BrownWatch

View Original

Could a Non-white person Kill an Unarmed White person & then be released from custody? White Man who Killed Retreating Latino Man Out on Bail

Don't Blame the Gun. Just as the white media has labelled/tagged George Zimmerman as the "neighborhood watch volunteer" in every single story, the white media has already began to spin this psychopath as a "Vietnam veteran" and "Church volunteer" to excuse or mitigate against this racist suspect's conduct. 

From [HEREPhillip Walker Sailors, the white man who shot and killed 22-year-old Rodrigo Diaz (b/c he was not white) for pulling in to his driveway is out on bail. Phillip Walker Sailors, 69, of Lilburn, was released after posting $11,200 bond, according to Gwinnett County jail records. Sailors was arrested Sunday afternoon and charged with murder in the death of Rodrigo Diaz of Duluth. (The Zimmerman Rule: Every day many non-whites are held pre-trial for non-violent misdemeanors in Courts all over the country [MORE].)

Don't Blame the Driveway. Friends of Diaz said he pulled into the driveway after his GPS directions led him to believe that was his friends house. Sailors allegedly came out of the home with a gun and fired a shot that struck Diaz in the head. Diaz died early Sunday following surgery at Gwinnett Medical Center.

"The guy came out. He went in again. And he came out with a gun in his and he shot to the air," Jason Jimenez, 15, told Channel 2 Action News. Another passenger in the car, Angie Rebolledo said that he was trying to speed away after Sailors fired one shot.

The three friends, had pulled into Sailors’ driveway by mistake, thinking it was the home of another friend. The group had planned to go ice skating. She was sitting next to her boyfriend in the front seat when he was struck in the side of the head. After he shot Diaz, the 69-year-old white man pointed the gun at her. As she tended to Diaz, she said Sailors showed no remorse and offered no assistance.

According to ColorLines, Phillips Sailors’ lawyers may be gearing up to use Georgia’s “stand your ground law” as part of their defense. Sailors believed someone was attempting to break into his house and feared for his life, his attorney has said.