Crime / drowning Prosecutors Decide on Teens Who Taunted Drowning Man State Attorney Phil Archer says no law forces you to help people By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Jun 22, 2018 6:00 PM CDT Copied Pallbearers carry out a bright red casket at the funeral for Jamel Dunn, 31, at the Zion Orthodox Primitive Baptist Church Saturday, July 29, 2017, in Cocoa, Fla. (Malcolm Denemark/Florida Today via AP) Florida prosecutors say they aren't charging a group of teens who taunted a drowning disabled man and recorded his death, the AP reports. State Attorney Phil Archer released a statement Friday announcing his office's decision not to criminally charge four juveniles and one adult for failing to help 31-year-old Jamel Dunn at a Cocoa retention pond last July. Archer pointed out that no Florida law requires a person to provide emergency assistance under the facts of this case. Such a law was proposed during this year's state legislative session but failed to pass. Dunn's death received international attention last year after a viral video showed the teens laughing at him as he drowned. Cocoa Police Chief Mike Cantaloupe initially said no laws were broken but said several days later a misdemeanor charge of failing to report a death might apply. (More drowning stories.) Report an error