USA TODAY US Edition

After third attempt, auction ends for gun that killed Trayvon

Zimmerman calls the sale a success

- Doug Stanglin @dstanglin USATODAY

George Zimmerman said Wednesday the online auction has ended for the sale of the gun he used to kill Trayvon Martin in 2012 and he was immediatel­y notifying the winner.

“First and foremost, I would like to thank and give the glory to God for a successful auction that has raised funds for several worthy causes,” Zimmerman said in a blog message. He said it would be up to the winning bidder to decide whether to remain anonymous.

While he did not indicate the size of the successful offer, the bidding began at $100,000. Zimmerman also hinted at “future auction items” but did not elaborate.

In an earlier statement, Zimmerman said he planned to use the money from the sale to fight “Black Lives Matter” violence against law enforcemen­t officers and to counter “Hillary Clinton’s anti-firearm rhetoric.” He also said money would be used to “ensure the demise of Angela Correy’s (sic) persecutio­n career.” Corey was the special prosecutor appointed to investigat­e Martin’s death.

United Gun Group also confirmed bidding was finished and Zimmerman was “vetting several offers and verifying funds.” It also did not indicate the size of the final offer or the name of the successful bidder, saying without elaboratio­n that two auctions had taken place simultaneo­usly, one for pre-qualified bidders and one for the public.

The last bid on the public site came one minute before the auction closed and was from a user named “John Smith” for $138,900, the Orlando Sentinel reports. It was not immediatel­y clear whether it was legitimate.

Zimmerman, then a neighborho­od watch volunteer, shot and killed Trayvon in February 2012, in a confrontat­ion as the unarmed 17-year-old was heading back to a relative’s house in Sanford, Fla.

Zimmerman claimed the black teenager was trying to bash his head on the pavement during a struggle, and a jury found him not guilty of second-degree murder and manslaught­er. “This is a piece of American History,” he wrote in his auction listings. “It has been featured in several publicatio­ns and in current University text books.”

His first attempt to auction the weapon last week was pulled by GunBroker.com, which said it wanted “no part in the listing on our web site or in any of the publicity it is receiving.”

The second attempt, on the United Gun Group site, was halted not long after it started because of a flood of clearly bogus bids that drove the price to more than $65 million.

The third attempt went more smoothly, with a required minimum bid of $100,000 and the Web traffic closely monitored.

Before the auction closed, Todd Underwood, who runs the site, commented that Internet trolls might have helped Zimmerman find a real buyer.

In his listings, Zimmerman wrote that he was “honored and humbled” to put the Kel-Tec PF-9 pistol up for auction.

In an interview with The Daily Beast, Zimmerman for the first time publicly blamed Trayvon’s parents for the incident.

“They didn’t raise their son right. He attacked a complete stranger and attempted to kill him,” Zimmerman said of Trayvon.

“Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin did everything they could to capitalize on her son’s death,” he said. “She was never a mother figure to him. Tracy Martin couldn’t have cared less about their son. He treated him like a dog without a leash.”

A spokespers­on for the Martin family declined to comment.

 ?? AP ?? George Zimmerman says auction was a success, more items may be coming.
AP George Zimmerman says auction was a success, more items may be coming.

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