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Supreme Court rejects appeal in racially tinged murder of Jordan Davis in Jacksonville

Michael Dunn shot and killed the teen over a dispute about loud music in 2012.
Credit: Florida Times-Union
Michael Dunn (Photo: Jacksonville.com)

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Florida Supreme Court on Monday refused to take up an appeal by a man convicted in the high-profile shooting death of a teen in a Jacksonville convenience-store parking lot in 2012.

Michael Dunn took the case to the Supreme Court in December after the 1st District Court of Appeal ruled against him in the murder of 17-year-old Jordan Davis. As is common, justices did not explain their reasons Monday for declining to take up the case.

The murder drew national media coverage and came amid increased scrutiny of the deaths of young black men. Dunn is white, while Davis was black. The shooting came after Davis and three friends stopped at a Gate convenience store and Dunn pulled into an adjacent parking space. The teens were listening to loud music, and Dunn asked them to turn it down.

Dunn and Davis exchanged words, and Dunn fired repeatedly into the Dodge Durango that carried the teens.

RELATED: Web Extra: Timeline Davis death/Dunn trial

At the appeals court, Dunn contended, in part, that he had received “ineffective assistance of counsel” during his trial. As an example, Dunn argued that his lawyer was ineffective for failing to hire an expert to examine audio from the convenience store’s surveillance video, but the appeals court rejected the argument.

Read more from our news partners, The Florida Times-Union.

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