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To: Cautious_Optimist who wrote (88271)5/15/2012 9:18:35 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Give it up, cautious.

Your Trayvon fiction has gone up in smoke.



To: Cautious_Optimist who wrote (88271)5/15/2012 9:33:20 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 89467
 
Autopsy results show Trayvon Martin had injuries to his knuckles

May 15, 2012
wftv.com

SANFORD, Fla. —

WFTV has confirmed that autopsy results show 17-year-old Trayvon Martin had injuries to his knuckles when he died.

The information could support George Zimmerman's claim that Martin beat him up before Zimmerman shot and killed him.

The autopsy results come as Zimmerman's attorney, Mark O’Mara continues to go over other evidence in the case.

O’Mara wouldn't comment on the autopsy evidence, but WFTV legal analyst Bill Sheaffer said it's better for the defense than it is for the prosecution.

WFTV has learned that the medical examiner found two injuries on Martin’s body: The fatal gunshot wound and broken skin on his knuckles.

When you compare Trayvon’s non-fatal injury with Zimmerman's bloody head wounds, the autopsy evidence is better for the defense, Sheaffer said.

“It goes along with Zimmerman's story that he acted in self-defense, because he was getting beaten up by Trayvon Martin,” Sheaffer said.

The injury to Martin’s knuckle also fits with Zimmerman's story that before he shot and killed Martin, Martin had broken his nose and knocked him to the ground, slamming his head on the sidewalk.

But Sheaffer said there could be another explanation for Martin's knuckle injury.

“It could be consistent with Trayvon either trying to get away or defend himself,” Sheaffer said.

Zimmerman shot and killed the unarmed teenager almost three months ago after calling 911 to report the teenager was acting suspiciously.

Zimmerman said Martin threw the first punch and that he opened fire in self-defense after his screams for help went unanswered.

The FBI was not able to determine whether it was Zimmerman or Trayvon who could be heard crying out for help in 911 calls.

The defense is trying to decide what evidence it wants a judge to keep confidential before the media gets a chance to see it, but WFTV is being told that could happen in the next week or so.

In the meantime, there’s new information surfacing about Zimmerman.

ABC News said it has obtained Zimmerman's medical report from the day after the killing. According to ABC, the report shows Zimmerman had a broken nose and abrasions on the back of his head.




To: Cautious_Optimist who wrote (88271)5/15/2012 9:43:13 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 89467
 
many of Obama’s most liberal and costly political mistakes stemmed from Jarrett’s advice.

New book: Jarrett’s ‘Chicago connections’ led to Obama’s Solyndra visit

Mahlon Mitchel May 14, 2012
dailycaller.com

Revelations from a new unauthorized biography of President Obama called “The Amateur,” continue to trickle out. The latest involves White House adviser Valerie Jarrett.

According to the book, written by former New York Times Magazine editor Edward Klein, many of Obama’s most liberal and costly political mistakes stemmed from Jarrett’s advice.

Jarrett reportedly hatched the idea of Obama flying to Copenhagen to “make a dramatic presentation to the International Olympic Committee” for Chicago’s Olympic bid — and also encouraged Obama’s visit to “the Bay area solar company Solyndra” — despite the protestations of Lawrence Summers (who in 2009 warned against the loan guarantee) and others.

Klein implies Jarrett’s pro-Solyndra position was a result of her “Chicago connections” and

especially her close ties to the George Kaiser Family Foundation, which controlled 35.7 percent of Solyndra. The foundation had made a sizable donation to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where Jarrett once served as chairwoman and where one of Obama’s best friends, Eric Whitaker, is currently executive vice president. Billionaire George Kaiser, one of Obama’s top 2008 campaign fundraising bundlers, visited the White House no fewer than sixteen times, and Jarrett herself met at least three times with Solyndra lobbyists, who pushed for government assistance.

But Jarrett didn’t always get her way.

Regarding the killing of bin Laden, Klein writes that,

she privately urged the president not to send in a Navy SEAL team. She told Obama that the raid could turn out to be a replay of 1980’s Desert One, when President Jimmy Carter’s effort to rescue American hostages in Iran backfired so badly that it doomed the Carter presidency.

The book casts former Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel as a pragmatic adviser, who was frequently overruled by the more liberal Jarret. “[A]t almost every turn,” the book says, “Emanuel was thwarted by Jarrett, who functioned along with David Axelrod as Obama’s ‘political brain.’”

Axelrod and Jarrett were charter members of the Cult of Obama; they had drunk deeply of the Obama Kool-Aid. They made certain that the president remained true to his roots as a big-spending, big-government liberal,” adds Klein.



Read more: dailycaller.com



To: Cautious_Optimist who wrote (88271)5/15/2012 10:46:57 PM
From: Hawkmoon  Respond to of 89467
 
We know there was a fight, Trayvon had a right to stand his ground. Zimmerman should have stayed in his vehicle.

So Martin had the right to trap Zimmerman in his vehicle? Maybe Martin had the right to shoot Zimmerman too, eh?

Last time I checked, there's no law against leaving your vehicle.. It certainly doesn't warrant an attack..

Going to feel that way when it happens to a loved one of yours?

I wonder how many bruises and broken bones Martin had? Bet he only had a bullet hole in his chest..
Hawk



To: Cautious_Optimist who wrote (88271)5/16/2012 11:56:51 AM
From: Brumar891 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Wrong, Zimmerman had as much right to walk in his neighborhood as Martin did.