Montreal Gazette

Donors contribute $200,000 for defence of Trayvon’s shooter

- BARBARA LISTON REUTERS

SANFORD, FLA. – A Florida judge delayed ruling on a prosecutio­n request to raise the bond for George Zimmerman on Friday, after it was disclosed that the man charged with murdering unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin had received about $200,000 from anonymous donors to fund his defence.

“I’m not going to make a snap decision,” Circuit Court Judge Kenneth Lester Jr. said during a hearing in Sanford, the Central Florida town where 17-year-old Martin was shot dead by Zimmerman in February.

He spoke after prosecutor Bernardo de la Rionda said the disclosure by Zimmerman’s lawyer on Thursday that donors had contribute­d “just over $200,000” to his defence meant that the amount of his bond should be reconsider­ed.

Lester said he needed more informatio­n about Zimmerman’s fundraisin­g before he could agree to any request for reconsider­ation of the bond.

Zimmerman was released this week on $150,000 bail and has been moved to an undisclose­d location. He had surrendere­d to police earlier this month after prosecutor­s charged him with second-degree murder in the shooting death of Martin.

Ben Crump, an attorney for Martin’s family, had expressed outrage over the money raised for Zimmerman’s defence, saying it was not disclosed before his bond hearing and that the $150,000 bond should now be revoked because defence lawyer Mark O’mara had previously described Zimmerman as penniless.

“The court was led to believe that he (Zimmerman) had no money and was indigent. He either did not tell his lawyer or, if he did tell his lawyer, he did not discuss it with the judge. What George Zimmerman did was deceive the court,” Crump said.

No formal motion for revoking Zimmerman’s bail was filed with Lester before Friday’s hearing, however.

The prosecutio­n did request an order that would bar lawyers from making public commentsab­outthecase.but Lester rejected the call for a gag order out of hand, saying attorneys on both sides of the case had done a good job dealing with the media spotlight surroundin­g it.

Nothing that prosecutor­s or O’mara have said publicly about the case had “startled the court or shocked the court” so far, Lester said.

Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty and says he killed Martin in self defence. But the Martin shooting triggered civil rights protests and a national debate over guns, self-defence laws and race relations in America, because police initially failed to arrest Zimmerman or charge him with any crime.

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