Hang on, what?? Step back just for a moment, when did I say anything about being loudmouthed?
I was expanding the conversation to make a larger point about behavior I've seen in many, many videos (I'm a LiveLeak connoisseur) where people pull all sorts of nonsense with cops. Sovereign citizens,
Moorish Americans, "I don't have to provide my ID" - you. name. it. Seen it all. Very rarely works out well for them. What I've almost never seen NOT work out well for someone, on the other hand, is being respectful and compliant.
Would that training include notifying the cop that you had a legally concealed firearm on your person?
What about producing your identification when the cop requests it?
Sounds like a recipe for a screw-up (a fatal one) if the cop can't keep his cool and panics. Not sure what the poor mope getting shot can do about that.
Die, I guess.
Yes, the training includes notifying a police officer that you're legally carrying.
It's good that Castile notified the officer about his firearm, though it's unfortunate he didn't say anything about the concealed carry permit and simply said he had a firearm. Still pretty good, but there could've easily been doubt in Janez's mind about whether it was legal or not.
The training also tends to include things about how to proceed from there. Like, being hyper-careful about your motions and making it clear to the officer that you will do whatever he asks and proceed how he commands in order to turn over the firearm to him if that's what he wants, etc.
When the encounter FIRST began, Janez asked Castile "do you have your license and registration?" and Castile leans over and gets his insurance / registration information out of the glove compartment. Good so far.
Then as Janez is looking at that, Castile decides to inform him about the firearm. Still good so far.
But here comes the crucial point of fatal mistake for Castile. He didn't realize (and he should have) that the moment he drops that revelation on the officer, that he has a firearm, that sort of resets the whole situation and he can't really just blithely continue on with previously issued commands about getting the license. Especially if the license is located in a position that could be interpreted as him going for the gun.
He needed to accept that mentioning the gun reset the situation and let the officer instruct him on what to do next. But everyone's right when they say that the mistake of NOT doing so should not equal an immediate death sentence.
Good thing it didn't. He was given at least three loud, clear commands to stop the motions he was engaging in. If, in his mind, he didn't have to stop because it was his wallet and not his gun he was reaching for... all I can say is that his fate clearly demonstrates that it was not the time for pedantry.
If he didn't realize beforehand that reaching for his wallet at that point, regardless of any previous request for his licence, could easily be interpreted as going for the gun he'd just mentioned...
he damned well should've realized that was how the officer was interpreting it when the officer then made it clear that was how he was interpreting it with loud, repeated commands to stop doing so accompanied by attempts at physical restraint.
Now, if Castile's hands were motionless in that car as Janez just simply imagined them moving and Castile was simply sitting there, baffled at the officer going insane as his hands didn't move at all... then Janez should probably get the death penalty.
But somehow, between the authenticity of Janez's reaction, what Diamond Reynolds said ("he was getting his licence"), etc. --- I would say Castile was indeed fishing in his pocket area and anyone who doesn't realize how dumb that is in a situation like that... I just don't know if I can help.