After a long media silence the family of George Zimmerman, Trayvon Martin’s now-infamous killer, have opened up about what it’s like being the family of “the most hated free man in America,” according to a new article from GQ magazine.
Among the potentially shocking revelations in the piece, is his father Bob’s admission that “if FBI agents come and kick in his door, he’s probably gonna shoot a few of them.” There is an ongoing federal investigation into George Zimmerman’s case but NBC News has reported that federal charges against Zimmerman are unlikely.
In a lengthy article, which appears in the October edition of GQ, Zimmerman’s family talks of life as they know it. It’s a life filled with paranoia, fear and the feeling that they are the true victims of what they describe as “the incident.”
The so-called “incident” refers to the night back in February 2012 when Zimmerman, a former neighborhood watch volunteer shot the unarmed teen in Sanford, Florida. Since that night their lives have been upended, even more so since Zimmerman’s acquittal on second-degree murder charges last summer.
Zimmerman’s parents, Gladys and Bob, and his younger brother Robert who serves as the family spokesman, tell GQ that their lives have been on an endless loop of money problems, safe house re-locations and struggles to at once buffer themselves from their newfound notoriety while also trying to capitalize from it.
Nearly all of the Zimmermans, including a sister who isn’t quoted in the article, are currently unemployed or underemployed, subsisting off of the parent’s meager retirement income. The Zimmermans say George owes millions in legal fees and that the family has spent about $35,000 on hotel rooms, living expenses and rent for a secret house they’ve rented.
But the biggest debt they say they are paying is to the public, whom they fear will come after one of them as payback for Martin’s killing, which sparked outrage particularly among many African-Americans who believe Zimmerman murdered Martin in cold blood.
“I am sure there are people, you know, some young kid that has nothing going for him, but he’s able to get a pistol, wants to make a name for himself. ‘Maybe I’ll kill one of the Zimmermans. Maybe George, maybe one of his family members. I’ll be famous.’ You know? That happens,” Bob Zimmerman said in the piece. “And that’s what worries me.”
Since his acquittal last summer Zimmerman has had several run-ins with the law and nearly every incident has involved guns or allegations of violence. Just weeks after the acquittal Zimmerman’s ex-wife, Shellie Zimmerman, called 911 during a fight and reported that he punched her father in the face and threatened both of them with a gun.
A couple months later George Zimmerman hooked up with a new woman, who later called 911 reporting that Zimmerman pointed a shotgun at her.
Charges were dropped in both cases. But combined with a number of other incidents involving the police, including one just last month in which Zimmerman was questioned by police in a road rage incident in which a driver said Zimmerman threatened to shoot him, the lore of Zimmerman as something of a bogeyman continues to grow.
Robert Zimmerman told GQ that he believes his brother George is suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. He’s developed a short fuse and is prone to getting defensive, yelling and interrupting during conversations.
The article describes Zimmerman’s Peruvian mother as “darker-skinned than she appeared on TV during the trial, beautiful and indigenously featured” who is fierce and brassy and speaks with a thick accent:
It infuriates her that George is often described as a white man, which she considers an affront to her Peruvian heritage. She can be startlingly callous about Trayvon Martin’s family, about the help they’ve received, financial and otherwise, which she feels her family has been unfairly denied. It often seems as if she believes the Zimmermans have suffered equally, as if they have lost a son as well.









