The New York Post recently shared a tragic video taken of a black disabled man, Jamel Dunn, as he was drowning in a retention pond in Cocoa, Florida.

The saddest thing about the video is that it was recorded by five teenagers who mocked the man as he drowned instead of helping him.

According to officials, the teens broke no laws by standing by and letting the 32-year-old die, and therefore will face no charges.

Not only did the teens film the drowning, but they did not report the incident to 911. Dunn's body was found three days after he drowned per reports by Florida Today.

Police questioned the teens after the event; they told officers that they'd warned the man not to get into the water.

When he failed to do so, they thought it best to watch him sink to his death.

Dunn can be seen struggling to swim and screaming for help in the pond in the video.

Yvonne Martinez, a Cocoa Police Department spokesperson, said in a statement, “The kids were at the park that day smoking marijuana and apparently saw him walk into the water. He walked in on his own. They were watching him."

The video makes it clear what happened next.

“He started to struggle and scream for help and they just laughed,” Martinez said. “They didn’t call the police. They just laughed the whole time. He was just screaming … for someone to help him.”

“There was no remorse, only a smirk,” Martinez said.

One teen can be heard saying, "Oh, he just died" in the video when Dunn's body does not surface in the water. The remark elicited peals of laughter from the others.

So how did the police find out about the incident?

A family friend of Dunn saw the two-minute clip on social media and contacted the police.

The Brevard-Seminole State Attorney’s Office said: “While the incident depicted on the recording does not give rise to sufficient evidence to support a criminal prosecution under Florida statutes, we can find no moral justification for either the behavior of persons heard on the recording or the deliberate decision not to render aid to Mr. Dunn."

Friends and family of Dunn have created a GoFundMe campaign to raise pay for his funeral.

Our condolences to Dunn's loved ones.