ORLANDO, Fla.— Ben Jealous, president of the NAACP, offered a thundering call to arms on Monday during the organization’s annual convention in Orlando, calling for an end to Stand Your Ground laws that initially shielded George Zimmerman from arrest in the killing of Trayvon Martin.
These are times of “great peril… and we see it in the verdict handed down in Sanford,” Jealous said, referring to a jury’s verdict on Saturday that cleared Zimmerman of any wrong doing in Martin’s death.
Speaking 30 miles north of the Florida town where Martin died, Jealous also urged the Department of Justice to charge Zimmerman under federal hate crimes statutes for the killing. Martin was 17-years-old and unarmed when he died. Zimmerman contended that he was attacked and shot Martin in self defense.
“We will bring an end to the scourge of gun violence in this country, not just by the bad guys but by the self-appointed or even the officially appointed good guys,” Jealous told reporters after his keynote speech. “Because the reality is, in this country, the world’s greatest democracy, it should not be the case that a child has to fear the robbers and the cops or the bad guys or the good guys.”
The NAACP contends that Zimmerman racially profiled Martin before the shooting that left him dead. Neither the prosecution nor Martin’s parents have said Martin was “racially,” profiled. Within an hour of the verdict, Jealous’ organization launched a petition calling for Justice Department involvement in the case. As of Monday afternoon, some 550,000 people had signed the petition.
The department has an open inquiry going in the case and said it would continue to investigate whether any federal civil rights laws had been violated. “I want to assure you that the Department will continue to act in a manner that is consistent with the facts and the law,” Attorney General Eric Holder said Monday in Washington. “We are resolved, as you are, to combat violence involving or directed at young people, to prevent future tragedies and to deal with the underlying attitudes, mistaken beliefs and stereotypes that serve as the basis for these too common incidents.” Holder is scheduled to deliver the key note address at the NAACP convention on Tuesday.
Police initially declined to arrest Zimmerman after the killing, citing Florida’s controversial Stand Your Ground law which gives wide discretion in the use of deadly force. Zimmerman was arrested 44 days after the shooting and charged with second-degree murder, as outrage over the killing spread nationwide. Zimmerman pleaded not guilty and was acquitted Saturday.
The verdict came just as hundreds of NAACP members and officials were arriving in Orlando for the convention, coincidentally held just 30 or so minutes from where the killing took place.









