The prosecution and defense in the George Zimmerman trial laid out their cases for the jury in Monday’s opening statements, with differences in both tone and message. The prosecution argued Zimmerman “profiled” and “murdered” Trayvon Martin; the defense argued that Zimmerman’s decision to shoot Martin was self-defense after he was “viciously attacked” by the teen.
Zimmerman faces a charge of second-degree murder and has pleaded not guilty.
Prosecutor John Guy was the first to speak, and surprised many in the court by using profanity in his opening remarks.
Guy quoted Zimmerman as saying to a dispatcher, “F***ing punks,” and “These a**holes, they always get away.”
“Those were the words in that grown man’s mouth as he followed, in the dark, a 17-year-old boy who he didn’t know,” Guy continued, describing Zimmerman’s remarks as “hate-filled words that he used to describe a perfect stranger.”
Guy said that Zimmerman “profiled, followed, and murdered an unarmed teenager,” and described the defendant as “someone who believed it was his right to rid his neighborhood of anyone he thought didn’t belong.”
When defense lawyer Don West laid out his client’s case shortly later in his opening remarks, he took a different tone, saying that “there are no winners here,” and making the case for Zimmerman’s not-guilty plea by arguing he shot Martin in self-defense.
“I think the evidence will show that this is a sad case,” West said. “There are no monsters here.”









