JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Closing arguments are underway in the first-degree murder trial of a man who fatally shot a teenager after an argument about loud music outside a Jacksonville convenience store.
Michael Dunn is on trial in Jacksonville for the shooting death of 17-year-old Jordan Davis in November 2012.
Dunn took the stand and gave his version of events the night he fired his gun into an SUV full of teens.
"I heard snips of things. What I heard was 'I should (expletive) kill that (expletive)," Dunn said.
It was the second time Dunn has testified in his own defense.
Watch Live: Michael Dunn murder retrial
In February, Dunn was convicted on three counts of attempted murder, but jurors were deadlocked on the murder charge filed against him.
Prosecutors said the shooting began as a dispute over loud music.
In his retrial, Dunn appeared more emotional, at times wiping away tears when he testified about learning that Davis had died.
He gave similar testimony to that he gave at his previous trial, saying Davis threatened him, pulled out a shotgun and started moving toward him.
"I said you're not going to kill me, you son-of-a-bitch, and I fired my weapon," Dunn told jurors.
By midafternoon, both sides had rested.
During their closing arguments, prosecutors told jurors that no shotgun was found. They said the teens were unarmed. According to prosecutors, three of the 10 bullets fired by Dunn struck Davis.
"Jordan R. Davis didn't stand a chance," prosecutor Erin Wolfson said.
During the trial, the defense has argued that the weapon could have been dumped when the teens left the parking lot, and that Dunn was justified in shooting if he believed his life was in danger.
"Mr. Dunn didn't shoot Jordan Davis because his music was too loud, or because Jordan Davis disrespected him. He shot him because he threatened his life and seemed like he was going to act on it," said defense attorney Waffa Hanania.