Dramatic testimony from the last person to speak to Trayvon Martin brought attention to some of the intangible and uncomfortable undertones at the George Zimmerman trial.
Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in the 2012 shooting death of the Florida teen, claiming he shot Martin in self-defense.
Rachel Jeantel, a friend of Martin’s and one of the prosecution’s key witnesses, spent two days on the witness stand this week and more than five hours being cross-examined by Zimmerman’s defense team. But it’s mostly the style—not necessarily the substance—of her testimony that fueled the public conversation.
Some members of the media, the Twitterati and other online outlets criticized the 19-year-old for her arguably unpolished performance, citing everything from her personal appearance and facial expressions to her command of the English language. The criticisms focused, implicitly if not explicitly, on issues of race and class.
The exchanges between her and defense attorney Don West seemed tense at times. He picked apart some discrepancies between past depositions and her court testimony, such as why she didn’t attend the funeral. She blurted out, “That’s retarded, sir,” after the defense suggested Martin attacked Zimmerman. A few times, defense attorney Don West asked her to repeat herself, seeming to suggest it was hard to understand her way of speaking. The prosecution and judge also asked Jeantel to repeat herself.
When Jeantel first took the witness stand, prosecutor Bernie De La Rionda told her, “I know you grew up in Haitian family, so make sure that everybody can hear you, try to speak as clear…” The judge stepped in, asking, “Can you repeat what your answer was?”
Though Jeantel was asked to repeat herself on multiple occasions, according to Lehigh University Director of Africana Studies Dr. James Peterson, Jeantel’s style of speech was being “exploited” he says by the defense in particular, making it “difficult to stomach” for courtroom observers. “Jeantel is multilingual, comes to English as her second or third language, and speaks in a variety of English that is completely credible in her speech community,” said Peterson.
According to Jeantel, Martin allegedly told her that he was being chased by a “creepy-ass cracker”–a comment the defense team highlighted.
“Do people that you live around and with call white people, ‘creepy ass crackers’?” West asked.
“Not creepy. But cracker, yeah,” Jeantel said.
“You’re saying that in the culture that you live in, in your community, people there call white people crackers?”
“Yes, sir,” she said.









