April 14, 2012
Judge could step down in Trayvon Martin case
The Associated Press
Circuit Judge Jessica Recksiedler holds a status hearing Friday, in Sanford, Fla., in the second-degree murder case against neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman. Attorneys are asking for a bond hearing next Friday and for the judge to remove herself from the case because her husband is a member of a law firm whose founder is a legal analyst on television. Zimmerman has been charged in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin on Feb. 26, in Sanford.
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SANFORD, Fla. -- A day after being assigned the George Zimmerman murder case, Circuit Judge Jessica Recksiedler announced a possible conflict of interest that could force her withdrawal.

Her husband is a partner at the law firm of Mark NeJame, who has been hired by CNN to provide analysis for the case, one of the most racially charged in the country.

The judge made the disclosure Friday, saying Zimmerman's attorney or the special prosecutor might want her to step down.

No one has made that request yet, but Zimmerman's attorney, Mark O'Mara, said he might do so next week. If he does, she's almost certain to step aside.

NeJame acknowledged that Zimmerman called his office March 15, saying he needed a lawyer. NeJame declined, he said, largely because he has daughters ages 4 and 6, and several other businesses.

Two weeks later, he signed a contract with CNN, he said. Then, earlier this week, when Zimmerman inquired again through a friend, NeJame said he recommended O'Mara.

The judge's husband, Jason Recksiedler, is a partner at NeJame's firm, heading the personal-injury section, NeJame said.

If Jessica Recksiedler steps aside, Zimmerman's bond hearing, which was scheduled for April 20, likely will be rescheduled.

The defendant is being held without bond in the Seminole County jail, charged with second-degree murder.

He's the Neighborhood Watch volunteer who killed Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black 17-year-old, on Feb. 26 as the high-school junior walked through Zimmerman's gated community.

Zimmerman told police he fired in self-defense after Trayvon attacked him. He's expected to defend himself using Florida's "stand your ground" law, which says a defendant is allowed to use deadly force if he has a reasonable fear of death or great bodily injury.

Recksiedler has had recent experience with that law. Two weeks before Trayvon's death, she dismissed an aggravated-assault case against a 45-year-old Oviedo man after a "stand your ground" hearing.

Michael David Adkinson shot and wounded his neighbor, Raul Castro Rosa, on May 18. According to court records, after an argument, Rosa banged on Adkinson's front door and window, went into the garage and banged on the interior door so hard that he left dents.

Adkinson then opened the door after having picked up a small handgun. Rosa saw it, charged him, broke a crutch over his head and tackled him, records say.

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