oceanblueeyes
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In the state of Nevada under charges of M1 'deliberate' has a very specific legal meaning and is not for instance synonymous with 'intentionally.' In Nevada this lays out all the elements of M1 and the underling definitions of each element, BBM:
http://law.justia.com/cases/nevada/supreme-court/2000/32207-1.html
Under M1 I'm not sure that there's willfulness - intending specifically to kill - rather than not caring if he killed or wounded (but I could see a jury saying that he did based on the number of rounds he may have fired); nor do I think there was deliberation under the M1 meaning of the word in that given the circumstances I just don't believe anyone short of perhaps a cop or combat soldier would be mentally capable of coolness and reflection in that length of time and this is my biggest sticking point on M1. I'm also not seeing that it was premeditated in the M1 definition with this being part of some plan rather than spontaneous.
All I can say is defense attorneys would love you.

It clearly says that premeditation can be formed in seconds so even the courts recognize that there doesn't have to be a long drawn out period of reflection and EN had way more time than seconds.
There was plenty of time for EN to reflect once the first shooting had stopped. So he reflected, and deliberately, willfully, and with premeditation continued to hunt for the car and when he and his driver hemmed them in he opened fire completing his full intentions of killing those kids. Didn't he say he couldn't let the MFs get away? Even he knows his intent was to murder them.