hoping to be able to provide a decent lifestyle for my family. reporter: decent indeed, because the first painting sold for more than $100,000, but the next painting was priceless for a different reason. angela corey painting, provocative, and i have this much belief in the justice system, and you knew it would be provocative? yes. why do it? it was a creative tangible form to show my inner thoughts, my inner feelings. negative toward angela corey? of course. it provided a tremendous release for me, and so, yes, it was worth it. reporter: and then the fight. the move as confusing as disturbing. the man whose defense at trial was the inability to hold off a teenager was now a prize fighter and willing to take on all comers for charity. reporter: the idea of you fighting is just, you know, the image is bad, and let alone that it might be, like, a black rap
17-year-old? and all the other 17-year-olds out there. they shouldn t have to fear the adults with the guns that are running around shooting them at will. if you throw popcorn in someone s face, they want to shoot you because you threw popcorn in their face. that s what we have come to but we have to stop. those are the parents of jordan davis on good morning america. abc news spoke to one of the jurors in the dunn trial. that juror found done guilty of three counts of attempted murder for firing into a vehicle of teenagers. three jurors believed that dunn was justified in shooting and ultimately killing jordan davis, not juror number four, the one who was talking. she says she agrees with many people in the public who now say michael dunn got away with murder. how could you all convict michael dunn of attempting to kill the other teenagers but not
17-year-old. and all the other 17-year-olds out there. they shouldn t have to fear the adults with the guns that are running around here shooting them at will. one of the jurors in the dunn trial is also speaking out. her name valerie and in an interview with abc she talks about how the jury arrived at its decision and what she personally believes about michael dunn. do you think michael dunn got away with murder? at this point, i do. myself personally, yes. how could you all convict michael dunn of attempting to kill the other teenagers in the car but not convict him of killing the 17-year-old? that is premise sole purpose for being here because reading the social media and people looking at us like we didn t do we had a lot of discussion on him getting out of the car. and the threat has now gone. and your intent is yet to still
17-year-olds out there. they shouldn t have to fear the adults with the guns that are running around here shooting them at will. if you throw popcorn in someone s face, they want to shoot you because you threw popcorn in their face. that s what we have come to. we have to stop. one of the jurors in the dunn trial reveals what happened when they deliberated. at one point, we were all trying to get our point across. scream? oh, yes, sir. profanity? oh, yes, sir. people were passionate about their position. oh, yes, sir. just ahead, more on the jury s opinion of mikchael dunn and the legal view and what this could mean for the retrial on the murder charge. ameriprise asked people a simple question: can you keep your lifestyle in retirement? i don t want to think about the alternative.
there was mystery there. but with the dunn trial, that was an open and shut case. but you say they are the same case. and the root of the case is the fear, again, of the black teen. trayvon martin walking home with skittles and iced tea unarmed. zimmerman sees him thinks he is a thug. a group of black kids in a car playing loud music, they must have a shotgun. if we are being honest these two cases are exactly the same and they are only tied together by the fact that florida has stand your ground. i wanted to ask mark o mara, so many people talking about michael dunn say it s not stand your ground case. in florida every case is a stand your ground case because it is codified in the law.