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Prosecutors: Zimmerman ‘profiled,’ confronted Trayvon Martin before shooting him

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Investigators said they interviewed the girl who was on the phone with Martin just before he died.

“The witness advised that Martin was scared because he was being followed through the complex by an unknown male and didn’t know why. Martin attempted to run home but was followed by Zimmerman who didn’t want the person he falsely assumed was going to commit a crime to get away before the police arrived,” the affidavit says.

The document recounts how the operator told Zimmerman to wait for police. It notes that Zimmerman muttered, “these a -- holes always get away” and referred to “these (expletive) punks.”

The reference to “punks” was a hotly debated controversy, as many who listened to the tape thought they could hear Zimmerman using a racial slur. It was unclear whether the state attorney’s office had the tape analyzed professionally to determine what he said, or whether it was simply the word investigators heard when they listened to it.

Many people believe they heard a much uglier word, but the utterance was too muffled to say for sure.

Zimmerman, the investigators said, confronted Martin. And it was Martin, investigators believe, whose distressed voice is heard in the background of a 911 call begging for help.

“Trayvon Martin’s mother has reviewed the 911 calls and identified the voice crying for help as Trayvon Martin’s voice,” the investigators wrote. The document does not say if investigators employed any more scientific method to determine the source of the cries.

The affidavit was signed by 4th Judicial Circuit investigators T.C. O’Steen and Dale Gilbreath. O’Steen has 35 years of law enforcement experience, including 20 years as a homicide investigator. Gilbreath was at the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office before working with the state attorney and has worked homicides for 24 years.

One sentence in the affidavit is blacked out and kept secret.

The rest of the case’s supporting evidence was ordered sealed, too. The defense attorney asked Herr to keep the public records from the hands of the media, which he said had too much piecemeal information already. Special prosecutor Angela Corey agreed.

The case was then sent up to circuit court and will be heard before Judge Jessica J. Recksiedler, a Central Florida native who has been on the bench for just over a year. Arraignment was set for May 29.

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