. >> joining us for a closer look is criminal defense attorney and prosecutor joining us from davey floridai thought it was a very, very good case for the prosecution. the reason is just to get right to the point is rarely do you have in a trial a window right in to the head of the defendant and what he was thinking. and we have that window in this case. and that window is after firing not once, not five times, but 10 times at a vehicle as it was pulling away as well, as he is driving away with his fiance, he never tells her, his fiance that there was, in fact, a we hope in the car and that's why he had to fire his gun. >> is huge. >> that's a window into this shooting. >> sarah hoy and i were just talking about the presence or absence of any sort of weapon in the car that the teenagers were riding in. does it matter to the stand-your-ground defense whether there really was a weapon or not, whether it was a gun or a baton or anything else? >> no. actually, it doesn't. unfortunately, the way the law reads in florida, as long as the individu individual, here the defendant, reasonably believed