Exposing the Big Game

Forget Hunters' Feeble Rationalizations and Trust Your Gut Feelings: Making Sport of Killing Is Not Healthy Human Behavior

Exposing the Big Game

Man dies in Sauk County hunting accident

http://www.nbc15.com/content/news/Man-dies-in-Sauk-County-hunting-accident-467482023.html

TOWN OF GREENFIELD, Wis. (WMTV) — A Milwaukee man is dead after a hunting accident in Sauk County.

The Sauk County Sheriff’s Office said they received a call around 10:35 a.m. on Sunday for a hunter who had fallen out of a tree stand and had fatal injuries.

Authorities say 50-year-old Jacob Herr was using a self-climbing tree stand on public hunting land with a family member on Tower Road in the Town of Greenfield.

The sheriff’s office said Herr was found by a hunting companion near the base of a tree. He was wearing a safety harness, but it was not attached to the tree.

Horse shot and killed by Michigan deer hunter

https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2017/11/29/michigan-deer-hunter-horse/906148001/

BEULAH, Mich. — A hunter killed a red-and-white horse in northern Michigan, apparently believing it was a deer.

The owner tells TV station WPBN that the horse was found near a bait pile in Benzie County on Nov. 19, the fifth day of deer season.

Tracii Kunish-Chandler says it’s hard to imagine that the 83-year-old hunter couldn’t recognize the animal. She says the horse, named Kodi, weighed 1,100 pounds. A gunshot was heard after legal hunting hours.

WPBN says the man has been charged with careless discharge of a gun.

Read more:

For Hunters in the Woods, a Quiet Killer: Tree Stands

Chris Nutter surveys the land around him in rural upstate New York from a tree stand, which are popular among deer hunters. At least five people have died this year statewide while hunting from tree stands and many more have been injured. CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

Jeff Callahan can still recall the morning he dozed off while hunting deer from a homemade tree-stand in upstate New York.

The resulting fall — a 13-foot plunge that caused a spinal injury and left him paralyzed from the neck down — was avoidable, he said, if only he had followed precautions and tethered himself to the tree with a safety line.

“Some guys think they’re indestructible, and that’s what I thought too,” said Mr. Callahan, 57, who now hunts from his wheelchair. Even aiming with his teeth and firing with the help of a breathing tube, he has bagged many deer with both shotgun and crossbow.

“They call me one-shot,” he said.

While the topic of dangerous hunting mishaps has long seemed synonymous with gun-related incidents, there is now a more deadly category: falls from tree stands that have become increasingly popular among gun and bow hunters seeking a high vantage point.

Tree stand mishaps are not a new phenomenon, but have become chronic enough that, this year for the first time, New York State’s Department of Environmental Conservation, which regulates hunting, has begun collecting information about such accidents from local authorities to better monitor and study the problem, said the agency’s commissioner, Basil Seggos.

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As this year’s deer hunting season winds down, New York State officials report only one gun-related fatality among hunters this year, while at least five people have died statewide while hunting from tree stands — many more have been injured.

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Photo

“Some guys think they’re indestructible, and that’s what I thought too,’’ said Jeff Callahan, who was left paralyzed from the neck down after he fell from a tree stand while hunting deer.CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

State officials reported one tree stand death last year, but said that there may have been others, since they had not started to systematically begin tracking the incidents. Mr. Seggos said he had “heard at least anecdotally that a number of people die or get injured each year” from tree stand falls and mishaps, but lacked hard information.

“I wanted to begin tracking them, to see where the problems were,” he said.

Gun mishaps, the longtime scourge of hunting season, have been declining for decades because of safety awareness initiatives such as orange clothing meant to deter accidental shootings, said Glen Mayhew, president of the national Tree Stand Safety Awareness Foundation.

“But we’ve seen tree stand incidents go up, because although people know they should wear harnesses, many still aren’t wearing them,” said Dr. Mayhew, adding that the mishaps continue despite persistent efforts to educate hunters about tree stand safety, the most important rule being the use of a safety line and harness attached to the tree both while in the stand and while climbing in and out.

Several thousand hunters fall from tree stands each year nationwide — with roughly 4,000 falls in 2015 — and states where hunters use tree stands typically have a fatality or two a year, Dr. Mayhew said. “So to see five fatalities from one state in a year, is an outlier, or unusually high,” he said of New York’s figures.

Mr. Seggos said his agency relies on some 2,500 teaching volunteers for its hunter safety program, and that about 45,000 hunters took advantage of the 1,500 courses given this year whose curriculum includes safety instruction on the stands, which often consist of a seat and a small platform that are fastened onto a tree’s trunk above brush lines and above an animal’s ability to spot or smell a hunter.

Also, he said, the agency has created online videos on tree stand safety, posted online notifications, and put out advisories on social media.

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Mr. Nutter, a hunter who lives near Syracuse and teaches bow hunting safety, said he knows numerous hunters who have suffered broken limbs and spinal injuries from falls. CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

Of the five tree stand fatalities in New York in recent months, one is still under investigation, officials said. One was caused by the failure of a tree stand, and another victim likely fell while entering or exiting a stand, a particularly common circumstance. The two other victims fell after having heart attacks, state officials said.

For some hunters, carrying equipment long distances to hunting locations and then climbing up to the stand can increase the chances of a heart attack, Dr. Mayhew said. Strapping into the stand can help a hunter survive a heart attack by enabling him to phone or signal for help, he said.

Dr. Michael F. Kamali, who runs the emergency department at the University of Rochester Medical Center, said hunters are brought in perhaps once a week — usually still in their hunting outfits — after tree stand falls, with injuries that range from “minor to very significant to life threatening.”

Chris Nutter, 57, a hunter who lives near Syracuse, and teaches bow hunting safety said he knows numerous hunters who have suffered broken limbs and spinal injuries from falls. Two hunters died in tree stand accidents in 2015 in Onondaga County, which includes Syracuse, he said.

As a young man, Mr. Nutter said he sometimes felt impervious enough to neglect safety practices — “I was 8 foot tall and bulletproof” — and fell twice from his stand while in his 20s, but avoided lasting injury.

Many hunters called tree stand accidents far more frequent than official figures indicate, because hunters are often reluctant to tell medical or law enforcement that they fell from a stand.

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Photo

Mr. Nutter heads into the woods in northern New York. As a young man, Mr. Nutter said he sometimes felt impervious enough to neglect safety practices — “I was 8 foot tall and bulletproof” — and fell twice from his stand while in his 20s, but avoided lasting injury. CreditBrett Carlsen for The New York Times

“A hunter who goes to the E.R. is not going to admit they fell out of a tree stand,” said Bill Conners, 71, a lifelong hunter from Dutchess County who writes about conservation issues and serves as a regional director of the New York State Conservation Council. “Either out of embarrassment, or because they didn’t tell their wives or bosses they went hunting.”

In fact, many hunters favor hunting alone and lose communication after a fall, especially if cellphone service is spotty.

Years ago, many hunters built wooden tree stands, but affordable manufactured stands have become the norm. Many are left up year-round and become weakened over time, Mr. Conners said.

Hunters often access the stands by rudimentary ladders, which can be tricky while wearing bulky winter clothing and lugging equipment, especially in icy conditions. Falls can be caused by alcohol, fatigue, sudden moves with a weapon and even excitement.

“When deer comes along, or a squirrel jumps onto your head, you might suddenly take a step back and you’re not standing on anything anymore,” said David Hartman, the president of New York State Whitetail Management Coalition.

It was sleepiness that caused Mr. Callahan’s fall in 1986. He now hunts from his wheelchair with the assistance of a friend. He finds flat areas in the woods or a field to roll onto, and behind camouflage material, rests his crossbow or shotgun onto a shooter’s rest. He aims it with a bar controlled by his teeth and activates the trigger with an air tube.

“I‘ve talked to so many hunters who have fallen out of trees,” he said. “So the first thing I tell any hunter is to learn from my experience and put your safety strap on.”

Willsboro men charged after hunting accident

ELIZABETHTOWN — A Willsboro resident accidentally shot another man while they were hunting illegally, State Police say.

About 5 p.m. Dec. 14, Elizabethtown Community Hospital contacted State Police to report what was said to be an accidental, self-inflicted gunshot wound sustained by Waite E. Denton, 27, of Willsboro.

The accident happened while he was hunting with Andrew L. Rolston, 33, police said in a news release.

“Denton initially claimed to us that he shot himself” while they were in a wooded area off Crowningshield Lane in the Town of Elizabethtown, State Police Troop B Public Information Officer Jennifer Fleishman said Wednesday.

“A subsequent investigation revealed Denton and Rolston were illegally hunting deer when Rolston accidentally shot Denton with a 20-gauge shotgun,” the release said.

“The slug entered his right bicep and exited through his right tricep before grazing his upper back.”

Rolston drove Denton to Elizabethtown Community Hospital. He was later flown to the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington with non-life-threatening injuries.

Fleishman said Rolston was treated there and has been released from the hospital.

 

CHARGES

State Police charged Rolston with second-degree assault, a felony, and second-degree reckless endangerment, fourth-degree criminal possession of a weapon and making a punishable false written statement, all misdemeanors.

He was arraigned in Westport Town Court, where he was released on his own recognizance.

Rolston is due in Elizabethtown Town Court at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 28, and in Lewis Town Court at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 26.

Denton was charged with making a punishable false written statement.

He was released on an appearance ticket, due back in Lewis Town Court at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 26.

 

HUNTING OFF SEASON

Deer-hunting season in the northern zone of New York state runs from Oct. 21 to Dec. 3, according to the State Department of Environmental Conservation website, so Denton and Rolston were allegedly 11 days past season.

Additional New York State Environmental Conservation Law charges are pending.

The investigation was conducted jointly with DEC Environmental Conservation Police.

Police Use Drone to Find Missing 92-Year-Old Hunter

https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/Police-Use-Drone-to-Find-Missing-92-Year-Old-Hunter-465174913.html

How Weight Loss Gave One Woman Her Life Back
Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office

A police drone has helped authorities find a 92-year-old hunter who had gone missing in a heavily wooded area in Virginia.

The Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office says said it took just 20 minutes for the drone to find the missing hunter on Sunday morning.

A search team on the ground was then able to go help the man, who they said was found without injuries.

The sheriff’s office said it was the first successful use of the new drone, which is equipped with infrared and high resolution cameras.

Coyote hunter injured in shooting accident

http://elkodaily.com/news/local/coyote-hunter-injured-in-shooting-accident/article_be1527c9-506e-59f4-8808-dde91cfab640.html

Elko sheriff patch
ELKO – Detectives with the Elko Sheriff’s Office responded to a report of a person being accidentally shot in a hunting accident Saturday morning at South Fork Road and Jiggs Highway.

When detectives arrived on the scene, the ambulance was present and had treated the victim of the shooting. Kevin Vella was one of four hunters pursuing coyotes that morning when Jamie Salazar accidentally shot Vella, according to Elko County Sheriff’s Office preliminary reports.

 “What happened is the four were set up to hunt the coyotes and calling them in,” said Undersheriff Ron Supp. “The coyotes then started to come behind [Salazar] and he took a shot. The two other guys were in line with him, but he didn’t know where [Vella] was.”

All four hunters were reportedly wearing camouflage during the incident, which occurred around 9 a..m.

Salazar shot Vella with a .223 caliber rifle, and reported the incident to the Elko Sheriff’s Office. Vella sustained injuries to his arm.

The investigation is ongoing as detectives continue to collect statements and evidence.

What can be done to stop all the deadly hunting accidents in France?

https://www.thelocal.fr/20171218/can-the-accidental-deaths-of-frances-hunting-season-come-to-an-end

What can be done to stop all the deadly hunting accidents in France?
Photo: AFP
The French hunting season isn’t only dangerous for wild animals. Every year a series of tragic accidents sees hunters, their family members and other members of the public killed. But how can it be avoided?
So far during the 2017-2018 French hunting season which started in September there have been nine people killed.
Three of these were people were unconnected with the hunt and one of these victims was sitting in her own garden.

Les non-chasseurs représentent un tiers des victimes d’accidents de chasse mortels !!
71 % des Français se sentent en insécurité en se baladant dans la nature :@EmmanuelMacron écoutez les citoyens et répondez à notre demande pour faire réformer la chasse !

On average there are around 20 deaths each year. In recent years, The Local has reported how joggershikersmushroom pickersmotorists, even gardeners have routinely been killed by stray bullets from rifles that were meant to kill wild boars, deer or pheasants.
But what can be done to solve the number of deadly accidents?
What the anti-hunting lobby says
Anti-hunting groups blame the hunting community’s lack of regard for the rules around hunting.
“They don’t respect the rules and they don’t want to be controlled,” said Marc Giraud, spokesperson for French anti-hunting group ASPAS.
“They are masters of their own world and the rules as they stand at the moment are insufficient,” he added.
READ ALSO:

'It's like the Wild West': Tales of life in rural France during the hunting season

ARCHIVE Photo: AFP Picture dated 29 August 1996 of 90-year-old Anna Chaillard, still an active boar hunter walking with her dog Titi in the surroundings of Huanne, central France.
ASPAS has been campaigning for hunting to be banned on Sundays for several years which Giraud said he believes would cut down on the number of deaths.
“There are around 20 deaths in hunting accidents each year and about 300 injuries, but France is the only country in Europe where hunting is not banned around the country on at least one day of the weekend,” he told The Local previously.
“We need to remember that hunters often suffer themselves. They or their family members are often the ones killed in these accidents.”
“But it’s worse when it’s people who aren’t involved in hunting because that spreads fear among people who are trying to live their normal lives.”
ASPAS would like to see more breathalyzer tests conducted on hunters before they are allowed to go out with their guns. For Giraud the same rules that apply to driving should apply to anyone who picks up a gun.
“One of the big problems is that breathalyzer tests are not obligatory and are only carried out in some departments,” he said.
Photo: AFP
“When you have a rifle in your hand, you are in charge of a lethal weapon, just like car drivers. Yet we have laws against drink-driving. It should be the same for hunters,” he told The Local.
One of the main barriers for change in the situation is the power of France’s hunting lobby which Giraud says is the “most powerful lobbying group in the National Assembly”.
The government, already conscious that rural France is suffering from a farming crisis, might not want to take on that lobby. But for ASPAS, there is only one way to prevent the accidents.
“The only way you’ll stop the accidents altogether is by stopping hunting,” he said.
What the residents say
Those living in rural France don’t expect any change soon, given the power of the hunting lobby in France. Most accept they will have to continue to take cover during hunts.
“As immigrants we do not feel that we should be critical of the way of life here but do feel it needs stronger regulations such as restricted to one day a week and kept further away from inhabited areas,” says Claire Younghusband, who lives on the border of Dordogne and the Lot.
“Sadly, we do not believe that anything will change any time soon as there are too many off duty police officers and municipal officials that enjoy the ‘sport’ and the general public does not seem to be inclined to get behind an anti-hunt lobby.”
American Kene Ovenshire from the Landes department has regularly confronted hunters near his farm.
“Their tradition is so deeply ingrained in them that my ‘complaints’ are always offensive to them,” he told The Local.
“I’ve resided to the fact that this is the way it is here – there’s nothing it seems that can be done.
“Other than tolerate them as best I can.”
Photo: AFP
What the hunters say
The National Hunters Federation in France has stressed that it is taking measures to improve the situation.
“It’s harder to get a licence now and the accidents that we see during the hunting season are usually people who are older, who got their permits a long time ago,” Julie Miquel, head of communications at the federation told The Local.
“The number of accidents is falling and will continue to do so now it’s more difficult to qualify for a licence,” she added.
Miquel also puts the “unusual” number of non-hunter deaths that have occurred so far this season down to the unseasonably warm weather.
“One accident is one too many,” said Miquel. “But usually it’s hunters that are killed during the hunting season rather than members of the general public.
“This year however the number has gone up because people have been making the most of the warmer weather and have been out walking in the countryside more than they normally would.”
Statistics released by France’s national hunting and wildlife office show that the number of accidents reported from June 1st 2016 May 31st 2017 stood at 143 in total, which showed a drop on the previous year’s figures.
However this isn’t the whole story. While the total number of accidents did fall, the number of deaths rose by 80 percent, from 10 to 18.
Miquel says the accidents are usually a result of “tired” hunters and are “definitely not down to alcohol intake”, which others have pointed to as a contributing factor in the past.
Photo: AFP 
Although she added that hunters are not required to take a breathalyzer test before hunting.
“It’s more a question of judgement, like if someone left a restaurant after a few drinks and was deciding whether to drive home or not,” said Miquel.
And what about the rise in deaths this year among members of the public?
Miquel said: “We have been looking into the subject of cohabitation of natural spaces for many years. One of the problems is that some areas that were once clearly forest aren’t anymore, as the population rises and more and more houses are built in rural zones.”
“But it is a good question and we’re looking at how we can better communicate with hunters. We’d also like to introduce more regular training for hunters who got their permits a long time ago.”
One of the problems with this however is that different departments are responsible for making the ultimate decisions on subjects such as this and rules cannot be enforced by the head office, said Miquel.

Hiker is killed after being shot in the groin by a wild boar hunter in the south of France

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5190417/Hiker-shot-dead-wild-boar-hunter-south-France.html

  • Jean-Louis Blanc, 59, was shot to death in Drome, south France
  • The alleged killed was out hunting and mistook Mr Blanc for a boar 
  • The 64-year-old local hunter is now facing charges of manslaughter

A hiker has been shot to death in a hunting accident after he was mistaken for a wild boar in the south of France.

Jean-Louis Blanc, 59, was out walking close to the village of Taulignan, in the Drome department, when he was hit in the groin by a bullet.

The hunter, a local man aged 64, has been arrested by police and is facing manslaughter charges.

Accident: A 59-year-old man was shot dead by a hunter near the village of Taulignan, Drome department, after the 64-year-old mistook him  for a wild boar

Accident: A 59-year-old man was shot dead by a hunter near the village of Taulignan, Drome department, after the 64-year-old mistook him for a wild boar

‘The hunter was in his 60s and was sure a boar was coming towards him through the undergrowth after his dog started barking,’ said a source close to the enquiry.

‘He pulled the trigger, and the result was this terrible accident. The hunter is now in custody.’

Paramedics attended the scene of the killing, which took place shortly after 3.30pm on Saturday, but Mr Blanc is thought to have died instantly.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5190417/Hiker-shot-dead-wild-boar-hunter-south-France.html#ixzz51dYQztIA
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mayor of Happy Valley-Goose Bay, in stable but critical condition following hunting accident

Mayor John Hickey
Mayor John Hickey – Submitted

HAPPY VALLEY-GOOSE BAY, NL — Mayor John Hickey is in stable but critical condition in hospital tonight, following a hunting accident earlier today.

The Town of Happy Valley Goose Bay issued a press release just one hour ago, stating, “Deputy Mayor Wally Anderson confirms … Hickey was involved in a hunting accident this afternon and remains in critical, but stable condition at the Labrador Health Centre.”

“Our thoughts and prayers are with Mayor Hickey and his family at this time,” said Anderson.

Sources inside the Town confirmed to the Labradorian that Hickey was shot in the face while out checking traps alone. He was reportedly shot under the chin and is in critical, but stable condition in St. John’s.

How the gun went off is unclear but Hickey managed to make his way to the road and get help.

Lake Melville MHA Perry Trimper posted on Facebook the community will now need to summon it’s inner strength to support the Mayor, his family, and the Happy Valley-Goose Bay Town Council. He also praised the medical team who took car eof Hickey.

“Special thanks to all those involved in getting him to the hospital and for those who prepared him for the medi-vac to St John’s,” Trimper wrote. “The paramedics, nurses and doctors are amazed at the ‘strength’ of this man, after all that he has been through in this accident. Our thoughts and prayers will now be needed to help John with his recovery.”

HIckey was a memebr of the House of Assembly from 2003 to 2011 and became mayor of Happy Valley-Goose Bay this past fall.

Latah County hunter shot with .50-caliber muzzleloader

Hunting Accident:

http://dnews.com/latah-county-hunter-shot-with–caliber-muzzleloader/article_12ffbcc4-d9f4-11e7-bff0-4790a4f4f844.html

A 60-year-old Moscow man was shot in the buttocks by a .50-caliber muzzleloading rifle while hunting near the 1300 block of Mica Mountain Road near Deary Monday morning.

Latah County Sheriff’s deputies responded to the accident about 9 a.m. and determined that the man’s hunting partner, a 72-year-old Potlatch man, believed he had been firing at an elk when he accidentally shot his friend.

The man was transported to Gritman Medical Center by the Deary ambulance and was in stable condition Tuesday.