When I originally heard the recording of Zimmerman's phone call to the police, it sounded to me like Zimmerman wasn't initially sure that Martin was black when asked whether the guy in question was white, black or Hispanic. He answered that the guy "looked" black, but a little later in the conversation after he seemingly got a better look he then just voluntarily confirmed that Martin was indeed black.
So, just when would mere common sense say that Zimmerman racially profiled Martin - before, during or after that phone conversation?
http://www.soundevidence.com/index.php?link=zimmerman
The audio is at that site also.
It sounded to me like Zimmerman just answered the question he was asked the best he could at the time and then confirmed that he had answered correctly once he got a better look. So, I'm really not sure that race was much of an issue until others decided to make it so.
Here's Zimmerman's reenactment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qfkRTC5gF4
And his NEN call:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9A-gp8mrdw
Now, Zimmerman in his reenactment, claims that he drove by Martin, saw his face, and that he was a stranger to him. Then he parked at the clubhouse, and called NEN there, and that Martin walked past while still looking around. And this is reasonable to believe - after all, the address he claimed to have parked was the clubhouse he gave the address to in his call, and of course, Martin would need to walk towards him in order to go home. And Martin...well, he has eyes.
Now, to the problems.
First, there are a couple hundred houses in the community, so there's little to no chance that Zimmerman would recognize everyone there. So why was he flipping out over some kid who we know was walking home?
Second, if you can't actually identify the skin color of a person, and you have normal sight, why would you say they're "real suspicious" for "walking around, looking about" and that "[you]'d never seen them before"? In my complex, we get kids like that every day. So what? Zimmerman's description in his reenactment exactly resembles a person watching a car passing by and waiting to cross the street - which makes sense, since the only sidewalk was on the other side of the street.
Third, and this has yet to be explained...We use the word "follow", since the dispatcher used it, but at that point it was a chase. We've heard theories before - like that Martin ran home, sat on his porch, and then got up and ran back to attack Zimmerman (who he last saw sitting in a car), while Zimmerman, who
left his car to run after an unarmed teenager, just decided to give up and go back to his car, despite refusing to give the dispatcher any real clue to where he would be.
As to the claims of assault...of course, any person who had someone jump out of their car and "follow" them, had strong reason to suspect that that person intended harm. And of course, you never want to lead a stalker like that directly to your house, which explains why he stopped well enough. What we've never been given are: Why would Zimmerman would go out of his way to "follow" Martin", and what Martin was doing that would require this.