Earlier this month a Florida task force empaneled by Gov. Rick Scott in the wake of the Trayvon Martin killing determined that the state’s controversial Stand Your Ground laws, which give wide discretion in the use of deadly force, should remain largely intact.
But last week’s killing of Jordan Russell Davis, an unarmed teenager allegedly gunned down by a white gun collector in Jacksonville who said he feared the teen was a gang member, has unleashed fresh anger and renewed scrutiny of the law.
“It’s a shame that just two weeks after a Florida task force decided it didn’t need to do anything substantive to change Shoot First laws, we have another sad example of how conflicts escalate and a young life is lost senselessly,” Ginny Simmons told msnbc.com this afternoon. Simmons is the director of Second Chance on Shoot First, a coalition of elected officials and grassroots organizations that has been critical of stand your ground laws.
Police say Davis, 17, a high-school senior whose teachers described him as “bright” and whose family said he recently began working an afterschool job at McDonald’s, was shot and killed on Friday by Michael Dunn, 45, after an argument over loud music.
Davis is black. Dunn is white. And the racial overtones in the case–an armed white man killing an unarmed black teenager amid questionable claims of self-defense–has drawn comparison to the Martin case, which sparked a national movement calling for Martin’s killer’s arrest and a closer look at the Stand Your Ground laws.
Bishop Rudolph McKissick Jr., of Bethel Baptist Institutional Church in Jacksonville said the black community has reacted with “sadness and anger.”
“Sadness that a young life is taken away, anger at the larger issue: the continued stereotyping of our young African-American men.”
Dunn’s lawyer said that Dunn encountered Davis and three other teens at a Jacksonville gas station, where an argument broke out over the teens’ music. Then, the lawyer claims, Dunn saw the barrel of a shotgun poke from the window of the SUV the teens were sitting in, accompanied by threats and expletives.
Dunn pulled out a pistol. He fired eight shots, police say, two of which struck Davis, who was sitting in the backseat. None of the other teens in the car were injured, but Davis was pronounced dead soon after the shooting.
According to reports, Dunn and his girlfriend then stayed the night at a local hotel, before fleeing some 175 miles south to Dunn’s home in Satellite Beach where he was later arrested and charged with murder and attempted murder. The police said no weapons were found in the teens’ vehicle.
Dunn has pleaded not guilty and is being held without bond. “When all the evidence has been flushed out, I believe that it will be extremely clear that Mr. Dunn acted as any responsible firearm-owner would have under the same circumstances,” Dunn’s lawyer, Robin Lemonidis, said in an interview with CNN.
In recent years Davis had moved from Georgia, where his mother lives, to be with his father in Jacksonville. At a prayer vigil held for Davis this week, Ron Davis, the teen’s father, called his son’s killer “a coward,” according to a local news report.
“I don’t know what went on in that car and I don’t know what the kids or what he said to Jordan,” Lucia McBath, the teen’s mother, told First Coast News, an NBC affiliate in Jacksonville. “It doesn’t matter. You shot him over some music? And he was in the car and there’s no logical reason. There’s nothing logical you can say that would make me believe that you were threatened.”
She continued:
“We don’t know where he was or what kind of dark place he was in at that moment but something snapped in that man,” she said, referring to Dunn. “Something snapped in him, so we are not looking at it as a hate crime because that’s not going to honor Jordan.”
The Davis case echoed the killing of Trayvon Martin, the unarmed Miami teen who was shot and killed by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman in a gated community in Sanford in February. Zimmerman told police he shot Martin in self-defense, and the police declined to arrest him, citing his rights under the state’s Stand Your Ground Law.
Zimmerman was arrested 44 days later and charged with second-degree murder after a national outcry.









