So, if that aggressor, who claims to be a marine (we don't really know for sure) comes around that cart and assaults me, you would prefer that I just take the beating? You've never met me, so you don't know what you're saying. I'm 58 years old, with the skeleton of an arthritic 75 year old. To not defend myself would be a death sentence — particularly if the aggressor really is a combat trained marine. Furthermore, lots of people are beaten to death every year by someone's bare fists. An assailant doesn't have to be armed with a deadly weapon for the victim to reasonably believe that deadly force in self defense is a reasonable response. And try this one on for size.... I don't particularly care if the aggressor is really a marine or not. If he's attacking me, he can be the man from Mars for all I care, but I am going to do whatever I have to do to defend myself — including deadly force if that is what I reasonably believe is called for under 9.32; and the press can go pound sand. A belligerent and drunk marine is not a hero, he's a belligerent and dangerous drunk. Marines put their pants on one leg at a time, just like anybody else. I respect and honor their service, but that doesn't mean that I'm going to let one beat the life out of me in a Walmart. Besides, I don't believe the guy was a marine. He was just trying to impress everyone around him. He was a dirtbag.Beiruty wrote:I hate to watch a 6:00 PM news flash, that says "The Annoyed Man' shot and killed a Marines soldier whom he had had a verbal argument with. The marines was not armed.
Surely, enough the news would not elaborate nor indicated that the deceased was verbally and physically aggressive.
It does not sound good no matter the way you look at it. It would cost tons of money to exonerate Mr. The Annoyed Man.
You are being unkind if you think that a physically less able person should have the same threshold of response for whenever a situation crosses over from being covered in 9.31 to being covered under 9.32 as would exist for someone more physically able. Physical ability and capacity opens up the gap between those two chapters of the code and affords the actor a greater range of options than exists for someone like me. For instance, I cannot run. Perhaps you can, but I cannot. So that option is no longer available to me. But beyond that, you would be wrong because you're failing to account for the actor's reasonable belief, which nobody but the actor can define for him.
But, placing myself in the OP's situation, there was no verbal argument. The aggressor and his friends were committing a breach of the peace. The OP asked the aggressor not to use that language and then he stopped talking. Everything up to and beyond that point was entirely the aggressor's responsibility.
I take it as an article of faith — and so should every single member of this board, for that matter — that if I am ever involved in a defensive shooting, it won't matter how righteous it is. The media will not tell the truth about what happened. Therefore, I don't spend 2 seconds worrying about what they will report. They. Weren't. There.. Period.
As to the expense of defending one's self in court, well, that is the reality of having a CHL. I am definitely not hoping to ever be involved in a shooting. I couldn't be happier if I live out the rest of my days without ever having to draw my gun. Who needs that kind of stress? But, if any one of us shoots an assailant, it is going to cost a pretty penny. That is simply another reality of CHL, and it isn't particular to just my own situation. So I can't let that worry me either. If the financial cost of self-defense was more important to me than the actual self-defense, then I probably shouldn't bother carrying a gun in the first place. The high cost of legal defense and an unfair press are simply part of the grim realities of having a CHL.
May I suggest that you take Charles Cotton's use of force seminar at the first opportunity?