That is expressly denied in the Criminal Complaint. EN is not alleged to have been the driver by any of the accounts. Also per Stand Your Ground (which I'm no fan of), by the Complaint's own account EN was driven to a location he had a legal right to be in and by the Meyers own account KM was standing outside with a pistol in hand when the Audi arrived. In Nevada Stand Your Ground there is no duty to retreat. I think Stand Your Ground laws are very bad laws as it could potentially really get entangled here as both the Meyers and the occupants of the Audi could make claims to Stand Your Ground and both could conceivably be right.
Nevada's Stand Your Ground law has three requirements:
"That you have a right to be there.
That you're not doing anything illegal yourself.
And that you're not the original aggressor."
http://www.kolotv.com/home/headlines/Nevadas-Stand-Your-Ground-Law-What-Are-The-Rules-261183861.html
All parties involved qualify under #1 as no trespassing was accused of anyone in the Complaint and both parties could potentially claim #2 and #3.
Meyers party legal defense for all actions based purely on what is in the Complaint would be that they were verbally threatened (which it looks like it was the Audi driver not the EN that made the verbal threat and EN might not have even been in the car at the time the Audi driver made the threat and may never have known about it) and had a legal right to arm themselves and to then arm themselves and drive on the streets where they have a legal right to be and all subsequent actions of theirs are covered including the Meyers admission that they chased the Audi while armed. Conversely EN/Audi party can say they have Stand Your Ground protection because they saw the armed Meyers car chasing after them, which EN in particular could have the strongest defense here by saying he knew nothing about the verbal threat that happened before he got in the car where he only knew he called the Audi driver because he was frightened by the Meyers party in the parking lot and he only got out his gun and armed it upon seeing the Meyers armed and chasing him and he did not chase the Meyers to their house, but he had a legal right to be on Mt Shasta and defend himself either from his pre-existing SYG rights or by new SYG rights upon arriving with BM standing outside armed.
Now that I've detailed the importance of not engaging in illegality when claiming self defense, I think this rumor is highly relevant and it comes from a local source in a published article, which sounds like it meets the TOS:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...nned-19-year-old-said-buying-Xanax-years.html
If that is true, it has a great deal of bearing on EN's legal defense because if EN was engaged in a felony where a prescription drug deal went bust, EN would have a much harder time using self-defense as SYG could no longer protect subsequent actions by EN. It is actually easier for EN to be found guilty of murder/manslaughter if any of the Meyers were engaged in a drug deal that went bust. Any Meyers involved in illegal drug deals with EN around this event is not a defense of EN, but actually the contrary. Even though prescription drug dealing/possession is a felony in Nevada, it doesn't make it a Felony Murder case as only certain felonies count, so the Meyers couldn't be charged nor could any other Audi passengers with Felony Murder.
In short non-drugs EN has a potentially unique SYG defense compared to all other participants in the events if he wasn't there for the verbal threat but with drugs EN is in a particularly indefensible position in not being able to use SYG in defense against any criminal charges.