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Trayvon Martin’s killer leaves Florida jail on bail

Neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman (L) leaves the Seminole County Jail after posting bail in Sanford, Florida, April 22, 2012. REUTERS/David Manning

(Reuters) – George Zimmerman, the former neighborhood watch

volunteer charged with second-degree murder in the killing of unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin, was released early on

Monday from a Florida county jail on $150,000 bail.

Wearing a brown jacket, jeans and carrying a brown paper bag, Zimmerman

walked out of the John E. Polk Correctional Facility in Seminole County moments after midnight after posting bail and meeting

other conditions set for his release at a pretrial detention hearing on Friday.

Zimmerman was met by another man and

quickly climbed into a white BMW sports utility vehicle that drove off. He made no comments to a handful of journalists

gathered outside the jail.

Under the conditions set by Judge Kenneth Lester Jr., Zimmerman must wear an electronic

monitoring device and he may be allowed to leave the state. He must also observe a dusk-to-dawn curfew and is prohibited from

consuming illegal drugs or alcohol or possessing a firearm.

No date has been set for Zimmerman’s trial. Due to safety

concerns, his whereabouts are expected to remain a closely guarded secret until his next appearance in

court.

Zimmerman shot and killed Martin is a gated community in Sanford in central Florida on February 26 in an

incident that triggered civil rights protests nationwide and fired a national debate over guns, self-defense laws and race in

America.

Zimmerman, who is white and Hispanic, has said he shot the 17-year-old Martin in self-defense following a

confrontation that occurred as Martin was returning to his father’s house in the community after buying candy from a

convenience store.

Police initially declined to arrest Zimmerman, citing Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law, which

allows people to use deadly force when they believe they are in danger of getting killed or suffering great bodily

harm.

The lack of an arrest led thousands to march in protest rallies in Sanford and across the country. The public

outrage forced the Sanford police chief and regularly assigned prosecutor to step aside.

At the Friday hearing,

Zimmerman apologized to Martin’s family, stunning a rapt courtroom after he appeared in a suit and tie and with shackles

around his waist and wrists.

Governor Rick Scott appointed Angela Corey as special prosecutor. She charged Zimmerman

on April 11.

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