Pipitone asked how the state can still call it "illegal behavior" when the jury found it was self-defense.
"No, the jury found that we could not prove our case beyond a reasonable doubt," Corey said.
"But he didn't violate the law. He's not a murderer. What is he?" Pipitone asked.
"He is and always will be a man who profiled and tracked an unarmed teenager. He provoked that teenager. What George Zimmerman did after disobeying that dispatcher and getting out of his truck set the entire set of circumstances into motion," Corey said.
"But it wasn't a crime," Pipitone said.
"That alone wasn't a crime.That combined with his mindset, his profiling, him wanting to be the cop, him wanting to apprehend Trayvon, that's what was all against the law,"Corey said.
But the jury didn't appear to see it that way, as the state tried to disprove Zimmerman's claim of self-defense.