Excaliber wrote:
One could remove some ambiguity by stating clearly to the BG on the ground that any uncommanded move will be seen as an attempt to reach and use his weapon and he will be shot. Then the BG has a decision to make, and the witnesses have a point of reference that will likely be helpful.
I can see how that would be helpful, but I still wonder if there has been some court agreement on when "imminent commission" stops...
For example, as a rough analogy, Mr. Cotton noted a few years ago that when people were testifying about the castle doctrine stuff, all the legal eagles agreed that in the phrase "unlawfully and with force entered...habitation..", that "force" could be as little effort as opening an unlocked door or window -- it didn't have to mean kicking the door in. I suspect this was argued about at many trials before through appeals and such the came a decision or consensus about how little effort constituted "force."
I wonder if the phrase "imminent commission" has a similar judicial history with an agreed on interpretation. After the suspect in the OP had left the shop and gone down the street, I suspect there was no longer any "imminent commission". As long as he was inside tho, I would vote that was still "fight's on."