The thing that bothers me more than anything is that relatively little attention has been paid to the absolutely insane laws in place that protected George Zimmerman.
The same laws are in place in Kansas and most other states. It was just a standard self-defense claim, and there's nothing really special about it.
Don't you have to attempt to retreat in KS? I mix up which ones are which.
No, you don't have a duty to retreat in KS before invoking self-defense. It all comes down to whether you have a reasonable fear. Regardless, SYG was not an issue in the Zimmerman trial because according to the defendant's story that TM was on top of him, he couldn't retreat anyway.
SYG was in the jury instructions, therefore it was an issue in the Zimmerman trial.
You should stop pretending to be an attorney. You really don't know what you're talking about.
I'm not "pretending to be an attorney." Maybe you are. I'd love your theory of how the jury instructions were irrelevant to the outcome when according to the juror granting an interview on CNN the jurors started split 3-3 and then "they read the jury instructions over and over" and then ended up acquitting.
I'll be very interested to see the interview. And I'm not pretending to be an attorney. I am an attorney.
The jury was instructed on self defense, and one aspect of self defense in Florida, and in many other states, is that you have no duty to retreat before acting in self defense. The jury was instructed accordingly. The SYG aspect of the instruction was irrelevant, however, because GZ claimed he was pinned under TM at the time of the shooting - hence no ability to retreat. If the two had been standing up at the time, then SYG would have been relevant. I'm not sure what part of this is difficult to understand.