She just can’t seem to stop herself…. even now. “He wants more”? Really Rene? Really?

Bond Hearing Held For Trayvon Martin Shooter George ZimmermanORLANDO –  George Zimmerman, the Neighborhood Watch volunteer who killed Trayvon Martin, plans to ask the state of Florida to cover $200,000 to $300,000 of his legal expenses, his attorney told the Orlando Sentinel Monday evening.
Because Zimmerman was acquitted, state law requires Florida to pay all his legal costs, minus the biggest one: the fee that goes to his lawyers.
That includes the cost of expert witnesses, travel, depositions, photocopies, even that animated 3-D video that defense attorneys showed jurors during closing argument that depicts Trayvon punching Zimmerman.
Defense attorney Mark O’Mara said Monday that he would soon prepare a motion, asking Circuit Judge Debra S. Nelson to authorize the payments.
That motion, he said “is in the works.”
His office is still collecting numbers, he said, but estimated the request would total $200,000 to $300,000.
That would be on top of the estimated $902,000 that public agencies have already spent on Zimmerman’s five-week second-degree murder trial that ended July 13.
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[…] For months leading up to the trial, Zimmerman lived in hiding, had no job and lived off donations to his legal defense fund. At one point, he tried to pump up giving by promising each donor a hand-written, signed thank you note.
Although, O’Mara said several times in the months leading up to the trial that defense funds were so low, he might ask the judge to declare Zimmerman indigent, and thus, require the state to pay his legal bills, that never happened.
This upcoming motion, however, would have the same effect.
It would be based on Florida Statute 939.06, which says that a defendant who has been acquitted is not liable for any costs associated with his case and if he’s paid any, he’s due a refund, if approved by a judge or clerk.
The money would come from the Judicial Administrative Commission, the state agency that pays the non-lawyer legal expenses of indigent defendants.
O’Mara said he would ask the judge to certify the costs he submits then expects the commission, which is commonly referred to as JAC, to challenge many.
“That’s where the fight is,” he said.
O’Mara has been paid nothing by Zimmerman, said the defense attorney who bills at a rate of $400 an hour, but he has kept billing records.
O’Mara gave a ballpark estimate of the number of hours he had worked on the case: 40 hours a week for 16 months.
At $400-an-hour, he would be owed slightly more than $1 million.
That does not include any of the work done by co-counsel Don West, who bills at $350 an hour, or O’Mara’s partner, Lorna Truett.  (FULL ARTICLE)

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