The so-called “stand your ground” law will be tested again.

The mother of Trayvon Martin, Sybrina Fulton, stood side by side with lawmakers on Wednesday to try and repeal the controversial statute.

Martin, 17, was shot and killed in February 2012 by George Zimmerman.

With Fulton was Democratic State Rep. Alan Williams, who introduced House Bill 4009, which would reform stand your ground if passed.

Sen. Dwight Bullard was also at the announcement.

“We have to strategize and we have to make changes to this law. We need to get rid of this law. We need to do something seriously about this law,” Fulton.

“I wouldn’t want you to stand in my shoes,” she added.

“We owe it to citizens of Florida to ensure that these laws will not bring harm to their family and to our streets,” Rep. Williams told reporters in Tallahassee on Wednesday.

The stand your ground law was passed in 2005 and grants legal immunity to those who use deadly force if they believe their life is in danger.

Zimmerman will have a self-defense immunity hearing, which could include a stand your ground defense.

A judge could dismiss the charges, meaning no trial would take place and Zimmerman could go free.

“How many children have to be killed?” Fulton asked.

After the shooting death of Martin, a 19 member task force was created by Governor Rick Scott to review the law.

The panel found no need to change it.

News 13 legal commentator Mark NeJame said he believes it is unlikely Fulton’s plea with make an impact either.

But he agreed the law is broad and clearly needs further review.

“There is great ambiguity, and it really is just a subjective standard that you can kind of take the same facts situation in one county and one incident and be found not guilty, and take that same fact and situation in another county in a another incident and you can have a different result. So that ambiguity always bothers me,” said NeJame.

The bill Williams filed will likely face opposition from Republicans, who control the legislature and backed the current law.

Also on Wednesday, the Zimmerman defense team received Trayvon Martin’s school records.

They will not release the records to the public and only parts deemed relevant to the case will be entered into evidence.