[Editor's note: Click the linked text to read the live update summary from that moment in court.]

Neighborhood Watch

The neighborhood watch program was the focus of testimony Tuesday morning, including George Zimmerman’s connection to it.

Testimony from Wendy Dorival, the accreditation manager for the Sanford Police Department, gave a look into how involved Zimmerman was in getting the program going.

She told the court Zimmerman was the coordinator and acted as the liaison for the community to the Sanford Police Department.

The prosecution asked her about a particular slide entitled “Not the vigilante police” from the presentation she gives to start-up neighborhood watch programs.

In cross-examination, when defense attorney Don West asked about the same slide, Dorival said the phrase “eyes and ears” is on the same slide.

Dorival testified that she told participants to call police, even if in doubt, because then they can check it out.

The president of the homeowner’s association for Retreat at Twin Lakes, Don O’Brien, followed.

His testimony touched on the arrest of a burglary suspect in the neighborhood. O’Brien said stucco workers at a home in the complex observed the man, which he had talked to in passing before, walking down the street. He says the workers followed the man at a distance and called police, leading to the his arrest.

When O’Mara asked him to describe the man, he said he was about 17 to 18 years old and black. "He seemed like a real nice guy, I mean he talked to us. I never would've thought anything of it," he added.

Crime scene

After lunch, the testimony transitioned to the crime scene and evidence collected.

Sgt. Anthony Raimondo testified that when he arrived, he tried to perform CPR on Trayvon Martin even though he could not feel a pulse. It was during his testimony that the court first saw graphic photos of Martin’s body.

Next on the stand was Crime Scene Technician Diana Smith, with the Sanford Police Department.

She went over the evidence with Prosecutor John Guy and showed each item to the jury. It was the first showing of the actual items

Martin was carrying that night.

Smith also went over the photographs showing the scene between the houses, the Martin’s body, and Zimmerman’s injuries.

Smith also told the court she is married to the first responding officer from that night.

In cross examination, West showed each picture of Zimmerman’s injuries and asked Smith if she saw them.

The court also saw Zimmerman’s and Martins clothing displayed in large, see-through evidence frames.

The first neighbor witness

Selene Bahadoor, who lived in one of the homes along the scene of the shooting, was the last witness on the stand.

Lead Prosecutor Bernie de la Rionda did the questioning for the first time since witness testimony began.

That night, she heard a noise that sounded like running from “left to right,” she told the court. So, she looked out the kitchen window, but didn’t see anything.

She said she went to the sliding glass door and saw “arms flailing,” and then left the door to turn off the stove. “When I went to take the stove off, that’s when the shot occurred,” Bahadoor said.

When she returned to the door, she said she saw a body.

The description of the noise’s movement was a point of contention for O’Mara in cross-examination. He questioned her about when she ever first said the phrase from “left to right.”

Bahadoor eventually said it was with her sister when it first occurred.

O’Mara also questioned Bahadoor about her Facebook page. O’Mara asked if she had ever clicked “like” a page called “Justice for Trayvon Martin” and if she had ever signed a change.org petition pushing for prosecution of Zimmerman.

"I did 'like.' So saying 'like' means I signed the petition?" she asked O'Mara.

He had her read from a laptop showing her Facebook page and a link to the Change.org petition with the description: "Selene just signed this petition."

"'Prosecute the killer of our son, 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, sign the petition,'" she read.

According to her Facebook profile available online, she did sign the petition.

In re-direct, De la Rionda went over the transcripts O’Mara addressed earlier, which were from her statements given to Investigators

Serino and Batchelor, and her deposition.

He asked if anyone ever asked her before about the direction of the movement. She said no.

De la Rionda also asked Bahadoor if she came forward with any kind of desire to be on TV.

Even though she said no, O’Mara cross-examined again asking her about an interview with a national reporter.

She said the interview was never broadcast and the reporter talked to her for 30 minutes before she said anything.

“I was just saying what I remember,” she said in her last words on the witness stand.