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In reply to the discussion: Nope. Sorry. I don't want to make it easier for the state when it comes to criminal prosecution [View all]Lee-Lee
(6,324 posts)The PROSECUTION were the ones who played the videos and entered them into evidence. Not the defense. The prosecution can't object to what they do.
They thought that they could point out enough inconsistencies in his story to outweigh his claims of self defense in the videos.
So because they did that, Zimmerman got to tell the jury his story, via video, without being cross examined.
The prosecution essentially handed them a major gift by using the videos.
Irony of it all, had he done what most people do after a self defense shooting and asked for a lawyer before making any statements he never would have made any videotaped statements, and therefore would have had to testify. His doing a dumb thing worked for him thanks to a dumber prosecution strategy.