Davey Defense – Firearms Safety & Training

Legal Basics (High-Level Overview)

This lesson is an overview only. It is not legal advice. Laws change — always verify
current statutes and consult an attorney for authoritative guidance.

Important: This section is informational only. It is not the Permit to Carry course
and does not meet BCA requirements for a permit.

① Core Principles of Self-Defense Law

  • Ability, Opportunity, Intent: The threat must have the means, opportunity, and clear intent to cause death or great bodily harm.
  • Imminence: The threat must be happening now — not past or future.
  • Reasonableness: Would another reasonable person in your shoes make the same judgment?

② Duty to Retreat vs. Stand Your Ground

  • In Minnesota and many states, there may be a duty to retreat if safe to do so, before using deadly force in public.
  • Inside your home, vehicle, or place of business, Castle Doctrine may apply — reducing or removing the duty to retreat.
  • Always confirm your state’s current law; interpretations change.

③ Use of Deadly Force

  • Justified only to stop an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm.
  • Not for protecting property alone.
  • Once the threat stops — your use of force must stop.

④ Aftermath Considerations

  • Call 911 as soon as safe. State: “I was attacked, please send help and medical.”
  • Identify yourself as the victim; request police and medical aid.
  • Expect to be detained, questioned, possibly arrested — stay calm.
  • Say: “I want to cooperate fully. I will give a full statement after I have spoken with my attorney.

⑤ Responsible Carry Habits

  • Know where carry is prohibited (schools, courthouses, private property postings, etc.).
  • Respect private property signs — entering against posted rules can result in legal trouble.
  • Stay sober: carrying under the influence is a serious crime.
  • Keep your permit and government ID on you at all times when carrying.

✅ Quick Knowledge Check

  • What three elements must be present for deadly force to be justified?
  • How does Minnesota law treat duty to retreat in public vs. at home?
  • What should you say to police immediately after a defensive incident?
Coach’s note: The law is the outer limit of what you may do.
Your personal standard should be higher: avoid conflict whenever possible.