Does having a pistol in the hand justify the use of deadly force? What
is the standard?
Use of force by the law enforcement officer in Florida is governed by the following statute (emphasis added):
776.05 Law enforcement officers; use of force in making an arrest.
A law enforcement officer, or any person whom the officer has summoned or directed to assist him or her, need not retreat or
desist from efforts to make a lawful arrest because of resistance or
threatened resistance to the arrest. The officer is justified in the
use of any force:
(1) Which he or she reasonably believes to be
necessary to defend himself or herself or another from bodily harm
while making the arrest;
(2) When necessarily committed in retaking felons who have escaped; or
(3) When necessarily committed in arresting felons fleeing from
justice. However, this subsection shall not constitute a defense in
any civil action for damages brought for the wrongful use of deadly
force unless the use of deadly force was necessary to prevent the
arrest from being defeated by such flight and, when feasible, some
warning had been given, and:
(a) The officer reasonably believes that the fleeing felon poses a
threat of death or serious physical harm to the officer or others; or
(b) The officer reasonably believes that the fleeing felon has
committed a crime involving the infliction or threatened infliction of
serious physical harm to another person.
The fact that the Airman has a pistol in hand alone might not justify a reasonable belief on the part of the deputy that it is necessary to defend himself, but a raised pistol is probably sufficient to justify a reasonable belief that the deputy needs to defend himself to avoid bodily harm. Once the pistol is raised, the deputy is a pull of the trigger away from being shot.
Also, the Airman was probably not justified under Florida law in raising his pistol towards a uniformed law enforcement officer, which is probably at least a threatened use of force. This is because Florida law says (emphasis added):
776.051 Use or threatened use of force in resisting arrest or making an arrest or in the execution of a legal duty; prohibition.—
(1) A person is not justified in the use or threatened use of force
to resist an arrest by a law enforcement officer, or to resist a law
enforcement officer who is engaged in the execution of a legal duty,
if the law enforcement officer was acting in good faith and he or she
is known, or reasonably appears, to be a law enforcement officer.
(2) A law enforcement officer, or any person whom the officer has
summoned or directed to assist him or her, is not justified in the use
of force if the arrest or execution of a legal duty is unlawful and
known by him or her to be unlawful.