Don't point unless you need to use deadly force.
Level 6 felony. Class A misdemeanor if unloaded.
Unless the use of deadly force is justified. Pointing is not deadly force. Don't point unless you need to use deadly force.
It's not nice to point. Unless there's bears. Always point out bears.
Hey...wait a minute here
I'll put my lawyer against your source. Unless you're justified in using deadly force, YES it is considered deadly force.No, it's not.
I'll put my lawyer against your source. Unless you're justified in using deadly force, YES it is considered deadly force.
317-844-4297. Give him a call and tell him you want in on his next lecture covering Indiana's firearm laws. Hell try asking on his FB page, maybe he'll answer for free there.
I'll put my lawyer against your source. Unless you're justified in using deadly force, YES it is considered deadly force.
317-844-4297. Give him a call and tell him you want in on his next lecture covering Indiana's firearm laws. Hell try asking on his FB page, maybe he'll answer for free there.
If your lawyer told you that pointing a firearm = deadly force, then you need to find a new lawyer. Or you need to listen better when he's talking. It's against the law to point a firearm at a person without justification. A low level felony if the gun is loaded. That doesn't make it deadly force.
Why don't you ask your lawyer to cite an Indiana case where someone was convicted of using "deadly force" for merely pointing a firearm at someone.
First off I did listen very well, here's a short audio clip stating it's deadly force.
https://youtu.be/fV8707uLs50
2nd, I'll question him when I have just cause to. He's not the only person that's practices law for a living that's told me this.
Where’s the “force”?First off I did listen very well, here's a short audio clip stating it's deadly force.
https://youtu.be/fV8707uLs50
2nd, I'll question him when I have just cause to. He's not the only person that's practices law for a living that's told me this.
They are all wrong, then. Simply pointing a firearm is not a use of deadly force. It may be construed as a threat of deadly force.
Besides, the crime is "pointing a firearm." There is no crime of "using deadly force" in Indiana.
Thus, the statement that "iTs dEaDLy fOrCe!" is silly and irrelevant.
What's next..."brandishing?"
Yes, there's the new double life time your kids can inherit.Did you hear lifetime licenses are going away?
I never said there was a law called Using Deadly force. It's an element.
Considering the Guy I paid to go over this with had a hand drafting some of the current firearm laws, I'll trust him and his education over what you think you might know.
I never said there was a law called Using Deadly force. It's an element.
Considering the Guy I paid to go over this with had a hand drafting some of the current firearm laws, I'll trust him and his education over what you think you might know.
Pointing a firearm can be an element of the actual use of deadly force, but it is NOT, in itself, a use of deadly force as you keep insisting.
Here's the Guy's course description from his website. Wonder why pointing a firearm is mentioned separately from actually using deadly force in the course description if pointing a firearm IS deadly force. Point a firearm and/or use deadly force. Weird.
https://www.tactical-firearms.com/course-schedule.html
[FONT=&]Comprehensive Indiana Gun Law is a full-day course (approximately seven hours) that includes a complete educational program on the laws affecting an Indiana gun owner - including both Indiana state law and applicable federal law. This program includes a wide-ranging discussion of the statutes and court rulings that affect Indiana gun owners' ability to legally carry a gun, draw a gun, point a gun and/or to use deadly force to protect themselves or others. The course also covers the law determining potential criminal and civil liabilities for inappropriate use of a firearm.
[/FONT]