The public now has somewhat of a look at four of the 21 profiled potential jurors in the George Zimmerman Trial.  The first was brought in Monday afternoon and each of the people given nicknames in relation to their potential juror number.

B12 – A white woman who works the third shift at her job.  She told attorney’s she does not watch a lot of TV but has heard of the trial.  She’s familiar with shows like “CSI” and says she wants to keep an “open mind” and does not have a pre-determined opinion of the trial.   “B12” told the attorneys she has heard of George Zimmerman’s wife and remembers she and George had raised money from donations to pay their bills a remembers seeing a photo of Trayvon Martin in a hoodie.

B29 – A married female third-shift worker who has five children and moved to Seminole County from Chicago four months ago.  Says she never paid attention to the news and doesn’t always believe it.  She watches a lot of reality TV.   A 4-6 week trial may be a problem if she was sequestered because although her husband is supportive she doesn’t know if she would be emotionally tough enough to be.  “B29” says she has seen t-shirts and photos of Trayvon Martin and assumed he was 12 or 13 years old.  She told the attorneys she has friends who have already took sides in the case but she has not.

B30 – A 65 year old white male.  Started off with a joke when the attorneys said that he is juror B30 and he said he’d rather “be 30 than be 65” – a comment that got a chuckle from George Zimmerman and most of the courtroom.  B30 says he does not watch TV because it is “too negative” nor has he done research about the case because he’s “not tech-savvy.”  Played in a band for 20 years and that’s why he says his hearing is bad.

B76 – A white woman who says she remembers a gun involved from watching the news.  Says her family is very open-minded and has lived in Seminole County since 1981.  B76 does not have cable television or access to national newscasts.  She has discussed the case with relatives but that hasn’t lead for her to make a decision or personal judgment yet adding she can keep an open-mind and disregard what the media says.  She told the attorneys she was aware when Zimmerman was arrested and saw spokespeople from both sides on the news.

A pool for 500 people was summoned but 21 will be interviewed in court for about 30 minutes each.  That group of 21 will be whittled down to six which will then be the seated jury.

Jury selection is scheduled to begin again at 9 a.m. Tuesday.