George Zimmerman, the Florida neighbourhood watchman who
shot dead an unarmed black 17-year-old male last year, has been found not
guilty.
Lawyers for Mr Zimmerman, 29, argued
he acted in self-defence and with justifiable use of deadly force in the death
of Trayvon Martin.
The jury retired on Friday to
consider its verdict on charges of either second-degree murder or manslaughter.
The case sparked a fierce debate
about racial profiling in the US.
Protesters are gathering, reports
the BBC's David Willis, in Sanford, the Florida town where the shooting took
place.
'No
further business'
After the verdict, Judge Deborah
Nelson told Mr Zimmerman he was free to go.
"Your bond will be released.
Your GPS monitor will be cut off when you exit the courtroom over here. And you
have no further business with the court," Judge Nelson said.
Mr Zimmerman showed little reaction
as the verdict was read out.
"Hopefully everyone will
respect the jury's verdict," his lawyer Mark O'Mara told reporters after
the case.
He said Mr Zimmerman would now have
to be "very cautious and protective of his safety because there is still a
fringe element who have said that they would revenge - that they would not
listen to - a verdict of not guilty."
Another member of his defence team,
Don West, said: "I'm thrilled that this jury kept this tragedy from
becoming a travesty."
Our correspondent said the case
brought into sharp relief some of the most divisive issues in the United
States: race, gun control and equal justice under the law.
Florida police did not arrest Mr
Zimmerman for six weeks after the shooting, provoking mass rallies in Florida
and throughout the US.
Under the state's controversial
"stand your ground" law, the use of lethal force is allowed if a
person feels seriously under threat.
Benjamin Crump, the Martin family
lawyer, said: "Trayvon Martin will forever remain in the annals of
history... as a symbol for the fight for equal justice for all."
He, too, appealed for calm, saying
"for Trayvon to rest in peace, we must all be peaceful".
The family's legal team said they
were not in the courtroom when the verdict was read out.
Hooded
sweatshirt
State Attorney Angela Corey said she
believed prosecutors had "brought out the truth on behalf of Trayvon
Martin".
"This case has never been about
race or the right to bear arms,'' she said.
"We believe this case all along
was about boundaries, and George Zimmerman exceeded those boundaries."
As the jury retired on Friday, the
judge told the panel of six women to consider whether Mr Zimmerman acted in
self-defence and with justifiable use of deadly force.
Trayvon Martin was unarmed and
walking home to his father's house
Without explicitly discussing race,
the prosecution had suggested Mr Zimmerman assumed the African-American
teenager, who was wearing a hooded sweatshirt as he walked in the rain, was up
to no good.
But the defence said Trayvon Martin
punched their client, slammed his head into the pavement and reached for Mr
Zimmerman's gun.
The accused, who was legally armed
with a pistol, had been sitting in his vehicle on a dark street when he saw
Martin.
Mr Zimmerman telephoned police to
report a suspicious person, then left his vehicle in apparent pursuit of the
teenager.
Shortly afterwards, Martin was found
dead, shot in the chest.
'Civil
rights violations'
Earlier, Mr Zimmerman's lawyer said
he had proven his client's "pure, unadulterated innocence" in
Martin's death.
But prosecutors said the accused had
told a series of lies.
US President Barack Obama commented
on the case last March following calls for the arrest of Mr Zimmerman.
He said the "tragedy" of
an unarmed black teenager shot dead in Florida should prompt some national
soul-searching.
"If I had a son, he would look
like Trayvon," President Obama told reporters at the White House.
Following the verdict, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP) - best known for its battles against segregation and discrimination -
said it was calling "immediately for the Justice Department to conduct an
investigation into the civil rights violations committed against Trayvon
Martin".
"This case has re-energised the
movement to end racial profiling in the United States," Roslyn M Brock,
chairwoman of the NAACP, said in a statement.
Teenage killer acquitted
Reviewed by Idowu Wasiu
on
07:37:00
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