Michael Giles
A
former U.S. airman is currently sitting in a Florida prison for what his
supporters argue was a simple act of self-defense.
Just
two years into a 25-year sentence, he joins a list of cases that have drawn
national attention to the Sunshine State’s sentencing and gun laws. Encouraged
by the activity, his family is hoping to stir up interest in his case and is
currently petitioning Florida’s governor for clemency.
In
the spring of 2010, 26-year-old Michael Giles was on active duty with the
Unites States Air Force and stationed in Tampa. The married father of three had
recently finished two tours in the Middle East and was looking forward to a
career in the military, says his family. One night in February, a friend
invited Giles to party at a Tallahassee nightclub. Shorty after arriving, a
fight broke out among members of fraternities from nearby Florida A&M
University.
According
to court documents, an argument quickly escalated into a brawl involving 30 to
40 young men.
Giles
reportedly was not involved in the melee but, separated from his friends, went
outside to the car where he had a gun, for which he had a concealed carry
permit. Giles put the weapon in his pants pocket and searched the crowd for his
friends. Suddenly, he says, someone from the crowd punched him. Knocked to the
ground and in fear for his life, Giles says he pulled out the gun and fired one
shot into the leg of his alleged attacker.
Three
men were injured, wounded by bullet fragments. Giles was immediately arrested
and charged with second-degree attempted murder.
Aside
from his having no criminal background, Giles’ supporters argue that he was
merely defending himself from an unprovoked attack. In fact, when testifying in
the case, the man who punched Giles, Courtney Thrower, admitted that the
assault was random. “The first person I get to I’m going to hit,” he remembered
thinking.
Other
witnesses testified that Thrower, having heard of an attack on one of his
fraternity brothers, was outside of the nightclub pacing with his fists
clenched and, in the middle of the brawl, “leapfrogged” from the crowd to hit
Giles. Despite all of that, according to the Florida state prosecutors, Giles
had no right to use deadly force that night.
“The
evidence is clear here that the act of pointing a gun into a group of people,
even if you’re not specifically deciding to kill them, is a crime,” said
Assistant State Attorney Jack Campbell in his closing statements during the
trial. “There is no self-defense that is applicable based on the evidence
that’s before the jury.”
The
defense argued, however, that Giles was justified in using deadly force if he
reasonably believed that such force was necessary to prevent “imminent death or
great bodily harm” to himself.
“He
doesn’t have to think he’s going to get killed, even though people looking in
from the outside thought someone could get killed,” said defense attorney Don
Pumphrey in his closing. “If the defendant was not engaged in an unlawful
activity and was attacked in any place where he had a right to be, where he had
a right to stand, he had no duty to retreat and had the right to stand his
ground and meet force with force, including deadly force.”
The
jury disagreed however and Giles was ultimately convicted in August of 2011 of
the lesser charge of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, a crime that
comes with a mandatory minimum sentence of twenty years in the state of Florida.
It is the same sentence Marissa Alexander received in her controversial case –
a case recently awarded a new trial on appeal.
“10-20-Life”
(Florida Statute 775.087) is a controversial Florida law under which Giles and
Alexander were sentenced. It confers a minimum sentence of 10 years for a
felony conviction where a firearm is merely brandishing. Firing the gun adds
another 10 years – even if no one was hit, as was the case with Alexander. And,
if someone is hit, the shooter necessarily faces 25 years to life in prison.
“Frankly,
I think the 25-year mandatory is overly harsh on the facts of this case, but
that’s what the law requires I do and I intend to follow the law,” said Judge
James C. Hankinson when issuing Giles’ verdict
Given
the facts of the case, Giles’ supporters – led in an effort by his parents –
are hoping to have his case reevaluated by the state. His mother, Phyllis
Giles, has created an online
petition through Change.org asking Florida Governor Rick Scott for
executive clemency for her son. She claims that not only do the facts of the
case show that Michael was reasonably defending himself, but that his lawyer
pressured him against taking the stand and evoking a “Stand-Your-Ground”
defense.
Giles’
new defense attorney is currently in the process of filing a motion for
post-conviction relief, claiming that he received ineffective assistance of
counsel and, so far, the petition for clemency has received more than 56,000
signatures.
Florida
State Senator Dwight Bullard (D-39) has also written
a letter to Gov. Scott asking him to commute Giles’
sentence. According to a statement to theGrio from Bullard’s office, he
has received no response from the governor.
“As
of yet our office has heard nothing from Gov. Scott’s office. His office has
time and again proven non-responsive on issues related to injustice,” Bullard
said in a statement to theGrio. “He subsequently has turned a definitive blind eye
to high[-]profile plights of injustice involving African-Americans. His lack of
intervention on behalf of Marissa Alexander and lack of compassion for the
killings of Trayvon Martin and Jordan Davis have not gone unnoticed by Black
Floridians – and all Floridians. So it comes as no surprise that he has been
noticeably absent in the case of Michael Giles. Nonetheless I will continue
pressing his office and others to take notice of cases like Mr. Giles, Ms.
Alexander and others.”
In
response, John Tupps, deputy press secretary for Governor Scott, told theGrio,
“Florida is at a 42-year low in its crime rate, and Governor Scott works every
day to ensure that Florida families are kept safe and have the opportunity to
live the American Dream.”
Michael
Giles supporters believe that’s not enough and are asking for direct action on
his behalf. Ultimately, Phyllis Giles says she would like the state to take
into consideration her son’s character and the extraordinary circumstance he
was in the night of the shooting.
“Michael
is a very caring person, never been in trouble, never been arrested. He’s a
family man. We’re a bible-based family and both my husband and I are retired
military,” she says. “We believe that we have raised a good man, so we don’t understand
how the state of Florida could sentence him to 25 years in prison for defending
himself. Michael is a good man. He is honest. He is hard working and, through
all of this, he is our rock and confidence we need to keep fighting.”
Revelation
13:16 And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and
bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:
Jeremiah
4:30 And when thou art spoiled, what wilt thou do? Though thou clothest
thyself with crimson, though thou deckest thee with ornaments of gold, though
thou rentest thy face with painting, in vain shalt thou make thyself fair; thy lovers will despise thee, they will seek thy life
Lamentations 1:19 I called for
my lovers, but they deceived me:
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