MIAMI: A Florida man who fatally shot a black teenager during an argument over loud music was sentenced yesterday to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Michael Dunn, a 47-year-old white man, was convicted October 1 of first-degree murder in the death of Jordan Davis, 17, in November 2012.
The case has been widely followed in the United States, which has been rocked by a series of racially tinged shooting incidents in recent years. “I truly regret what happened,” Dunn said in a short statement he read to Davis’s family in court.
“If I could roll back time and do things differently I would. ... Still, I’m mortified I took a life.”
At his trial, Dunn said he approached a group of teens in a sports utility vehicle and asked them to turn down their music, but they refused.
Dunn said he feared for his life when one teenager started to get out of the car and approach him. Dunn pulled a pistol out of his glove box and opened fire.
“To lose a child is a parent’s worst nightmare,” Judge Russell Healey said prior to sentencing, according to The Florida Times-Union. “Mr Dunn, your life is effectively over. What is sad is that this case seems to exemplify that our society seems to have lost its way.”
In addition to the life sentence, Davis was also sentenced to 105 years for having shot at the three other teenagers.
At his trial, the software engineer testified he kept firing as the teens’ car drove away, saying he was afraid that he or his fiancee — who had rushed out of the gas station shop when she heard the shots — might get hit by returning fire.
“He wasn’t shooting at the tires. He wasn’t shooting at the windows. He was shooting to kill, aiming at Jordan Davis,” prosecutor Erin Wolfson said during closing arguments.
AFP