Hot on the heels of his latest charges, Shellie Zimmerman -- the soon-to-be ex-wife of the infamous George Zimmerman -- gave an interview in which she said that her estranged husband has "snapped" since the Trayvon Martin trial. 

"I like to think I married a person who was a good person, and going through the past year and a half, I don't know how that changes a person, or how a person's spirit breaks, but it certainly seems that's what happened to him," she told Katie Couric (via USA Today). "I haven't seen him in a couple months, but it certainly seems like something snapped in his spirit." 

Zimmerman, who is currently awaiting trial for a brutal attack on his pregnant girlfriend (an attack which included him brandishing an AK-47 in her face), was acquitted of murder in July, and has been in trouble ever since. But according to UPI, Shellie said that despite George's rash of bad behavior, he wasn't like that when they got married in 2007. "We were great friends, and I thought he was a wonderful person. That's why I married him," she said.

She also admits that she was "selfish" when she refused to file charges against Zimmerman after he attacked her and threatened her father. And even though she says that her estranged husband is "not a racist," nor does she believe that he deliberately killed Trayvon Martin that fateful night, she did express some doubts about his motives and actions, and she regrets defending him during the trial.

"I do wish that the night before when I had left ... that he had just let me go and didn't call me back into his life and that I didn't play the role I played as a supportive wife," she said. "Because my life would be very different now."