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Thursday, April 9, 2026

Sanford Residents Worried About Their City’s Future

Sanford, Fla. residents are worried about impact of George Zimmerman’s not guilty verdict on their city. Photo/Duane Fernandez/The Florida Courier.
Sanford, Fla. residents are worried about impact of George Zimmerman’s not guilty verdict on their city. Photo/Duane Fernandez/The Florida Courier.

By James Harper

Special to the NNPA from the Florida Courier

SANFORD, FLA. – Now that George Zimmerman has been found not guilty and the  news media are packing to leave Sanford, residents are concerned about the  future of their city and the lives of other Black teens who may be walking their  streets and are killed on their way home.

While being interviewed at the Goldsboro Community Center in Sanford awaiting  the Zimmerman verdict July 12, Don Brown asked the Florida Courier, “Where do we  go after this is over? When the news media blows over? Two, three, five years  down the road, are we going to go back to business as usual?”

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Sanford resident Brown was on “verdict watch” with many other community  members at the local center, and said there was no winner after the verdict.

“I would have been scared too, because of the system that exists,” Brown  said, adding that now is the time to discuss the racial issues that exist in  this community of approximately 50,000 – with a 30 percent Black population.

Brown said there are divisions between Blacks and Whites, and it upsets him  when he hears Whites don’t want to talk about the mistreatment of Blacks  historically.

“Slavery was part of our history. Jews don’t let you forget about the  Holocaust,” he declared.

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Sanford resident Cheryl Smith, a retired correction officer, was also at the  Goldsboro Center on verdict watch. She reflected on the jury’s decision.

“It could have been a child coming from church, school. Zimmerman should have  exercised caution, asked some pertinent questions. Problems have been existing  (in Sanford). No one was surprised what happened (to Trayvon). (This) city is  governed by some, for some,” Smith noted.

James Davis, 65, a retired insurance adjuster, said what happened to Martin  since he was shot was “part of a government breakdown.”

“We went to the mayor, to the city manager, to get charges brought. We  pursued issues in a logical manner. Police refused to arrest Zimmerman. The  state attorney refused to bring charges. We had to go public (to get Zimmerman  arrested),” Davis said. (Former Police Chief) Bill Lee would not have had  Zimmerman face any charges.

“We have a new Black police chief and a Black city manager because of a  history of injustice,” said Davis, noting that City Manager Norton Bonaparte was  hired two years ago and Police Chief Cecil Smith, who replaced Lee, was hired to  reduce tension in the city after pressure was applied from local Black  leaders.

Davis said they are still working on getting more Blacks hired to work for  the city.

“We don’t have jobs representing the city’s Black population in our city’s  work force,” he said.

“I always thought Zimmerman should have been charged with manslaughter. We  still don’t know if George Zimmerman pulled his gun (before being on the  ground). Zimmerman was never drug-tested. We only have the version (of events)  of the killer,” Davis concluded.

Tina Eudell, a victim service advocate, is worried about her grandson who is  16.

“He could be treated like Trayvon because he is Black. If the law doesn’t  change, they are not going to change. Self-defense is a big lie. Trayvon had to  defend himself,” said Eudell.

William Taylor, a retired Seminole County school teacher, says the “good old  boys” in Sanford have to be brought down.

“Unfair treatment has to end. He (Zimmerman) profiled him, stalked him,  killed him. We have been going through this for years. Killing Black boys and  beating them before they get to the county jail,” he said.

“The same thing happening here is happening everywhere else.”

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