George Zimmerman retweeted pictures of the dead body of Florida teen Trayvon Martin after someone sent him the photo under the boastful caption, "Z-Man is a one man army."

The New York Daily News reports Zimmerman quickly sent the graphic pics out to all his roughly 11,000 Twitter followers. The photos were used as evidence in the high-profile 2013 trial where Zimmerman was acquitted of all wrongdoing. He had been charged with the murder of unarmed black teen Trayvon Martin. The photo shows Martin's body lying on the grass as investigators stand over it.

Zimmerman's action instantly drew the ire and disgust of many, including from rap star Talib Kweli, who took to Twitter to express his discontent.

By Sunday, Twitter had deleted both posts, but the accounts of Zimmerman and his apparent admirers remained active.

By Monday morning, he had attached a picture of President Obama to the tweet, "If I had a race baiting President, He would look like this."

Not long before that, Zimmerman took on a Twitter by writing, "We all know how it ended for the last moron that hit me. Give it a whirl cupcake."

This isn't the first time Zimmerman has used social media to give voice to some of his most controversial and divisive rhetoric. Over the last several months, Zimmerman has also charged Virginia live TV shooter Vester Flanagan was "too much of a daisy to deal w/ racism," and branded the president a "Racist."

Just over a month ago, he also began using the Confederate flag as his Twitter profile photo after he painted a Confederate battle flag and publicly dedicated it to an anti-Muslim Florida gun shop owner.

Zimmerman became a household number after he gunned down 17-year-old Martin just steps away from the home of his father. Zimmerman later admitted that he confronted the teen after he spotted him wearing his hoodie in the rain and thought he looked suspicious.