VOA标准英语2012--US Shooting Case Puts Spotlight on Controversial Law
时间:2012-04-12 06:05:53
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US Shooting Case Puts Spotlight1 on Controversial Law
Neighborhood Watch volunteer George Zimmerman said he shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in self-defense2 during a confrontation3, after calling the police emergency line to report a suspicious person:
Dispatcher: "Are you following him?
Zimmerman: "Yes."
Dispatcher:"Ok, we don't need you to do that."
The case has cast a spotlight on Florida's "Stand Your Ground" law, which gives people the right to protect themselves with deadly force, even outside of their homes.
Zimmerman told police he shot Martin after the teenager punched him and slammed his head on the sidewalk. Authorities did not charge Zimmerman with a crime because of the law.
But former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, who signed the
statute4 in 2005, doesn't think it applies in the Trayvon Martin case.
"'Stand Your Ground' means 'Stand Your Ground.' It doesn't mean chase after somebody who's turned their back," Bush said.
Supporters of the "Stand Your Ground" law said it has reduced violent crime and protects citizens who are trying to defend themselves. Greg Stone favored expanding gun rights laws.
"Its been proven over and over again that it will make it more safe. An armed society is a polite society," said Stone.
Daniel Gross with the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence disagreed, and told members of Congress the law needs close examination.
"In Florida law enforcement authorities do not have the
discretion5 to take away
licenses7 to carry
concealed8 weapons even from those who have killed unarmed people, which occurs with alarming
regularity9 in states like Florida with Stand Your Ground or, more aptly named 'Shoot first, ask questions later', laws," said Gross.
Florida law enforcement data indicate the number of
justifiable10 homicide cases tripled in the first five years the "Stand Your Ground" law was on the books. Florida criminal defense attorney Kendell Coffey via Skype.
"The way it [the Stand Your Ground law] is being
applied11 and the way juries are reacting, it's tantamount to a
license6 to kill anytime the shooter makes a claim of self-defense and there are no
eyewitnesses12 to contradict the shooter's claim," said Coffey.
Former Florida state senator Durell Peaden, who helped craft the law, said it was not meant to allow abuse. "This law says nothing about vigilante type law. It says nothing about following anybody, it says nothing about those premeditated points by carrying a gun when you are following anyone," he said. "Those issues were not addressed and not intended to be addressed in this law."
More than half of all U.S. states have similar laws.
The
controversy13 surrounding them continues to grow. Many of the demonstrators who have taken to the streets since the Trayvon Martin shooting hope lawmakers will take a closer look and take steps to revise them.
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