with solid evidence... I just feel they could find people away from the law/courts completely. Instead one third of the jurors have a glimpse of the justice system first hand (maybe one of them is a family court attorney... Regardless, one bad case can phase your whole mindset.

But thats just me.

That would be true if the attorneys they are affiliated with are litigators. You have to realize that most attorneys have no litigation experience. There are so many different types of law so just saying you're an attorney doesn't really mean much. Just because someone is an attorney doesn't mean they have any understanding of evidence or how a trial works.
 
Old lady?


Disgusting.

I dont think all of this will be brought up in court, but hopefully they will hear this through the media or something.

They are being sequestered

Yep I remember vaguely he pushed her around til she fell and broke or fractured her ankle if I'm not mistaken

When he was a bouncer at a sportsbar or nightclub I'm not sure and I'm on my phone but I will locate a credible source soon as I get a chance
 
Idk 6 women GZ molested his cousin, slapped his girl around that resulted in a restraining order, pushed a old lady down, convinced his wife to lie, and cut his own mothers electricity off

So his rep with women is not angelic

If and when they bring all that up could be a bad look for GZ

Like shoefreak said if TM mom turns on the waterworks that most def will hit home

I just don't trust the jurors with the attorney husbands they in the club and will probe away at them til its over but hopefully it will be for the right side

Faux news doesn't cover that. Only about Trayvon.
 
hey there

my favorite bigot and internet coward

some of you should just be upfront and say you dont like black people i'd respect you alot more
Failed to see the connection with Sharif and the post quoted. 

This thread is like watching the movie Roots. 
 
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