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1:16 PM / Thursday April 18, 2024

23 Dec 2012

Jordan Davis’ father Ron Davis wants Florida’s ‘Stand Your Ground’ law repealed

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December 23, 2012 Category: Philly NAACP Posted by:

ABOVE PHOTO: Ron Davis, the father of Jordan Davis is embraced as he arrives at the funeral home for the visitation and a memorial service for his son
Jordan, Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2012 in Jacksonville, Fla. Michael David Dunn has been charged with fatally shooting Davis outside a Jacksonville convenience
store following an argument that was triggered because the music coming from the teen’s car was too loud.

(AP Photo/The Florida Times-Union, Bob Self)

first coast news

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — “I never dreamt being that, I’m 59 years old, that my son would go before me … It’s so heartbreaking,” said Ron Davis, the father of
17-year-old Jordan Davis, who was slain in a shooting Nov. 23.

Wearing a T-shirt with his son’s picture on it that says “Kill Guns, Not Kids,” Ron Davis said he is staying positive and focused four days after laying
his son to rest. He is organizing a candlelight vigil that will be held at Friendship Fountain on Saturday, December 15th.

While he continues to grieve the loss of his son, he is encouraging Jordan’s schoolmates and the entire community to get involved and stay positive.

“If the community stands together, they can stop some of this violence. Every day, we read about violence and at some point, we have to take a stand and
say ‘I don’t want to read about it anymore.’ I want it to stop happening and that’s what my job on earth is to do,” Davis said.

His focus now: changing the laws to make it illegal to carry guns in public and getting Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” Law repealed. The law allows the use
of deadly force if someone fears death or great bodily harm.

“It’s too much gray area,” Davis said. “I want that taken out of the law books. I know that’s an uphill battle. That’s OK. I’m a fighter, so I’ll fight to
have that law taken out of the state of Florida and once it is taken out of the state of Florida, we will go to other states and get that out of other
states also.”

17-year-old Jordan Davis was shot on Black Friday just after 7:30 PM at a Gate gas station on Southside Boulevard while he sat in a car with three friends.
Police say 45-year-old Michael Dunn, who is charged with his murder and remains behind bars, got into an argument with the teens over their loud music.
Jordan’s death has made news around the nation and while many say it was a racial hate crime, Davis disagrees.


PHOTO: In this photo is Michael David Dunn, 45, who is charged with murder and attempted murder in the Nov. 23 shooting at a Jacksonville, Fla., gas
station. Dunn parked beside a sport utility vehicle 17-year-old Jordan Davis was riding in with three other young men and told them to turn the music down,
police said. Dunn exchanged words with Davis, who was in the back seat, and started firing, later telling police he felt threatened.

(AP Photo/Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office)

“I just think if there were Irish kids or Italian kids in the car, it really didn’t matter,” Ron Davis said. “This was a crime of anger, and there was
handgun available for him to use. For him to even just pick up a handgun and point it at teenagers, just to point it would be so outrageous. Let alone
firing eight shots or more at teenagers that were trying to get away from him at that point, so I believe it was a crime of having the availability of a
handgun.”

Dunn’s attorney Robin Lemonidis claims her client saw one of the teens flash a shotgun and said he fired because he felt threatened for his life. Police
say Jordan and his friends were not armed. While Davis said he doesn’t want revenge, he does want answers.

“I just want to stand face-to-face with him and have him tell me the real reason, without his lawyers, without the cameras, without microphones or
anything, just tell me between me and him what was the reason in his mind he felt he had to shoot my son and take my son’s life,” Davis said. “I want him
to tell me that. Anything else that goes on as far as this case, that’s up to the authorities and the final authority is God. That’s the final authority
and he’s going to realize that.”

Many have drawn comparisons of Jordan Davis’ case to the Trayvon Martin case, another 17-year-old shot to death in Florida earlier this year.

Davis said while he thinks the cases are very different, he has been in touch with Trayvon’s father.

“He texted his prayers and his condolences to me and I texted him back and said ‘perhaps our children because they were around the same age they are
probably forever linked together,’” Davis said. “I said ‘the situation is different but I understand how people are linking the guys,’ and they actually
kind of look like each other if you really look at them but how it’s linked together and I gave him the condolences of my family and I’m going to keep up
with his case also.”

While Davis now only has memories and pictures of his son, he wants to make sure Jordan is never forgotten.

“I’m going to do something that brings my child the love and the respect that he deserves and that’s the legacy he is going to leave is that he did
something to unite and to bring about community activism. Everybody is going to be active in this, you know. Not just let this happen to our community,”
Ron Davis said.

Update: Accused shooter of Fla. teen Jordan Davis dumped by attorneys

first coast news

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The two attorneys who were representing Michael Dunn, the man charged with the murder of 17-year-old Jordan Davis, tell First Coast
News they are no longer representing Dunn.

Robin Lemonidis and Mitch Stone said Monday that Dunn’s family has hired West Palm Beach attorney Cory Strolla to represent Dunn.

While it is not known if he will use the “Stand Your Ground” law in Dunn’s defense, Davis’ mother is fighting to get the law repealed.

Lucia McBath is trying to get 25,000 signatures on an online petition by January 1, 2013 to “Declare ‘Stand Your Ground’ laws illegal in accordance with
federal law. Require states amend laws to match federal law.” White House staff will review the petition and issue an official response if 25,000 people
sign it.

“We don’t have to stand by and watch more people be affected and more people dying because of it,” said McBath.

McBath doesn’t want any other family to have to go through the devastating pain that she is experiencing. Davis, her only child, died after being shot
during an argument at a Southside gas station that police say started over loud music.

Dunn’s former attorney Lemonidis previously said her client acted in self-defense when he felt threatened for his life. She claimed Dunn saw someone in the
car Jordan was in flash a shotgun. Police said Jordan and his friends were not armed.

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