The shooter stated that he felt his fellow employee's life was in danger due to possibly being ran over with the vehicle or being shot. He clearly stated this in the article.
Straight from every CCW course I've ever seen: it doesn't matter what you say or think, what matters is whether it was
reasonable to be in fear, and the
reasonableness of your actions in light of that.
But hey, doesn't matter, beeeeeecause--
Ziggy2525 said:
I totally think he was reckless in how he chose to use deadly force shooting with the highway as a backstop.
Agreed--pretty dumb. I think the danger to all the bystanders in the background, both on the highway and across the street, is far greater. The dude is firing one-handed while running. I'm actually sort of surprised he hit the car at all.
4) The jewelery store owner shot the passenger, not the driver. My impression from the video is it was the passenger that had a hold of the employee and that's the guy that got shot.
I dunno, doesn't really look like there was any time at all for that. Looks like the clerk tried to grab the passenger as the vehicle was pulling away, and got knocked aside.
Tenntex32 said:
his also begs the question...……. If the shooter had not been a retired NY detective would they have rushed so quickly to state he probably would not be charged?
If anything, being a retired NY detective means that he had training which
should have better-educated him as to the risks of firing at moving vehicles. The reasonable person standard always means "knowing what you knew at the time". So on the one hand, he knows that a vehicle is a deadly weapon, and how it doesn't take very much at all to cause a serious injury.
On the other, I'm pretty sure the NYPD has all sorts of prohibitions against firing on vehicles, and he would have had the concept of "ricochets" and "backdrops" explained to him in-depth.
If anything, I think his former career is a liability in this situation.