USA TODAY US Edition

Family of slain teen: Video shows police reports ‘false’

Slain teen’s dad says shooter’s story is ‘false’

- By Yamiche Alcindor USA TODAY

Police surveillan­ce video showing shooter at the station discredits claim of self-defense, says lawyer for Trayvon Martin’s family.

WASHINGTON — The family of slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin said Wednesday that a police video showing the shooter, George Zimmerman, arriving at the station for questionin­g discredits claims he acted in self-defense.

“It just shows that everything that Zimmerman has been saying, that the police have been reporting, is false,” the teen’s father, Tracy Martin, told USA TODAY as he watched the video on television in a Washington hotel Wednesday night.

ABC News said it obtained the police surveillan­ce video, and it was replayed on other networks. Sanford police Sgt. David Morgenster­n told the Associated Press that the video is of Zimmerman.

“From what I saw, Zimmerman had no blood on his face, had no grass on the back of his clothes, no cuts on the back of his head,” Martin said.

Family attorney Benjamin Crump said the video and lack of evidence of a struggle knocks down Zimmerman’s claim of self-defense and shows officials botched their investigat­ion.

“You’re witnessing a conspiracy in the first degree,” Crump said. “If they don’t arrest this guy — there’s a conspiracy at this point.”

The police surveillan­ce video taken the night that Trayvon was shot dead, shows Zimmerman, 28, arriving at the Sanford, Fla., police station in a police car, exiting with his hands cuffed behind his back and being led to questionin­g.

The 17-year-old’s death has sparked a national conversati­on about racial profiling. Trayvon was fatally shot Feb. 26 after Zimmerman, a neighborho­od watch volunteer, followed him because he said the teen looked suspicious.

Trayvon, who is black and wore a hooded sweatshirt, was unarmed; Zimmerman is described by police as white; his family says he is Hispanic.

No charges have been filed against Zimmerman. He had told police that Trayvon jumped him and smashed his head into the pavement. According to an initial police report, an officer noticed Zimmerman was bleeding from the nose and back of his head and showed signs of having been in a struggle.

Crump said the national outpour- him of rules that prohibit the wearing of hats in the chamber while the House is in session.

Harper said wearing a hoodie was “not consistent with this rule.” Rush was escorted out.

The hoodie has become a symbol of support for Trayvon. Miami Heat stars Lebron James and Dwyane Wade and their teammates wore hooded sweatshirt­s in pictures as part of the “We Are Trayvon” campaign.

Tens of thousands of people have posted pictures of themselves wearing hoodies on Twitter, Facebook and other social media.

Zimmerman’s lawyer and friends have spoken in defense of the neighborho­od watch volunteer, saying he is not a racist. He has dropped from sight since the killing and has not made any public remarks.

Despite the police decision not to charge Zimmerman at the time, several other probes are ongoing. The U.S. Justice Department has opened an investigat­ion, and a Seminole County, Fla., grand jury is considerin­g possible charges. The grand jury is likely to convene April 10.

More than 30,000 people signed an NAACP petition to Florida prosecutor­s in just a 24-hour period. ing of outrage in the case won’t stop until Zimmerman is arrested.

“I think the people aren’t going anywhere,” he said referring to the growing online petitions, gatherings and social media campaigns.

Among the displays of support Wednesday was that from Rep. Bobby Rush, D-ill., who was escorted off the U.S. House floor for wearing a hoodie as he protested the shooting. The lawmaker called for a full investigat­ion into Trayvon’s death.

“Racial profiling has to stop,” Rush said on the House floor. “Just because someone wears a hoodie does not make them a hoodlum.”

The congressma­n, wearing the hoodie again, said later in a CNN interview that “life is much more than a piece of clothing.”

The House has strict rules about what lawmakers can wear on the floor. Rep. Greg Harper, R-miss., who was presiding over the chamber when Rush was speaking, banged the gavel repeatedly and reminded

 ?? By Allison Joyce, Getty Images ?? “Hoodie” protest: New York City Council members stage a City Hall event to call for an arrest in the Florida case.
By Allison Joyce, Getty Images “Hoodie” protest: New York City Council members stage a City Hall event to call for an arrest in the Florida case.
 ?? AP ?? Challenge to House decorum: Rep. Bobby Rush reprimande­d for outfit.
AP Challenge to House decorum: Rep. Bobby Rush reprimande­d for outfit.

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