I don't remember reading before exactly "when" the armed convenience store robbery occurred, related to the PC stop-- just that it happened previously. I had interpreted that to mean it could have happened days earlier. Officer Yanez was the lead investigator in that armed robbery, according to numerous articles. And there were security video that had already been reviewed to identify the suspects-- so I didn't realize how close the robbery was to the traffic stop. But it appears it all happened VERY quickly, that the security video was available so soon after the armed robbery.
This (below) indicates that the armed robbery happened in very close time proximity to when the officer identified PC as a possible suspect. (And in close geographic proximity-- elsewhere I previously read that the robbery was within a half mile of where PC was pulled over). So, the robbery happened earlier in the evening. I do think that is quite significant as to the timeline of when exactly the robbery happened, when he radioed that PC resembled the armed robbery suspect, and the mindset of Officer Yanez.
Castile was pulled over while driving in the nearby suburb of Falcon Heights because he resembled a suspect in a gas station robbery that had taken place earlier in the evening, according to prosecutors.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/...le-stoned-negligent-before-shooting/95471712/
The office reported that Castile died at 9:37 p.m. CDT in the emergency room of the Hennepin County Medical Center, about 20 minutes after being shot.[6]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Philando_Castile
Yes, I know PC would have had no knowledge of that robbery, but as someone who had been pulled over
56 or more times, and had numerous encounters with police (including no license/ no insurance situations in his past, etc),
he knew how to respond to an officer during a traffic stop, AND
he knew he was an impaired driver, AND
he knew he was an impaired driver
with a child in the car, AND
he knew he was in possession of a gun he WAS NOT authorized to have (by virtue of him knowing that he WAS actively impaired), he absolutely did CAUSE the situation that occurred, IMO.
Had he cooperated with the officer, he would have been arrested for numerous charges (including child endangerment), had his car impounded, and likely would have lost his job at the school, in addition to facing felonies and misdemeanors. IMO, his behavior (and his actions, as an impaired driver with a child and a loaded gun in the car) created the situation.
IMO, he knew he was about to be arrested, but not for the reasons that Officer Yanez anticipated. My guess is that PC absolutely
knew he was busted for the impaired driving and pot possession and smoking, and the gun possession while driving impaired, and the child in the car, and thought somehow he could "mitigate" the situation by digging out his carry permit INSTEAD of complying with the officer's instructions and keeping still.
IMO, being acutely under the influence, his ability to make sound legal judgments was severely impaired. Executive function, actions/ consequences, and all that. He just started digging around in his pockets, instead of carefully considering the totality of his own predicament, and that of the child in the car (and the GF). And if that child had been taken into child protective custody and tested for drugs, I guarantee she would have tested positive for the "hot boxing" second hand smoke she breathed in that car (and was chronically exposed to). But that's a whole other discussion on its own.
These were not just some random "virtuous, law abiding innocent" people driving home from an outing. They were 2 adults smoking drugs in a car
with a child, driving around under the influence, with a child in the car, and carrying a loaded gun.
Let's not forget that. All of that is extremely significant to understanding what happened.
Both of these adults committed numerous crimes-- that the police and prosecutor
chose not to charge the girlfriend is immaterial-- she still engaged in criminal activity. (And politics had a lot to do with her not being charged, IMO.) This wasn't a "simple misunderstanding" that went awry.