Note: This story quotes testimony with offensive language including racial slurs.
In halting, sometimes tearful testimony, a friend of Trayvon Martin’s who was on the telephone with him just moments before he was shot and killed by George Zimmerman, testified that she heard Martin shout, “Get off!” right before the phone went dead.
Rachel Jeantel, 19, one of the most anticipated witnesses for prosecutors in Zimmerman’s trial on second-degree murder charges, told jurors that Martin said he was being watched and then followed by a “creepy” stranger.
Jeantel said that Martin told her that he would try to lose the man, but that he was unable to. She then said that she heard a man’s voice asking what Martin was doing there. And that she then heard Martin ask, “Why are you following me?”
Jeantel testified that she heard what she believed to be physical contact between the two, Martin’s shouts of “Get off” and then, nothing.
The stranger from the night of the shooting would later be identified as George Zimmerman, 29, a neighborhood watch volunteer who says he shot the teen in self-defense after Martin, 17, attacked him. Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.
Jeantel’s testimony capped an emotional third day of witness testimony in the trial. Earlier in the day defense lawyers for Zimmerman questioned the testimony of two of Zimmerman’s former neighbors who said they heard cries the night of the shooting. Defense attorneys argued that neither of the women clearly witnessed what happened during the confrontation on that dark, rainy February night when Martin was killed.
One of the women, Jane Surdyka, placed a 911 call the night of the shooting and said she heard a young person cry out, before then hearing gunfire.
“In my opinion, I truly believe the second yell for help that was like a yelp, it was [unintelligible], I really felt it was the boy’s voice,” she said.
When Surdyka’s emotional call to 911 was played in court, she dabbed tears from her eyes. Sybrina Fulton, Martin’s mother, buried her head in her hands.
Surdyka said she had never heard Martin’s or Zimmerman’s voice before the night of the shooting.
“You don’t know who had the higher voice, or who had the stronger, more dominant voice,” defense attorney Don West asked the woman, an unemployed hospital worker.
Another neighbor, Jeannee Manalo, also testified that she heard a cry for help and then gunfire.
Manalo testified that she saw two people on the ground struggling. After the shooting, Manalo told investigators that she could not identify who they were or their gender. But on the stand Manalo was certain that the bigger of the two people was on top of the smaller-framed person, and that after the shooting, the larger of the two got up.
After seeing news reports that showed photos of both Zimmerman and Martin, Manalo said, she could identify that it was Zimmerman on top of Martin as they tussled on the ground.
“I believe it was Zimmerman, comparing the size of their body,” Manalo told the court.
Defense attorney Mark O’Mara then asked what photos of the men she used to judge their sizes. Manalo said she’d seen a widely circulated head shot of Martin wearing a hooded sweatshirt. O’Mara then questioned whether or not such a shot would be a good way to size up the rest of Martin’s body.
But the most dramatic testimony of the day came from Jeantel, one of the prosecution’s most important witnesses, who recounted to jurors the last minutes of Martin’s life from her vantage point on the other end of a cell phone call.









