It's not easy to admit when you're wrong. For that you should be commended. However, after that admission, it seems you are still proceeding with facts that are not only not in evidence, but which are contradicted by the limited available evidence. I'm speaking of the recorded conversation with the non-emergency dispatch operator. Towards the end of it, you can hear that he is still walking as the operator is asking for his address. He says his address, and then says, "Oh crap, I don't want to give it out. I don't know where this kid is." Prior to that statement he had said that the subject "ran." Neither of these statements suggest that he could see Martin anymore. Martin may well have come at Zimmerman after Z lost sight of him. That's the question that has to be answered, who came at whom? There is no clear evidence in the public domain that can answer that question.
Obviously, Zimmerman's story has always been that he was jumped by Martin subsequent to losing sight of him and after he had already hung up the phone with the operator. A jury will have to decide if all the evidence is consistent with that story and whether or not it was a justifiable self defense case based on their conclusions on that specific issue. I think the ship has already sailed for the judge to make that ruling in the Stand Your Ground hearing that will happen before trial, because he has made it clear that he thinks Zimmerman is a liar, which I think is grounds for a petition to get another judge assigned to the case, but that's a whole 'nother kettle of worms. In any case, no one is justified in assuming that Zimmerman approached Martin or vice versa. That's a question for the jury to answer.
Blues