I was not asking you to give examples of "Warning shots".
I wanted an answer to ..
Quote from: Flapp_Jackson on November 07, 2022, 10:57:47 AM
Legally, if you draw your weapon and do not shoot, you must NOT have considered your life to be in danger -- at least in the mind of the prosecutor. Therefore, you could be charged with brandishing and/or assault with a deadly weapon if you draw and don't shoot.
Please produce source.
I'm not going to rehash all the references on the forum to laws and ordinances against discharging firearms. if you want sources, start with the threads on being arrested shooting a pellet gun in a cemetery. it's informative as well as entertaining.
i hope you agree there are laws against such things, and that you can be arrested for discharging a firearm as well as assault, brandishing and terroristic threatening. The state has a plethora of laws to choose from when punishing gun owners for actually availing themselves of the right to self defense.
I said you could be charged, not will be. Laws concerning self defense are also chock full of exceptions and conditions, like you can't claim self defense if you are the aggressor unless the other person escalates to lethal force before you, etc.
There's no definitive 'source' that says you must fire to be legally in fear for your life. but, just like using a .44 Magnum versus a g17, the prosecutor will use anything they can. real or imagined, to paint you as the gun nut you obviously are and the attacker as your victim.
i'm repeating what i was taught in my defensive firearm training -- that depending on how unfriendly the gov't is to gun owners, you COULD be in trouble if someone files a complaint. At that point, good luck claiming you were in fear for your life without audio and video evidence.
This is not just my opinion. Many have been charged for drawing a gun without ample justification. Using self defense as a defense to the charges won't go very far if your fear didn't rise to the level necessary. Failing to follow through and fire speaks to your state of mind and level of fear.
Legally, you should talk to a lawyer before giving any details on what you were thinking when you drew your gun.