The Sanford, Fla., Police Department said Thursday it won't
return George Zimmerman's gun after the FBI requested evidence be preserved
from his murder trial.
The Justice Department's investigation into whether
Zimmerman violated Trayvon Martin's civil rights when he shot and killed the
unarmed teen requires evidence to be preserved, even though Zimmerman was
acquitted Saturday in his criminal trial.
"The evidence is just in a hold status, pending their
DOJ investigation," the Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel quoted Sanford police
spokesman Capt. Jim McAuliffe as saying.
Zimmerman attorney Mark O'Mara had said earlier this week
his client would get his gun back.
Meanwhile, Martin's parents said they were shocked and
disgusted when the Florida jury of six women found Zimmerman not guilty in the
shooting death of their son.
"I really didn't believe that he was not guilty,"
Trayvon's mother, Sybrina Fulton, said Thursday on ABC's "Good Morning
America." "My first thought was shock, disgust."
A six-person, all-female jury Saturday found Zimmerman, a
29-year-old Hispanic-American, not guilty of second-degree murder and
manslaughter for shooting Martin, an unarmed 17-year-old black teen, Feb. 26,
2012, in Sanford, Fla. He said he shot Martin in self-defense.
"I think people are forgetting that Trayvon was a
teenager so he probably thought as a teenager," Fulton said. "I
really do believe he was afraid because he did call George Zimmerman creepy. So
he was afraid and if you are 17 years old and you are afraid, you may not know
what to do."
The verdict prompted a wave of public outcry, including
protest marches across the country.
Demonstrators held a peaceful rally in Beverly Hills,
Calif., against the verdict, but 17 people were arrested during a rally that
turned rowdy in Victorville Wednesday, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Protesters marched along busy Wilshire Boulevard during rush
hour, carrying signs in support of Martin, police said.
In Victorville, 17 people, including eight juveniles, were
arrested Wednesday night, the San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department said.
Most of the arrests were for unlawful assembly.
"As parents understanding how they reached the verdict,
I'll never grasp that concept," Martin's father, Tracy Martin, said on
"Good Morning America." "Just as loving parents and God-fearing
people, we just continue to pray that whatever was in their heart was what they
intended to do. But we didn't feel it was fair and, of course, it was
devastating."
Zimmerman has been in hiding since the verdict. In an
interview with ABC News, his parents, Gladys and Robert Zimmerman Sr., said
they would tell Martin's parents they are sorry about what happened the night
their son fatally shot the teenager, if given the opportunity.
"There's no winner in this situation," Martin
said. "Obviously, we are devastated more."
Martin and Fulton have started a foundation named after
their son and say they hope his death and the trial can serve as a catalyst to
bring the country together.
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