I think that this is nonsense. If/when/if ever I have to make the decision to stop you then you are having all that I have got & this is not your Hollywood movie sketch.
Would you have felt that you were still in danger when this shot was fired.
I think that this is nonsense. If/when/if ever I have to make the decision to stop you then you are having all that I have got & this is not your Hollywood movie sketch.

shot 1,2 and 3 possibly 4 all fired in 0.7 seconds.
How many milliseconds into it is this specific event?
shot 1,2 and 3 possibly 4 all fired in 0.7 seconds.
You keep applying 20/20 hindsight.
Hindsight means something that couldn't be known at the time in the moment. What relevant factors do you believe the agent might not have been aware of.
How many milliseconds into it is this specific event?
Do you claim that he should not have fired this shot?
I would have fired this shot simply because my first shot was justified . . . And you are just about to experience everything I have at my disposal.
Hindsight means something that couldn't be known at the time in the moment. What relevant factors do you believe the agent might not have been aware of.

Perhaps stop trying to lecture me and spend your effort finding case law that backs up your position.Hindsight means something that couldn't be known at the time in the moment. What relevant factors do you believe the agent might not have been aware of.
Perhaps stop trying to lecture me and spend your effort finding case law that backs up your position.
You are demonstrating that you have absolutely no idea. You do not shoot anything that you are not prepared to kill. This is not your Hollywood movie. No one has ever been trained to shoot a gun otherwise than to kill. Please explain your reasoning, in your own time please.
Law enforcement are trained to shoot, reassess, then shoot again only if necessary. This is not the military, where they shoot to kill.
All the leading case law we have looked at backs up my position. It all says that as soon the threat is over, the officer has to stop shooting.
You are demonstrating that you have absolutely no idea. You do not shoot anything that you are not prepared to kill. This is not your Hollywood movie. No one has ever been trained to shot a gun otherwise than to kill. Please explain your reasoning, in your own time please.
No it does not. Please show us your case law.

Make the legal argument or stop going round in circles.
700 milliseconds.
Law enforcement are trained to shoot, reassess, then shoot again only if necessary. This is not the military, where they shoot to kill.
The third shot shown above came 700 milliseconds after the first shot shown below. During that time, the officer managed to stumble, regain his footing, change his body position and stance, and reacquire the target. He obviously had plenty of time to decide not to shoot.
of course it doesn't. So far its established.All the leading case law we have looked at backs up my position. It all says that as soon the threat is over, the officer has to stop shooting.
He did, he got 3 - 4 shots off and he stopped within 0.7 seconds.In law enforcement, your aim is to neutralise a threat. So, whilst that threat is extant, you are shooting to kill. But as soon as that threat has passed, you stop shooting.