Sure a bad shot can happen, but guys that shoot deer in the back end because that's all they can see don't have much respect, so I wouldn't think they'd put much effort into going after a deer they shot as such..
Printable View
Sure a bad shot can happen, but guys that shoot deer in the back end because that's all they can see don't have much respect, so I wouldn't think they'd put much effort into going after a deer they shot as such..
You were most definitely not wrong.
If it were me and it was the only way to finish the animal I would have risked the charge. If I made the bad shot, I would deal with the consequences. I would argue a charge based on taking all conceivable actions to retrieve wounded game.
An axe works, blunt end down between the lookers.
Sent from my SM-G960W using Tapatalk
Either way more than one offense happened. Leaving the deer to rot I bet is a worse charge then discharging a firearm after dark.
Im surprized more people woukd not just walk up and shoot it..I know thats what I would have done....hell I hit a coon or groundhog I back up if I see it not dead and run iver again buts me...
when you get to ethics that is exactly it-- it often transcends the letter of the written law.
sometimes the most ethical thing to do means rebellion.
If I shot a deer, knew where it was and it was only an hour past legal shooting time, and it was on property where I had permission, I'd go ahead get the OK from the landowner and put it out of it's misery.
I'm sure folks on here have done it and just wont want the internet police showing up at their door.
This kind of scenario just should not happen. The crew I run have orders … We quit at sunset. Gives them time to climb down from their stand and exit the woods with enough light to see by. We do not use buckshot only slugs or sabots are allowed. I was with a crew many years ago that made those mistakes and swore that when I ran my own gang that it would be done right or not at all. To date we have never lost a deer, nobody got hurt aside from egos or liver damage and everyone has fun. As for that situation … I would have shot it and argue the point later.
Sorry but the law is the law . The co's don't give a dam about your ethics or mine.
A firearm not in a gun case after dark you will be charged.
The cell phone # of my local CO is on my contacts list to cover such (and more) situations that can and do happen in real life.
I trust he would have found a good way to avoid both the waste of the deer, and also having to explain to a judge why the right moral/ethical action was taken.