Buncha issues all mixed up together here.
Legally, shooting someone is lethal force. It doesn't matter if you shoot at their heart, their eyeball, or their left big toe -- you've still used lethal force and you will need to be able to justify using it.
If you need to shoot someone, after realizing you're going to have to shoot, probably the first question you'll ask yourself is, "Where do I aim?" The most often given answer is that you should aim at the center of the biggest part of the bad guy you can see. That's generally his chest, sometimes his pelvis, and sometimes the center of his noggin. Or maybe all you can see is his hand and his gun. If so, you could shoot for the center of that and let the newsies go on and on about how you "shot the gun out of his hand." Whatever it takes.
When you aim, you might prefer to only wound the guy, for whatever reason, or you might prefer that he never draws another breath. That's a vital question when you're aiming the gun, but legally it doesn't matter a bit. By shooting him, you are using deadly force: that degree of force a reasonable and prudent person would consider likely to cause death or grave bodily harm. Shooting someone, anywhere on their body, is likely to kill them or cripple them, and every reasonable person knows this.
The police will show up and ask you why you shot the guy. "I shot to save my own life" is a great answer (yeah, yeah, you've got your lawyer involved but sooner or later you're going to have to answer that question even if you don't do it at the scene. Don't get sidetracked here!). "I shot to stop what he was doing" is another good answer. Both explain why you used deadly force.
If you answer, "I shot to kill him," or "I shot to wound him," you haven't said anything except, "I used deadly force because I used deadly force." Deadly force, after all, is by definition an attempt to maim or kill another person. They already know you did that!
So this kind of non-answer not only sounds bloodthirsty, it also exasperates people who are trying to get the whole story. They want to know why you shot the guy. They aren't asking where you aimed. They want to know what motivated you to shoot him at all. If the only answer you have is that you were trying to use deadly force, you have not answered the question they were asking. All you've done is tick them off and make yourself look like a bloodthirsty fool.
pax
Legally, shooting someone is lethal force. It doesn't matter if you shoot at their heart, their eyeball, or their left big toe -- you've still used lethal force and you will need to be able to justify using it.
If you need to shoot someone, after realizing you're going to have to shoot, probably the first question you'll ask yourself is, "Where do I aim?" The most often given answer is that you should aim at the center of the biggest part of the bad guy you can see. That's generally his chest, sometimes his pelvis, and sometimes the center of his noggin. Or maybe all you can see is his hand and his gun. If so, you could shoot for the center of that and let the newsies go on and on about how you "shot the gun out of his hand." Whatever it takes.
When you aim, you might prefer to only wound the guy, for whatever reason, or you might prefer that he never draws another breath. That's a vital question when you're aiming the gun, but legally it doesn't matter a bit. By shooting him, you are using deadly force: that degree of force a reasonable and prudent person would consider likely to cause death or grave bodily harm. Shooting someone, anywhere on their body, is likely to kill them or cripple them, and every reasonable person knows this.
The police will show up and ask you why you shot the guy. "I shot to save my own life" is a great answer (yeah, yeah, you've got your lawyer involved but sooner or later you're going to have to answer that question even if you don't do it at the scene. Don't get sidetracked here!). "I shot to stop what he was doing" is another good answer. Both explain why you used deadly force.
If you answer, "I shot to kill him," or "I shot to wound him," you haven't said anything except, "I used deadly force because I used deadly force." Deadly force, after all, is by definition an attempt to maim or kill another person. They already know you did that!
So this kind of non-answer not only sounds bloodthirsty, it also exasperates people who are trying to get the whole story. They want to know why you shot the guy. They aren't asking where you aimed. They want to know what motivated you to shoot him at all. If the only answer you have is that you were trying to use deadly force, you have not answered the question they were asking. All you've done is tick them off and make yourself look like a bloodthirsty fool.
pax