A couple of questions to consider in the Jordan Davis murder by Michael Dunn:
How does a jury convict of attempted murder charges (which it did) and fail to convict on murder charges (which it did not), when there is a dead body of the atttemptee in the room bleeding on the floor?
If a black man in Florida, or anywhere else, shot with deadly force into a car filled of unarmed white boys, how many minutes would it take to deliberate his fate--if he were lucky enough to make it court?
How does a jury convict of attempted murder charges (which it did) and fail to convict on murder charges (which it did not), when there is a dead body of the atttemptee in the room bleeding on the floor?
If a black man in Florida, or anywhere else, shot with deadly force into a car filled of unarmed white boys, how many minutes would it take to deliberate his fate--if he were lucky enough to make it court?
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