Learning last Friday that George Zimmerman had amassed about $204,000 in online donations prior to his bond hearing was pretty staggering in and of itself. Even more staggering was the fact that the man who shot and killed Trayvon Martin, and now stands charged for his murder, inspired some folks to log onto his website, open their checkbooks and break out their credit cards.
Zimmerman’s attorney, Mark O’Mara, told CNN that he hadn’t known about the website or the PayPal account it used to collect those funds prior to Zimmerman’s bond being set at $150,000 — which was paid prior to his release a week ago today:
“He asked me what to do with his PayPal accounts, and I asked him what he was talking about.”
The prosecution asked the judge presiding over the case to raise the bond on Zimmerman in light of the new information; the judge may later do so.. Martin family attorney Benjamin Crump wants the bond revoked altogether, claiming that the Zimmerman family “tried to portray themselves as indigent” in the bond hearing testimony.
Meanwhile, O’Mara shut down the donation website. His own office told the Orlando Sentinel why:
The point, said Jimmy Woods, O’Mara’s office manager and spokesman, is for Zimmerman to have no Web presence.
That was an April 25 report. Within three days, O’Mara’s office had set up not only a new web presence, but a rather clean-looking one, gzlegalcase.com. They also launched a Twitter account and Facebook page (where you can ‘like’ the George Zimmerman Legal Case, and have that pop up on your feed). And yes, all three sites are rocking a professionaly-designed logo (at right). (Are we now supposed to call it the “GZ case”? I
He told Suzanne Choney of msnbc’s Technolog why they’re doing using social media:
It is now a critical part of presidential politics, it has been part of revolutions in the Middle East, and it is going to be an unavoidable part of high-profile legal cases, just as traditional media has been and continues to be. We feel it would be irresponsible to ignore the robust online conversation, and we feel equally as strong about establishing a professional, responsible, and ethical approach to new media.”
O’Mara had to know he’d catch hell for this. The website debuted on Saturday, with an initial post entitled, “Why Social Media for George Zimmerman?” Good question!
After opening with, “We understand that it is unusual for a legal defense to maintain a social media presence on behalf of a defendant,” the post goes on to list justifications for the existence of the websites and social media accounts. Some of those justifications include “discrediting fraudulent websites and social profiles;” “disputing misinformation” and “discouraging speculation” about the case; and penultimately, “providing a voice for Mr. Zimmerman.”









