Sybrina
Fulton of Miami, Fla., mother of Trayvon Martin, listens to Rep. Louis
Gohmert (R) (R-TX) speak before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on
"Stand Your Ground" laws October 29, 2013 in Washington, DC.
*Sybrina Fulton, the mother of slain teenager Trayvon Martin, made an impassioned plea before a congressional committee Tuesday to amend "stand your ground" self-defense laws.
Fulton testified at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing scheduled in the wake of George Zimmerman's
acquittal in the 2012 death of Martin, who was shot while walking home
unarmed in Sanford, Fla. The jury's decision in July sparked nationwide
outrage, as protesters took to the streets to decry racial profiling and
demand a review of stand your ground laws.
"It's
very hurtful to know that Trayvon was only simply going to the store to
get snacks. Nothing more, nothing less," Fulton said. "It's important
to keep that in mind, because teenagers like to be independent at times.
And he was simply going to get a drink and some candy."
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"That
tells me right there his mentality," she added. "He wasn't going to get
cigarettes or bullets or condoms or items of that nature. He was going
to get candy. He was not looking for any type of trouble. He was not
committing any type of crime."
Sybrina
Fulton of Miami, Fla., mother of Trayvon Martin, greets Sen. Richard
Durbin (D-IL) during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on "Stand Your
Ground" laws October 29, 2013 in Washington, DC.
It
was Fulton's first appearance before members of Congress, who showed
signs of taking up the application of stand your ground laws in the
immediate aftermath of Zimmerman's not-guilty verdict. The laws, which
exist in some form in about 30 states, allow a person to use deadly
force in self-defense, rather than retreat, when they feel threatened
with "great bodily harm.
Tracy Martin,
Trayvon's father, spoke a week after Zimmerman's acquittal at the
inaugural meeting of the Congressional Caucus on Black Men and Boys,
where lawmakers pledged to renew the debate on race and racial profiling
in the United States. President Barack Obama addressed the issue in what were widely regarded as unprecedented remarks about his personal history with racial bias.