Updated at 8 p.m. ET
George Zimmerman won’t be charged “anytime soon” in connection with an altercation involving his estranged wife Shellie, police in Lake Mary, Fla., said.
Lake Mary Police Public Information Officer Zach Hudson said police lacked the evidence to make any charges–primarily because they have been unable to retrieve video from an iPad destroyed during the incident.
“As it stands right now there will not be any charges anytime soon without that iPad, and that could be weeks, months away,” Hudson said. Shellie Zimmerman blamed the iPad’s destruction on George during her 911 call recorded Monday, saying he took her “iPad out of my hand and smashed it and cut it with a pocket knife.” Police say that George Zimmerman claimed Shellie destroyed it by hitting him with it.
Hudson said the department is still deciding where to send the iPad for more intensive repair and retrieval.
“At this point we’re doing everything humanly possible and investing as much as physically possible in order to get that video,” Hudson said. “And sooner or later we hope to have something, but at this point there’s definitely no guarantee.”
He also addressed questions about whether similar cases involving domestic disputes receive comparable levels of time and attention from the police.
“The only reason why you’re seeing this much attention is obviously who that person is, but the truth is if you yourself had a domestic [dispute] in your home, tonight,” he said, “we would be doing the exact same thing to get that information because that’s critical to the citizens of this city.”
During the 911 call, Shellie Zimmerman can be heard telling the dispatcher that George Zimmerman was in his car with his hand on his gun “threatening all of us.”
“I don’t know what he’s capable of,” she said later. “I’m really, really scared.”
She later updated her story, telling police she never definitively saw a gun, and police said they never found one. George Zimmerman’s lawyer told reporters Monday that he did have a gun but “never took the weapon out.”
At a press conference Wednesday afternoon, Shellie Zimmerman’s lawyer Kelly Sims explained why she had “a valid reason why she believed George was armed” that day, pointing out that he wore his shirt differently than she was accustomed to, and that she’d seen packaging for a new holster.









