A Democratic state senator from Broward County is forming his own task force to review Florida’s Stand Your Ground law.

George Zimmerman used the law to defend his shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

Gov. Scott appointed a special task force to review the law nearly two weeks ago.

Scott had ordered the task force not to meet until the Martin investigation is wrapped up.

Sen. Chris Smith, D-Fort Lauderdale, questioned that decision.

“If I can do this in four days, put this together in four days on my own, you have the governor with all of his massive resources - why is he still waiting to do it?” Smith said. “It just baffles my mind.”

His task force will meet immediately and he says every option is on the table.

“If it's the will of the task force, we can recommend coming into special session and actually doing something and sending a message to the country that Florida is a safe state to be, that we will react and we will ensure that people feel safe in the state of Florida,” he said.

The governor continues to say having his task force meet now would be premature.

“We should do it,” Scott said. “We should do it for public safety.  We should always look at things like this, make sure we do the right thing, but the first thing you do is you do an investigation, you make sure justice prevails, then you step back and say, 'OK, so what did we learn from this'?”

Smith argues the lesson is already clear; Stand Your Ground has to be reformed or repealed. The question now is how to do that, which will be at the top of the agenda when his task force gets down to business.