Jury Can Hear Zimmerman’s Old 911 Calls

SANFORD, Fla. – A central Florida judge has ruled that police non-emergency dispatch calls George Zimmerman made in the months before he fatally shot Trayvon Martin can be admitted at his murder trial.

Judge Debra Nelson made the ruling Wednesday, a day after a prosecutor argued that the calls were central to the prosecution’s case since they showed Zimmerman’s state of mind. Prosecutor Richard Mantei said the calls would give jurors context on a “building level of frustration this defendant had” that the suspicious people he reported in his neighborhood were getting away, the Orlando Sentinel reports.

Attorneys and Circuit Judge Debra Nelson listened to the calls in court Tuesday morning before the jury was called into the courtroom. “We’ve had a lot of break-ins in our neighborhood recently, I’m on the neighborhood watch,” Zimmerman said in one of the calls. “There are two suspicious characters at the gate of my neighborhood. I’ve never seen them before – I have no idea what they’re doing. They’re just hanging out, loitering.”

 

Read more at cbsnews.com