Heffay wrote:When you ignore the advice a dispatcher gives you to extricate yourself from the sitution, I think your whole "unwilling participant" defense goes out the window.
Absolutely not! Where are you getting this information? A 911 operator is not a law enforcement officer, and their advice is just that, advice. Ignoring the advice of a 911 operator is no different from ignoring the advice of an ice cream vendor. Following Martin was a perfectly legal activity, and a 911 operator has absolutely no legal authority whatsoever.
A lot of people are making a big deal of the fact that Zimmerman got out of the car to tail Martin to determine where he was going. Again, this is a perfectly legal activity, and does nothing to negate him being an unwilling participant in the violence, or from a self defense claim. In fact, you can get into a heated argument with someone, and still remain an unwilling participant to any violence that may result from the argument. I'd have to look it up, but there is a MN supreme court case that states exactly this. As long as you are not enticing the other party to violence, no legal activities before the incident becomes violent can be used to eliminate a persons legal right to self defense.
As long as 1) Zimmerman didn't initiate or goad Martin into the violence, and 2) Zimmerman reasonably believed he was in imminent threat of great bodily harm or death, and 3) No lesser force would have been sufficient to stop the threat, then Zimmerman legally killed Martin in self defense. It's that simple.
Heffay wrote:Stand your ground is flawed in that way, at least the current implementations of it.
It is absolutely not flawed. Stumbling into a deadly encounter, being a stupid idiot, or someone proclaiming that you 'should have known better' does not and should not remove a persons claim of self defense. Once you allow lawful behavior to be used to nullify a self defense claim, you have opened Pandora's box. Zimmerman should have stayed in the car, or stayed at home, or lived in a safer neighborhood, etc. When lawful activities can be used to strip a person of their rights, it's a very short step to effectively not having those rights.