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August 11, 2010, 10:07 PM | #26 | |
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I wouldn't attempt to directly administer aid for the safety and health reasons already cited, but you are not going to hang yourself by showing some simple humanity after you have, in your judgment, neutralized the threat. The worst you could say of rendering aid in a manner that brings you into close proximity to the wounded attacker is that the action is naive and foolishly risky. As another poster stated, we're talking about two fundamentally different sets of circumstances. In the first, you're facing an active, as yet unchecked threat. In the second set, the threat, in your judgment, has been neutralized. Actions and calculations applicable in the first are in no way necessarily applicable in the second, and vice versa. |
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August 12, 2010, 12:21 PM | #27 |
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I really dont want to watch a man die either, dont get me wrong. However, If someones presenting deadly force to me and I have to shoot them, a phone call is what their getting for help. I am keeping my gun trained on them until police arrive if they are moving, and I would watch them die unfortunatley because to me, thats the only option. I'm not going anywhere near someone who I just had to shoot. That is the police's/emt's job. I just don't get shooting someone who a second earlier you though could kill you then you give them aid. Looks too much like you're unsure, to me. Thats just my opinion, I hope I never have to make the decision. If I do though I know what I would do (theoretically).
Last edited by TylerD45ACP; August 12, 2010 at 12:58 PM. |
August 12, 2010, 01:18 PM | #28 |
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This is a real life, it really happened story. It's not theory or, "I think..." or "I read..."
My little sister shot a carjacker in New Orleans twice in the chest with a 9mm. She called 911 right away and the paramedics arrived before ths cops did. By the time the cops got there he was on his way to the hospital and the crime scene was completely compromised. He spent about 2 years in the hospital and local jail before his case came to court. During that time my sister's name, place of business, and address were published in the court documents and newspapers. It turned out that the car jacker had AIDS, thank God she didn't try to give him first aid. He went to court and had a high dollar lawyer appointed to him who worked his case pro bono (giving back to the community) and the prosecuter was a ditsy airhead that had just graduated from lawschool. She may not have even passed the bar yet because there was another lawyer that was there for every hearing but didn't do anything. The pro bono lawyer argued that since my sister was married to a cop (reserve in a different parrish), carried a gun, and was alone in a bad neighborhood (she worked in the federal building in N.O.) that she must have been a "Dirty Harriet" (he used that term) out trying to kill a poor homeless man who just wanted a little change. The cops at the crime scene confiscated her gun, and when he was acquitted 2 years later she tried to reclaim it only to discover that it was destroyed in a "paperwork mistake". After he got out of jail he started driving by her house and even talked to her daughter, who was able to describe him to her, while she was playing in her front yard. Her prompt call saved his life due to the paramedics rapid response. The time he spent in the hospital extended his life by years because he got detoxified (drug adict) and recieved thousands of dollars of taxpayer funded AIDS drugs. Also, remember that if 1 is good, 2 is better, and half a magazine is even better than that. Well, take my story for what it's worth, my little sister still has nightmares and flashbacks and has never been the same because of all the crap she had to go through after the shooting b. ecause her attacker survived. I'm not saying that anyone should do anything, I'm just saying that if a piece of civiliazation's detritus is killed cleanly and humanely instead of living and suing you, that is a good thing. Fortunately, I live in a state with a strong castle doctrine and my right to defend myself and my family is more secure than alot of others who can EXPECT to get sued if their attacker lives. I DO advise that if you ever have to shoot someone, unload on them and keep them covered until you are completely certain that there is no longer a threat. I also say that if there is any doubt that an armed attacker might be reaching for a weapon, shoot again. and again. and again. until you are certain that your life is no longer in any way in danger. Ya'll can pussyfoot around it any way you want, but the final answer is that if you were justified shooting someone, you should shoot to kill. If he lives you'll wish you had. |
August 12, 2010, 02:08 PM | #29 | |
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August 12, 2010, 02:27 PM | #30 | |
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It will be a shame if this one is closed as well, as it will be if it goes in this direction.
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August 12, 2010, 02:28 PM | #31 |
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I would feel terrible about having to use deadly force on someone. But if they tried to kill me once, I have no reason to believe they would not continue trying if I got close enough to render physical aid.......after all I shot them and they must be really angry at me now.
Bottom line: I feared for my life enough to use deadly force and believe the threat has only been neutralized...... not removed. I still fear for my life.
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August 12, 2010, 02:29 PM | #32 |
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That was nearly the same exact post from the last thread from the same guy. I think that was the one that got it closed also.
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August 12, 2010, 02:35 PM | #33 |
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I believe there is some benefit to discussing what you would do along with the legalites. However, you are going to make a split second decision on what to do and that may not always be the right thing to do.
Even trained officers do not always get it right. For example, the recent New York City shooting by the NYPD in the Bronx. You can go ahead and google it to find the specifics...google NYPD shooting Bronx. In that incident, there was one man with a revolver who allegedly shot at the police. The police returned fire with 46 shots into a crowd of over 200 people hitting innocent people. So was 46 shots really neccesary? Obviously, it was a bit wreckless and may not have been neccesary, but then again one of the men was hit 21 times and still was not "stopped". However, the police made a split second decision that they thought was the right thing to do at the time. Could you have done a better job? Maybe or maybe not, but the point is that in any self defense situation you are going to do what you think is right based upon a second of thinking. In the end, a jury or judge will decide if what you did was the right thing to do. Kinda sucks, because you may have done the right thing, but if the judge/jury disagrees then you are basically left holding the bag...no one said self defense would be easy... |
August 12, 2010, 02:45 PM | #34 | |
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I dont know if I would feel obligated to help him/her, but I think I would. After putting the person down, I would ensure my family is safe, call 911, and then IF i feel that they are no longer a threat (ie not gun or knife around, or they are not still trying to attack, etc) I would do the bare minimum to ensure they survive IF i feel that I can save them. If its an extremity wound, put on a tourniquet, stomach wound, a towel to "try" to stop the bleeding. No mouth to mouth or freaking out about it. The way I see it, when the police arrive to my house, and they see me trying to stop the bleeding, I feel they would tend to think that I actually felt that I did the bare minimum to stop my attacker and that I did not just over react and make up some BS story
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August 12, 2010, 03:00 PM | #35 |
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Dliller:
The post that the mods objected to was different than what I posted in this thread. I won't go into the differences because I don't want to stir anything up. What I wrote here is basic common sense and if anyone objects to the concept of shooting your assailant until they are no longer a threat they should not be caring a gun. Anyone who thinks that shooting to wound is a good idea is an idiot and deserves to get what is likely to happen to them, which is your attacker shooting you while you are looking for your phone or a first aid kit. Firearms are a lethal weapon. If you can't handle that, carry a taser instead of a gun. That is my perspective and it is one that is shared by many if not most of the people on this board that carry a firearm. There are undoubtably people here that equate first aid with CPR. If you think providing CPR to a person with a gunshot wound is going to help, you are ignorant. CPR is only going to make it worse. If you don't actually have the skills to treat a gunshot wound, you shouldn't even bother when you really want that person to live, you definately shouldn't do it when it is in your interest for them to die. That just opens you up to an accusation that you were trying to hurt him instead of help him. |
August 12, 2010, 03:41 PM | #36 | |
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ISC, the OP's question was:
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If you don't want to stir anything up, then please don't. Comments along the lines of "... you definately [sic] shouldn't do it when it is in your interest for them to die " will get this thread closed. And, by the way, deliberately confounding "shooting to stop the threat" with "shooting to wound," which no one here is has suggested is a good idea, is a shoddy tactic technically known as a "straw man" argument... I could go on, but... it's probably too late to save this one, anyway.
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August 12, 2010, 03:48 PM | #37 |
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Oh I beleive shooting to stop a threat, but Im not going to go out of my way to make them die. If it takes 1 to stop them thats fine, if it takes 10 so be it.
I dont know any sort of first aid for gunshot wounds, so Ill call 911 and let them handle it. In addition to the original question of rendering aid, are you aloud to leave the scene of the incident? It would make sense to, but could you get in trouble for leaving the crime scene? |
August 12, 2010, 04:08 PM | #38 | |
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I don't think so, as long as you've called 911 and you keep the dispatcher informed about where you are. It's not like leaving the scene of a traffic accident. If you believe there might still be a threat, perhaps from another assailant, leaving the scene would be a prudent thing to do. I'm not saying you should just go home if you're out somewhere, but I don't believe you'd be in any trouble at all for retreating to a safe location.
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August 12, 2010, 05:43 PM | #39 |
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One of these days we will be able to discuss this with out the strutting and chest pounding. But not today.
Closed. |
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firstaid , legal , moral , obligaiton , wounded |
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