Sadly, The Zimmerman Verdict Makes Sense

Posted by | July 14, 2013 20:26 | Filed under: Opinion


(Before I begin, let me send a huge thanks to Alan for inviting me to be a contributor at his great site. I greatly appreciate it. For those who don’t know me, you can find me at my (group) blog, The Reaction, where I’ve been writing for over eight years, as well as on Twitter (@mjwstickings). I’m also a blogger at The Huffington Post and am part of the Mike’s Blog Round-Up team at Crooks and Liars.)

(Over at my place, I have a longer version of this post that delves into some of the understandably outraged if not altogether reasonable reaction to the verdict.)

While wanting justice for Trayvon Martin, and finding the whole damn thing abhorrent, let’s not make the mistake of mistaking this one case for more than it was.

Even if it was a reflection of the deeper and broader problem of racism in America, as well as of the country’s gun-crazed culture of violence, even if we’re certain, absolutely certain, that things would have gone differently had a black man been the killer, this was one case with one set of evidence, one judge, and one jury. And unfortunately, in that context, the verdict, however disappointing, however disturbing, made some sense.

Yes, sense. I’m sorry, but it did.

**********

Perhaps the smartest thing I’ve read on the verdict came from Slate‘s Emily Bazelon, in a must-read piece that includes the following:

It feels wrong, this verdict of not guilty for George Zimmerman. It feels wrong to say that Zimmerman is guilty of no crime. If he hadn’t approached 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, if he hadn’t pulled his gun, Martin would be alive.

But that doesn’t mean Zimmerman was guilty of murder, not in the state of Florida. It doesn’t even mean he was guilty of manslaughter, though that was the middle ground I hoped the jury would find its way toward… Here’s the problem: To convict Zimmerman of murder, the six women of the jury had to find that he killed Martin out of ill will, hatred, or spite, or with a depraved mind. The law didn’t account Zimmerman’s fear or feeling of being physically threatened.

But the physical evidence suggested that in the heat of the moment, Zimmerman could have felt both of those things.

In other words, the verdict may not have been racist, and, given the laws in Florida and the high bar of “beyond a reasonable doubt” (a bar that must remain high at all times if the legal system is to be in any way just), maybe the verdict actually made… sense.

Here’s The Atlantic‘s Ta-Nehisi Coates, like Bazelon anything but a right-wing pro-Zimmerman apologist, making the same case:

I think the jury basically got it right. The only real eyewitness to the death of Trayvon Martin was the man who killed him. At no point did I think that the state proved second degree murder. I also never thought they proved beyond a reasonable doubt that he acted recklessly. They had no ability to counter his basic narrative, because there were no other eye-witnesses.

And on this I am in full agreement:

[T]rials don’t work as strict “moral surrogates.” Everything that is immoral is not illegal — nor should it be. I want to live in a society that presumes innocence. I want to live in that society even when I feel that a person should be punished.

Did the system work? Well, yes, in its flawed way.

It’s an imperfect system, after all, that when it works as it should presumes innocence even for those who seem the most guilty and places the burden of proof on the government.

I’m not saying that racism played no part here, or that the system isn’t deeply corrupt, but I think we should take a step back before hurling accusations in all directions.

And while there is undeniably a sense of gross injustice here — Trayvon is dead, Zimmerman walks — the point for us all should be to rally together to fight for change as the pathway to justice.

Fight to end racism, particularly as it manifests itself in institutions like the justice system. Fight for meaningful gun control legislation. Fight to put an end to America’s gun-crazed culture of violence.

Fight for Trayvon, yes, but do so in the right way, and without turning on the system for doing what, at the end of the day, it was probably supposed to do in this case.

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2013 Liberaland
By: Michael J.W. Stickings

Founder and editor of The Reaction, a liberal political blog on American politics and culture.