Bear with me here. I’ll start by saying that I am a practicing attorney in a very gun friendly state, but I don’t do any criminal or firearms law on a regular basis. I’ve been thinking about some of the factors that one should take into consideration when carrying in order to lessen the chances of being prosecuted after you’ve been involved in a legal self defense shooting. I’ll emphasize that there’s no need in this thread to debate whether a shooting is legal or not. The underlying premise is that you were legally carrying, you rationally perceived a direct and imminent deadly threat, you engaged the threat with your firearm until the threat was neutralized. So the underlying premise is that you did nothing wrong. But we all know that sometimes the investigators don’t get all the facts at first and may have thought you did something wrong and you end up getting charged. Or you live in an area that is not gun friendly or you have an overly zealous or anti gun prosecutor.
So these are things I think you can do that will either assist the investigators in concluding that you did nothing wrong, or help the prosecutor conclude that your case is unclear enough that they don’t want to bring the case, or that will help the judge or jury acquit you.
Also to be clear, the law doesn’t require any of these things and no one has to do them, but I think they would help.
1. As soon as the threat is neutralized, render first aid to the person you just shot. They fall down, you get the weapon out of their hand and away, pat their body down to ensure there’s no other weapons, call 911 on speaker and then try to stop the bleeding while telling the dispatcher what happened and ask for help and direction to try to help the person who just attacked you. Now there’s a recorded call of you caring about your attackers life, and when investigators arrive, that first impression will be critical and there you are trying to help. They’ll immediately perceive you as a good guy. You’ll get a more favorable investigative report and it will play very well to judge and jury.
2. Retreat if possible. We all know that stand your ground laws are being passed in some areas, and that is a very good thing. But it’s a legal protection you should hope to not have to take advantage of. You’re not law enforcement. You’re not a hero. You don’t have to run toward the danger. You don’t have to confront bad guys just because you’ve watched a lot of TV or trained every week at the range. This isn’t the big chance you’ve trained for, this is a crisis you want to avoid. If you can get away without you or others getting hurt, do it. You may not be legally required to, and could legitimately stand your ground, but there’s no requirement to do that if you have other options, and it will play well if you tried to retreat before you eventually had to draw and defend yourself.
There’s other things too, which I’m sure will be brought up, like carrying factory ammo and not handloads, etc. but these two are the big two in my opinion. I look forward to everyone else’s thoughts.
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So these are things I think you can do that will either assist the investigators in concluding that you did nothing wrong, or help the prosecutor conclude that your case is unclear enough that they don’t want to bring the case, or that will help the judge or jury acquit you.
Also to be clear, the law doesn’t require any of these things and no one has to do them, but I think they would help.
1. As soon as the threat is neutralized, render first aid to the person you just shot. They fall down, you get the weapon out of their hand and away, pat their body down to ensure there’s no other weapons, call 911 on speaker and then try to stop the bleeding while telling the dispatcher what happened and ask for help and direction to try to help the person who just attacked you. Now there’s a recorded call of you caring about your attackers life, and when investigators arrive, that first impression will be critical and there you are trying to help. They’ll immediately perceive you as a good guy. You’ll get a more favorable investigative report and it will play very well to judge and jury.
2. Retreat if possible. We all know that stand your ground laws are being passed in some areas, and that is a very good thing. But it’s a legal protection you should hope to not have to take advantage of. You’re not law enforcement. You’re not a hero. You don’t have to run toward the danger. You don’t have to confront bad guys just because you’ve watched a lot of TV or trained every week at the range. This isn’t the big chance you’ve trained for, this is a crisis you want to avoid. If you can get away without you or others getting hurt, do it. You may not be legally required to, and could legitimately stand your ground, but there’s no requirement to do that if you have other options, and it will play well if you tried to retreat before you eventually had to draw and defend yourself.
There’s other things too, which I’m sure will be brought up, like carrying factory ammo and not handloads, etc. but these two are the big two in my opinion. I look forward to everyone else’s thoughts.
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