New Black Panthers offer $10,000 bounty for capture of Zimmerman
Trayvon Martin: New Black Panthers offer $10,000 bounty for capture of
shooter George Zimmerman
March 24, 2012|By Arelis R. Hernandez, Orlando Sentinel
http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2012-03-24/news/os-trayvon-martin-new-black-panthers-protest-20120324_1_black-men-justice-new-black-panthers
SANFORD — Members of the New Black Panther Party are offering a
$10,000 reward for the "capture" of George Zimmerman, leader Mikhail
Muhammad announced during a protest in Sanford today.
When asked whether he was inciting violence, Muhammad replied
defiantly saying: "An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth."
The bounty announcement came moments after members of the group called
for the mobilization of 5,000 black men to capture George Zimmerman,
the Neighborhood Watch volunteer who shot Trayvon Martin last month.
Muhammad said members of his group would search for Zimmerman
themselves in Maitland and Jacksonville -- where the 28-year old
worked before the shooting, employees there told the Orlando Sentinel.
But he declined to say when they will begin their hunt.
Muhammad said the group's national chairman, Dr. Malik Zulu Shabaz of
Washington, D.C. is receiving donations from black entertainers and
athletes. They hope to collect $1 million by next week, Muhammad said.
The party said they would not release the names of donors nor would
they provide documentation to support the existence of donations.
The New Black Panthers announced the reward at a protest in Sanford
Saturday, the activist group's third protest in the past two weeks
over the fatal shooting of the Miami Gardens teen.
The group called for Zimmerman's arrest and threatened to find and
detain him if police were not willing to do so. But group members
didn't call for the mobilization of thousands until Saturday.
Muhammed led the group in chanting "Justice for Trayvon!" and "Black
Power!"
"If the government won't do the job, we'll do it," Muhammad said,
leading his group of eight party members in chants like "freedom or
death" and "justice for Trayvon" while making the iconic gesture of
raising their fists into the air.
The party members said they are tired of the inaction of government
officials — from Sanford city officials up to the Governor, accusing
them of lying and delaying justice.
They accused newly-appointed special prosecutor Angela Corley of
being an enemy of the black community.
"She has a track record of sending innocent young black men and women
to prison," he said.
Sanford police arrived toward the end of the demonstration Saturday
asking onlookers and media to avoid walking into the street in front
of The Retreat at Twin Lakes where Trayvon was killed.
As the officer walked back to his cruiser, Muhammad berated and
pointed angrily at him saying "If you'd had shown this much concern,
Trayvon may still be alive today."
The fiery rhetoric and often profanity-laden diatribes made some
visitors to the impromptu memorial uncomfortable.
Pastor Moses Brown of Tampa said he was disappointed with the
Panthers' approach.
"We believe in a message of justice, not hate," said Brown, who was
in town to pray at the memorial and attend the Monday event at
Sanford's Civic Center. "We believe justice will come through the
court system."
Brown, who is also the Chief executive officer of Feed Our Children,
said he has been meeting with other Christian ministers to discuss the
case.
While the Panthers chanted behind him, Brown said "I see parallel
versions of how we are coping with this as a community. Some in anger
and us, in prayer. But we are in America where we have our rights to
expression."
The Southern Poverty Law Center says the New Black Panther Party, a
black-separatist group founded in 1989, is "virulently racist and
anti-Semitic," and its leaders have encouraged violence against
whites, Jews and law officers.
Trayvon was killed Feb. 26 in the gated Retreat at Twin Lakes
community while walking back to his father's fiancee's town house.
Zimmerman spotted the unarmed teen and called the Sanford Police
Department's nonemergency line to report a suspicious person.
Zimmerman shot Travon before officers could respond. Zimmerman told
police he acted in self-defense. He has not been arrested and is not
charged with a crime.
This is a breaking-news story. Check back for updates.
Susan Jacobson of the Sentinel staff contributed to this report.
areher...@tribune.com