I'm no Tactics Junkie, but I've worked out a couple of scenarios in my Personal Tactical Training Area (my living room with the big mirror) and I decided that at bad-breath ranges, it is rarely a good idea to have the gun extended in one's hand, but to keep it close to one's body. This, to deter (not prevent) a disarming move from the opponent.
Yet the clerk seems to increase his vulnerability by extending the firearm into the other guy's face.
Strikes me this is some kind of training film to show what not to do.
And he lets the guy walk away --still armed, as far as I can tell.
I have no doubt that the incident (clerk prevents robbery by presenting his own firearm) happened, but somehow this clip itself strikes me as very odd, as if it were a mere re-enactment, directed by a non-tactically-oriented person.
Apart from the self-evident fact that the BG presents a weapon, putting the clerk in an obvious "in fear of death or severe bodily harm" situation, thereby justifying a self-defense shot, what would you have done in this situation, assuming you could be legally carrying behind the counter?
Terry, 230RN