"He took my head and slammed it against the concrete several times, and
each time I thought my head was going to explode and I thought I was
going to lose consciousness," George Zimmerman told police the day after he shot and killed Trayvon Martin.
"I didn't want him to keep slamming my head on the concrete so I kind of
shifted. But when I shifted my jacket came up…and it exposed my
firearm. That's when he said you are going to die tonight. He took one
hand off my mouth, and slid it down my chest. I took my gun aimed it at
him and fired."
The latest and most detailed account yet of what happened in Sanford,
Fla., on Feb. 26 comes from a voice stress test that Zimmerman passed,
along with a video re-enactment, a handwritten statement and audio
interviews conducted in the days after the shooting by investigators.
No comments:
Post a Comment