silvercorvette
New member
silvercorvette...
... I've never been thrilled with giving them the light to shoot at, either.
BilltheDJGuy, the light involved was not operated by the trigger finger, but by the middle finger, below the trigger guard. So.... your point doesn't apply.
The main thing is, his finger should not have been on the trigger, if he didn't perceive a direct threat. The possibility of a threat may justify the draw, and in some cases (arrests being one) the aim; but his finger shouldn't have been on the trigger at that point.
I mentioned that in post #128 on this thread