14VeritasAequitas
Inactive
Hello everyone -
There are cases where a plain clothes police officer brandishes a weapon without identifying himself first.
See this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHjjF55M8JQ
From the motorcyclist's perspective, a strange man in an everyday car pulls up next to him, gets out of the car, and brandishes a gun. With only that information at hand, I think it is reasonable for the motorcyclist to assume the stranger poses a deadly threat, thus giving him reason draw and shoot at the unidentified stranger in self defense.
It is only after the fact that the plain clothes officer identifies himself. It happens to be a Maryland State Trooper. The car is not marked and the officer is not uniformed.
I'd like to hear everyone's thoughts on this. If a complete stranger brandishes a weapon at you, but happens to be a police officer in plain clothes and unidentified, is it legitimate to defend yourself to the ultimate degree?
There are cases where a plain clothes police officer brandishes a weapon without identifying himself first.
See this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHjjF55M8JQ
From the motorcyclist's perspective, a strange man in an everyday car pulls up next to him, gets out of the car, and brandishes a gun. With only that information at hand, I think it is reasonable for the motorcyclist to assume the stranger poses a deadly threat, thus giving him reason draw and shoot at the unidentified stranger in self defense.
It is only after the fact that the plain clothes officer identifies himself. It happens to be a Maryland State Trooper. The car is not marked and the officer is not uniformed.
I'd like to hear everyone's thoughts on this. If a complete stranger brandishes a weapon at you, but happens to be a police officer in plain clothes and unidentified, is it legitimate to defend yourself to the ultimate degree?
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