Leading bidder ‘Racist McShootFace’ has account deleted after online auction on website for United Gun Group appears to be hijacked

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Bidding in an online auction for the pistol that George Zimmerman used to kill Trayvon Martin appears to have been hijacked by fake accounts posting astronomically high bids.



At one point early on Friday, the bidding surpassed $65m with the leading bidder using the screen name “Racist McShootFace”. The site later showed that account had been deleted.

The website for United Gun Group began hosting the auction on Thursday after another website, GunBroker.com, took down the auction saying it wanted “no part in the listing on our website or in any of the publicity it is receiving”.

Hours later, United Gun Group tweeted that it would post Zimmerman’s ad. The new link was posted, along with a statement from Zimmerman. The site calls itself a “social market place for the firearms community”.

Bidding on the 9mm Kel-Tec PF-9 pistol began at $5,000.

Critics called the auction an insensitive move to profit from the killing.

Zimmerman had told Orlando TV station WOFL that the pistol was returned to him by the US justice department, which took it after he was acquitted in 2013 of the second-degree murder of Trayvon.

Zimmerman’s listing said a portion of the proceeds would go toward fighting what he calls violence by the Black Lives Matter movement against law enforcement officers, combating anti-gun rhetoric of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and ending the career of state attorney Angela Corey, who led Zimmerman’s prosecution.

The listing ended with a Latin phrase that translates as “if you want peace, prepare for war”.

Zimmerman, now 32, has said he was defending himself when he killed Trayvon, an unarmed black 17-year-old, in a gated community near Orlando. Trayvon, who lived in Miami with his mother, was visiting his father at the time.

Zimmerman, who identifies as Hispanic, was acquitted in Trayvon’s February 2012 shooting death. The case sparked protests and a national debate about race relations. The justice department later decided not to prosecute Zimmerman on civil rights charges.