"If you didn't intend to kill, then why did you shoot my client's son in the head?"
"um.... because I just wanted him to stop. I didn't mean to kill him."
"What did you think would happen when you shot him in the head?"
I understand the difference between success and failure, thanks. If the guy dies and I live, (a scenario you neglected to mention) that's also a success in my books.
If he lives and poses no more threat to me, regardless if I shot him once or 10 times (hey maybe I needed to reload and hit him 11 times before he dropped his weapon or fell, it makes no difference to me) that's also a success.
I'm just pointing out the fact that if you're shooting someone in the chest or the head, your intention is to cause as much bodily harm to that person as possible. That course of action will quite likely cause the death of whomever you're shooting at. Therefore, you are shooting to KILL.
Our intention cannot be to kill. Once a goblin ceases to be a threat, either because he has dropped his weapon, or because his wounds prevent him from mounting any further aggression, you are no longer legally permitted to proceed with lethal force. Therefore our intent is to stop not to kill. Because he brought violence of us, we are not concerned with his well being. Quite likely two large caliber rounds in the chest are not survivable and will ultimately result in his death, but what we are concerned with is stopping him from killing us. Therefore if the two rounds in the chest have not taken the fight out of him, a CNS shot is our only means of survival.
I think you misunderstood my argument. I am arguing that shooting a person in the head is clearly intended to end the life of that person. I am saying that you simply cannot shoot a person in the head and then state that you had no intention to kill him. To say something of that nature in a court would immediately bring your honesty into consideration.
Regardless of whether a person shoots an attacker who is persisting in the attack once or 15 times, that person is covered by law unless they had another option to prevent the assault (ie escaping).
Beware and be aware of your backstop.

You seem to be missing the point. We don't shoot people for fun. Our intention is to survive a lethal assault, and the means we have at our disposal is lethal force. By bringing lethal force to bear on the situation, we must accept that there is a possibility that the goblin might die. We are not concerned with his welfare. If we shoot him twice, center of mass, and he does not break off his attack, there would seem to be little choice in the matter but to shoot for the head to stop his attack. Survival is the key to our defense, the choice of how we survive has been taken away from us. We don't care if the bad guy dies, but we want to live, and as long as we survive, if the bad guy survives we don't mind; if he dies we don't care, but our main purpose is not his death. As soon as you draw a firearm, even before you fire, you have brought lethal force into the equation. Should your man give up and drop his weapon, you live, and he gets to live as well, but the choice of life or death is his, not yours and you have not chosen to kill him.
Avoid using the 147 gr 9mm.



























