A Special Guest Commentary by Pulitzer Prize-Winning Journalist Les Payne
What If Trayvon's Case Had
Been About Rape?
The blame-the-victim treatment
isn't right in sexual assault. It's not right in killings, either.
Consider this scenario: Aroused by an attractive teenager in a halter top walking through his neighborhood, a Sanford, Fla. man was instructed to stand down by police, but instead he provoked an encounter that ended tragically with the assault and rape of the 17-year-old girl.
After showing authorities scratches on his face
and arms that he claimed were inflicted by the rape victim, the pursuer was
promptly released by the local police chief that night after discussions with
the detained man's father, who is a retired judge.
Sound familiar?
This scenario, minus the complicating race
factor, approximates the rough outline of what we've learned about George
Zimmerman's encounter with Trayvon Martin on Feb. 26. Contrary to distracting
media accounts, the "Stand your ground" law is clearly not applicable
to Zimmerman here because he ignored police instructions and advanced on
Trayvon's ground. The ordinance may well apply instead to the victim's reaction
to a man moving toward him with a Kel-Tec PF-9 9 mm pistol.
Though the hypothetical rape tragedy described
here is not lethal, as it was in Trayvon's case, the "arousal" motive
is similar, the execution approximate; and the behavior by officials should be
no less troubling to those concerned about judicial fairness in a civil
society.
Cops in both the real and hypothetical cases
gave the aroused pursuer the benefit of every doubt and, in the Trayvon
incident, initially dismissed the victim's defenders as frivolous petitioners,
lacking the attacker's connection to city hall and police headquarters.
In the Trayvon case the local media also failed
flat out in their responsibility to inform the citizenry in sufficient detail
-- or in any detail during the first few weeks -- so that residents could reach
a sovereign decision. It was instead left to Trayvon's parents and supporters,
over a period of weeks, to energize residents, and social media to protest the
official whitewash by blackout.
"She was wearing a halter top and tight
jeans, very provocative," would, in our hypothetical rape, match the
sentiments actually voiced by Geraldo Rivera, the has-been who never was much of a reporter.
"Slut gear" is likely how Rivera would
describe her clothing as "probable cause" in justifying the rape of
the mature-looking-for-her-age victim.
"I think what's far more significant is
what Trayvon Martin looked like on that night, Bill," is how Rivera
actually attributed blame to Trayvon for his own death in a recent discussion with Bill O'Reilly on
his TV show. During the same discussion, he accused Trayvon of dressing in
"thug wear" (read: slut gear) on the night of his killing and not
looking like the kid that he was.
Zimmerman also floated the excuse in court that
he thought the teenager was older, as if, upon being followed, Trayvon bore
some responsibility to get himself carded or risk getting shot to death.
While it is clear to all that the journalism of
Geraldo Rivera, long beneath the dignity of satire, has sunk even further down
the rabbit hole than it had been in 1986, when he pried open Al Capone's empty
safe on live TV, the rest of the mainstream media have not earned the right in
the Trayvon Martin case to criticize this mustachioed Inspector Clouseau of
what passes for TV reporting.
Again, it was not the mainstream but rather the
social media that gave the Zimmerman-Martin story legs and made it dance out of
the crypt to the tune of some 2 million hits on Change.org. Along the way, the
slumbering civil liberties crowd gained their national voice with new converts
of opposition to an unfair criminal-justice system.
So now, after failing to inform the public, the
media are wading in knee-deep with polls, alibis and disinformation. Forty
percent of the woefully misinformed public -- if we are to accept Rasmussen Reports polling
-- believe that Zimmerman shot Trayvon Martin in self-defense, while only 24
percent believe that it was murder.
And why should they not believe Zimmerman's
defense?
Their heads have been spinning like Poltergeist
recently with media drippings of "newly released evidence" depicting
Zimmerman's head gashes and alleged broken nose. This slideshow is being hawked
as proof positive that the hunter was justified in tracking down Trayvon like a
doe in the forest and finally shooting him in the chest.
Instead of justification for murder, Zimmerman's
small gashes and Trayvon's bruised knuckles likely carry no more significance
than the scratches on the face and arms of the rapist in the opening
hypothetical -- and his skin under the victim's fingernails.
The polls and sinister, leaked photographs of
Zimmerman be damned!
Where, pray tell, are the media photos of the
blasted-open chest of young Trayvon that night? What about the death stare on
his baby face? The eyes rolled back? The scattering of the Skittles? The blood,
Geraldo, splattered on his teenager's hoodie?
Les Payne is also the co-author of the critically acclaimed and
groundbreaking book "The
Heroin Trail" and the
former managing editor of Newsday.
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