Heffay wrote:Well, being a participant in a fight makes you responsible for the consequences of that fight.
Not necessarily. I don't have a link at the moment, but there is a MN supreme court ruling that speaks to being a reluctant participant. You can be an active participant in an argument, but be an unwilling participant if the other guy escalates to a fist fight. You can be an active participant in a fist fight, but an unwilling participant if the other guy escalates it to a knife fight. At each escalation of the force continuum, you have the opportunity to regain an unwilling participant status at that level by attempting to retreat from the encounter at the point of escalation. I wouldn't suggest this though, as it's not as black and white in the eyes of a jury, and if there is any question as to whether you attempted to retreat and deescalate, you could easily find yourself screwed.
Following someone, even chasing someone isn't a crime. Neither is ignoring the advice of a 911 operator. Until the encounter escalated to violence, nothing Zimmerman did would have stripped him of his unwilling participant status
to the violence.
Heffay wrote:This is a GREAT example of why the Florida stand your ground law is not something we want. You can argue self defense as a mitigating circumstance, but he picked a fight and got his ass kicked as a result. So he is partially responsible for the consequences.
A. This has absolutely nothing at all to do with Florida's stand your ground law.
B. He didn't pick the fight. Not according to the eyewitness testimony and evidence we've seen thus far.
C. He is only criminally responsible if he was a willing participant in the
crime. What happened between them 2 minutes earlier or two weeks earlier doesn't matter.