Stand Your Ground?

895 Words2 Pages

There has been much publicity surrounding the shooting death of Trayvon Martin; an unarmed 17-year-old Florida youth shot to death by a neighborhood watch patrolman. On March 19, 2012, The Miami Herald published an editorial that further fueled the flames of racial discrimination and depicted the law enforcement authorities that handled the situation as incompetent. This editorial leads off with, "Law enforcement authorities in the Seminole County community of Sanford have a lot of explaining to do...", follows with, "police Chief Bill Lee vows to follow the evidence, but his department's words and actions up to now only serve to raise more doubts about the investigation" (Miami Herald editorial).

The main problem with this editorial is the racial overtone it elicits. "The victim was black; the shooter is not (Miami Herald editorial)." The tension and the outcries not only in the community, the state, and even national news are becoming more heated daily. All of this does not benefit the pursuit of the truth in this tragic story. Painting this strictly as black versus white, and then suggesting the police department was impartial will only further divide this community and possibly lead to more unrest between the races. There are many unanswered questions, but depicting this solely on an ethnic card does no justice in answering them.

At the center, of the controversy surrounding the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin is a Florida law that changed America's definition of self-defense. Florida has a "stand your

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ground" law that allows residents to use deadly force to protect themselves no matter where they are. This event is proof that this law goes too far, but yet in this article it is not ment...

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...ommunity on bringing a change to the law. Presently, they are dividing the community by race. The bigotry and prejudices have no place in this debate. Abolishing this law is the place to start.

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Works Cited

Yamiche Alcindor, Marisol Bello and Kevin Johnson. "Florida case reignites debate over stand-

your-ground laws." USA Today. 21 March 2012. Web. 22 March 2012.

Curtis, Henry Pierson. "Stand Your Ground Law: What's Legal." Orlando Sentinel. 17 March

2012. Web. 22 March 2012.

Miami Herald Editorial. "Dead teen's family deserves answers." The Miami Herald. 19 March

2012. Web. 21 March 2012.

Pearson, Michael. "Florida shooting renews debate over 'stand your ground' laws." CNN. 21

March 2012. Web. 21 March 2012.

Schultz, Randy. "Review 'castle doctrine' law." The Palm Beach Post. 21 March 2012. Web.

21 March 2012.

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