Story highlights
The group is racially, regionally, and professionally diverse, the lieutenant governor says
The author of the "stand your ground" law is on the task force, she says
The group will hear from citizens through public testimony
Florida authorities have picked 17 people to tackle a heated question brought on by the killing of unarmed teenager Trayvon Martin: whether the state’s “stand your ground law” should be changed.
The task force, whose membership was announced Thursday, will hear impassioned arguments and testimony from residents at public meetings across the state. Its first meeting is set for May 1 in Tallahassee.
“We’re not walking into this with any preconceived notions,” Gov. Rick Scott said at a news conference. If there are “logical changes to be made,” he said, the task force “will provide those.”
It will pass along recommendations to the governor and the Legislature.
The task force will review Florida Statutes Title 46, Chapter 776, which deals with justifiable use of force – including the “stand your ground” provision, which allows people to use deadly force when they feel a reasonable threat of death or serious injury. Critics and defenders of the law have argued over just what it allows, when it applies and whether it achieves its intended effect.
The law allows people to use deadly force when they feel a reasonable threat of death or serious injury. Critics and defenders of the law have argued over just what it allows, when it applies and whether it achieves its intended effect.
George Zimmerman, 28, a neighborhood watch volunteer, fatally shot Martin on February 26. He has said the killing was in self-defense.
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It is unclear how the stand your ground law may ultimately play out in his case. But the debate over the law’s intent and its effect has already triggered a nationwide uproar.
Lt. Gov. Jennifer Carroll, who is leading the Task Force on Citizens Safety and Protection, said the “highly qualified” group includes people from “many different points of view” who are “racially, regionally and professionally diverse.”
Officials hope the task force will complete its work by the time of the state’s next legislative session, so changes could be made then, she said. A member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, Michael Yaki of San Francisco, said last week that he will ask that agency to investigate such laws.
There are no representatives from the National Rifle Association on the task force, Carroll said in response to a question. But the task force will hear from people on various sides of the issue at public events throughout the state.
She said the government did not reach out to people to join the task force, but rather considered people who had contacted officials and said they wanted to be a part of it.
“We’re going to engage the entire state of Florida to tell us the pros and cons, how they feel about these laws,” said the Rev. R.B. Holmes Jr., who is serving as vice chairman.
Officials announced a new website, flgov.com/citizensafety, which will offer updates and give residents resources to share their views.
Florida’s crime rate is at a 40-year low, and “I want to keep it that way,” Scott said. “If there’s laws that are impacting that, where people don’t feel comfortable, I want to know about it.”
The list of 17 task force members includes a sheriff, a former Florida Supreme Court justice and a leader of the League of United Latin American Citizens. Both Carroll and Holmes are African-American.
Trayvon Martin was African-American; Zimmerman is Latino. Questions of whether race played a role in the incident have been prominent in the uproar over the case.
Officials hope the task force will complete its work by the time of the state’s next legislative session, so changes could be made then, she said.
A member of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, Michael Yaki of San Francisco, said last week he will ask that agency to investigate such laws.
CNN’s Kelly Frank and Matt Smith contributed to this report.