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October 25, 2022

I have to wonder how George Zimmerman felt upon reading about the shooting death of Kansas City firefighter Anthony Santi, 41.

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Ten years ago, after getting his head pounded into the concrete for a minute or more, Zimmerman famously shot and killed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.  Although Martin attacked the much smaller Zimmerman without provocation, and eyewitness evidence supported Zimmerman’s claims of self-defense, the media and the woke mobs frightened state prosecutors into charging Zimmerman with second-degree murder and ruining his life.

Santi’s shooter, by contrast, faces no consequences whatsoever, not even a review before a grand jury.  According to the Kansas City Star, Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Baker, a liberal Democrat known for her racially sensitive leniency, “decided not to move forward with a second degree murder charge against the woman because it could not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that she was acting outside of Missouris self-defense law.”

The Star article compares the case to Zimmerman’s and mistakenly argues that he was cleared on Florida’s “Stand Your Ground.”  He wasn’t.  The Zimmerman case was pure self-defense.  Unlike with Zimmerman, the local media did not rail against self-defense laws in the Santi shooting.  This is curious in that just a few months before the shooting, the media were widely denouncing a pending Missouri Stand Your Ground bill as the Make Murder Legal Act.”

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Although admittedly not an attorney, I think a good case could be made that Santi’s shooting involved neither self-defense nor stand your ground.  I think an excellent case, however, could be made that the critical variables were the same as they were in the Zimmerman case: race and politics.

Here’s what happened.  On the afternoon of October 6, 23-year-old Ja’Von Taylor started a ruckus in an Independence, Missouri, liquor store.  (Independence borders Kansas City.)  Upon being told the store did not have the kind of cigars he wanted, he cursed out a female clerk.  When the clerk asked him to leave, Taylor acted up.  Santi backed the clerk and asked him to leave as well.

Taylor should never have been out on the streets.  In March 2022, he pleaded guilty to one count of first-degree robbery in Jackson County Circuit Court and was sentenced to ten years in prison.  The judge granted him a suspended execution of sentence and placed him on probation.  Seven months later, Taylor was out riding around with a loaded gun in his possession.

After threatening Santi, surveillance video shows Taylor retreating to his SUV and retrieving a firearm with an extended magazine.  A subsequent cell phone video clip shows Santi restraining the armed Taylor on the ground while Taylor violently struggles to break free.  At one point, Taylor hands off the gun to the unnamed woman.  While waving the gun around, she screams at Santi to get off Taylor while she pulls on his shirt and pounds on his back.  Santi turns to her and says, What are you doing?”

“Get off,” she yells.  “I’ve got a kid in the car.”  According to bystanders, the struggle lasted as long as ten minutes.  From the video, it seems clear that Santi is simply trying to restrain Taylor until the police arrive.  He is not punching him or banging his head on the pavement.

The video clip does not show the gun being fired, but the woman admittedly shot Santi in the back, killing him.  After shooting Santi, she and Taylor took off in the SUV.  While the police were processing the crime scene, the shooter returned and was taken into custody.  Taylor was later arrested on federal gun charges.