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There might be better ways of approaching the situation, but you still have the right to fire, as long as you can reasonably state you were in fear of your life or great bodily harm.

As I found in my own post, it seems he was actually on the road, which is public property. And if that is the case, then he is definitely in the wrong.

That’s true, which begs the question: Was he firing at a fleeing vehicle or as the vehicle was coming at him?

Not necessarily if they are on his property, but I after reading through the comments and reading the story again a few times, I think they were actually on road which is public property.

Yeah, I was unclear on if they were in his driveway or this was a public roadway.

Yes, as I stated in another reply, I was under the impression they were parked in his driveway or something of that nature on his property. Otherwise walking out with a weapon drawn onto the road, which is public property, is against the law. However, if he stayed on his property the whole time, it would be more

That would be correct then. I was originally under the impression that they were parked in his driveway, or something of that nature.

Yes, at this point it all depends on if he went outside brandishing his weapon, or if he stepped out in front of the car, told them to stop, they accelerate, then he pulls his weapon.

It is a subtle but important distinction.

To clarify, even if the two players weren’t technically trespassing, the act of quickly accelerating toward someone can be interpreted as trying to run them over, which would prompt the man to claim he was fearing for his life, giving him the right away again.

The only situation I can consider where these two players

I felt the need to make an account and reply before a bunch of misinformation started spreading.

This is most likely a complete misunderstanding between this man and the two players. That being said, at no point should you EVER trespass on someone’s property to play this game. The property owner has the right to tell