After a Florida man Michael Dunn, asked a group of teens at a gas station to lower their loud music that was blaring from their car, an exchange of words were said which leaded into him shooting and killing Jordan Davis, a 17-year-old boy…for the full story click below.

Mickey

Michael Dunn, 45, of Satellite Beach, has been charged with murder for the Friday slaying of Jordan Davis, 17, a black high school student from the Jacksonville area.
His lawyer said Dunn, who is white, thought he saw a gun and felt threatened during the incident, indicating that he may seek protection under the state’s controversial Stand Your Ground Law, according to local reports.
“Self defense applies because Mr. Dunn was threatened,” attorney Robin Lemonidis told CNN.
“We can’t say what the defense will be at this stage … but Stand Your Ground is a possibility.”
The alleged murder occurred on Friday as Dunn and his girlfriend were traveling to Jacksonville for his son’s wedding, the Orlando Sentinel reported.
The pair pulled into a gas station parking lot and stopped next to an SUV, which Davis was sitting in with three other teens, authorities said.
While his girlfriend was inside the store, Dunn asked the teens to turn down the loud music they were playing, cops said.
Davis said something back and there was a heated exchange, authorities said.
Dunn then pulled a gun and fired at least eight shots, hitting Davis twice, cops told the Sentinel.
Dunn and his girlfriend then left the scene.
The Sentinel said the two were staying in a Jacksonville hotel on Saturday when they heard news reports about the teen’s death and drove back to his home in Satellite Beach.
He was arrested at his home on Saturday and charged with murder and attempted murder.
He remains in jail after being denied bond on Monday.
No guns were found inside the teens’ car, authorities said.
Davis’ family demanded justice, saying there was no way Dunn fired in self-defense.
“He did something that there was no defense for,” Ron David, Jordan’s father, told CNN.
The shooting immediately drew comparisons to the murder of Trayvon Martin in February, which sparked protests over Florida’s self defense laws and accusations that George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer who shot him, was a racist.