I have been following your story since you posted it on USA Carry. Glad to see it spreading around. Like many others who have seen your video, I have read many a questions on how you knew all those case laws. I may search/start a thread about case laws for OC to have in their back pockets, but would you mind writing down your own research on Warren vs DC, Terry vs Ohio, Brown vs Texas, Hiibel vs Nevada, US v DeBerry and how they relate to your defense?
Here is a quick summary I made up and I will keep on me just for reference until I have them memorized:
Warren vs District of Columbia: Police do not protect the individual.
Terry v Ohio (Delaware v Prouse, Ybarra v. Illinois, Minnesota v. Dickerson, Florida v. J.L., Muehler v. Mena, Alabama v. White, Pennsylvania v. Mimms, Maryland v. Wilson, and Brendlin v. California): Must have reasonable articulated suspicion to detain, and probable cause to arrest for legal search and seizure. A RS detainment search must be limited to a pat of the outer surfaces of the clothing searching for weapons only. A search incident to arrest may be more thorough. But if they pat you down and feel a needle and ask "what's this" and you say, "it's a drug needle," then you're screwed.
Brown v Texas and Hiibel v Nevada and Kolender v Lawsen: Cannot demand ID without reasonable suspicion. (Also, statute must demand the identification, those court cases set a baseline of RS. Maine for instance does not require you to ID unless you are being issued a summons or are stopped for a traffic violation.)
US v DeBerry: A firearm where legally carried cannot be the only cause for a stop.