Is the Trayvon Martin case about race or guns?

IN an interview with CNN, Bill Cosby argues that the Trayvon Martin case is more about guns than race.  If George Zimmerman was scared and carried a gun to ease his fear, Cosby says, it doesn’t matter if he wasn’t a racist.  The question is, who taught him to be afraid, and who taught him that carrying a gun would solve his problem?   You can find a video of CNN’s interview with Cosby clicking here and scrolling down.

Mark Osler and Jeanne Bishop begin their CNN opinion piece by seconding Cosby’s motion.  They aren’t saying that racial profiling wasn’t involved in the Martin case; but Florida’s Stand Your Ground law is the big issue:  “This law is grounded in a factual error and a deeply flawed principle,” Osler and Bishop believe. “The factual error is that a proliferation of handguns makes us safer. The flawed principle is that somehow the right to bear arms needs to be enlarged to a right to resolve disputes with guns.”

Trayvon Martin case also about guns

Jeanne Bishop and Mark Osler

(CNN) — As criminal attorneys, we know that tragic cases very often bring festering social issues into public view. Bill Cosby was right: The Trayvon Martin case brings to the surface troubling questions not only about race but also about the role of handguns in our society.

Now that the shooter, George Zimmerman, has been charged with second-degree murder, his defense under Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law will become the focus of discussion. This law is grounded in a factual error and a deeply flawed principle. The factual error is that a proliferation of handguns makes us safer. The flawed principle is that somehow the right to bear arms needs to be enlarged to a right to resolve disputes with guns.

The notion that guns make us safer is a fallacy. People with guns in their homes are much more likely to be killed with their own gun — by accident, domestic violence or suicide — than to use it ever against an intruder, according to Arthur Kellermann, writing in the New England Journal of Medicine. Similarly, people who carry guns are more likely to be shot and killed than those who are unarmed. A University of Pennsylvania study found that people carrying guns were 4.5 times more likely to be shot and 4.2 times more likely to be killed.

That study’s author, Charles Branas, has speculated that one reason may be that guns give carriers a sense of empowerment that causes them to overreact in tense situations. That may be precisely what happened in the case of Zimmerman.

Florida’s Stand Your Ground law changed the previous understanding of self-defense in a simple way. Traditionally, one could only claim self-defense if there was no reasonable chance to retreat from a situation where one felt threatened. The revised law says if you feel threatened with imminent great bodily harm, you may use force, including guns, against the person you find threatening, even if there is a reasonable opportunity to retreat. What this invites is the settling of personal disputes with guns, as evidenced by a 300% increase in the number of killings by private citizens justified by “self-defense” in Florida since the law passed.

Most murders involve young men, often as both shooter and victim, as in the Trayvon Martin case. Young men, of course, often get in conflicts where they are threatening one another: that is, where both of them are trying to scare the other with “imminent great bodily harm.” Florida’s law may allow one of those chest-bumping young men, without consequence, to end the mutual dispute by shooting the other dead on the street. When it is over, the only witness may be the shooter, and his version of events will presumptively control. There is no morality in this rule.

Nothing in our Constitution even vaguely promotes the redress of grievances with guns; the “redress of grievances” clause of the First Amendment has nothing to with the “right to bear arms” described in the Second Amendment. Rather, what the Constitution protects is the ability to redress our grievances by petitioning our government.

There may be no more damning indictment of our society than this: We too often seem to be equipping our young men with the guns and excuses to kill one another, rather than the safe schools and knowledge it takes to frame a good and righteous petition.

Jeanne Bishop is a criminal defense lawyer in Cook County, Illinois. Mark Osler is professor of law at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota and a former federal prosecutor.

3 thoughts on “Is the Trayvon Martin case about race or guns?

  1. Actually you are wrong in so many ways… Zimmermen was a Latino, not White.
    Second there is enough evidence to prove that Traypon attacked Zimmermen and he shot Traypon in self defence. Evidence such as Zimmermen had scratches on his head which were bleeding, grass stains on the back of Zimmermens shirt, etc prove there was a struggle. It was in FACT Zimmermens voice screaming for help not Traypons. Traypons Girld Friend was a hoax as well, she never dated Traypon, she was not even talking to Traypon at the time everything occurred. Her Social Networking page confirms this with times and dates, conversations, etc. They could not even put her on stand as a witness.

    If Traypon did not attack Zimmermen, and Zimmermen just shot Traypon in cold blood, there would not have been a struggle at all, Zimmermen would have shot Traypon in the back or chest at a distance.

    Was it about guns? Yes and no. It was Zimmermens right carry a gun, and he used it in self defense, just as I would have and any one else here would have done the same. I do believe that the stand your ground law should be reworked, but it should not be scrapped.

    My advice, screw the MSM and do your own research. You will find that they have been lying to you.

Comments are closed.