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

Injured hunter rescued

http://www.bluemountaineagle.com/Local_News/20171030/injured-hunter-found-by-search-and-rescue

Man accidentally stabbed while field dressing.

Angel CarpenterBlue Mountain Eagle

Published on October 30, 2017 1:06PM

Long Creek Ambulance crew member Craig Palmer assists injured hunter James Moyer (out of view) with other volunteers. In the foreground is the six-point bull elk, shot by Moyer, which he was field dressing when he wounded himself.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Long Creek Ambulance crew member Craig Palmer assists injured hunter James Moyer (out of view) with other volunteers. In the foreground is the six-point bull elk, shot by Moyer, which he was field dressing when he wounded himself.

An injured hunter was flown to a hospital in Bend Thursday afternoon, after emergency workers packed him out of a remote site in northern Grant County.

James Lee Moyer, 51, of Mapleton shot a six-point bull elk across the Indian Creek drainage, about 15-20 miles east of Meadowbrook Summit, early that morning, Grant County Sheriff Glenn Palmer said in a press release.

Moyer made his way to the elk and was field dressing the animal when the knife he was using slipped, accidentally stabbing himself about two inches above the navel, Palmer said.

Moyer’s wife, who was 650 yards across the canyon with her husband’s parents when the incident took place, made it to his side where cellphone service was available and a call was made to 911 at 11:31 a.m.

Long Creek and John Day medical units were dispatched as well as the Grant County Sheriff’s Office and the sheriff’s Grant County Search and Rescue team. Oregon State Police and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife also responded.

Palmer said Air Link from St. Charles Medical Center in Bend landed about 150-200 yards above Moyer’s location.

Palmer credited search and rescue crews as well as hunters in the area, with clearing logs, trees and regrowth from the road where the helicopter landed. Moyer was carried on a backboard to the helicopter.

Search and rescue personnel, ODFW and Oregon State Police assisted Moyer in field dressing and packing the bull elk to an awaiting vehicle.

Family Says Woman Killed by Hunter Was on Her Own Land

Family members of the Maine woman shot and killed by a hunter say she was on her own land digging for gemstones when she was killed.

Oct. 30, 2017, at 2:36 p.m.

Family Says Woman Killed by Hunter Was on Her Own Land

HEBRON, Maine (AP) — Family members of the Maine woman shot and killed by a hunter say she was on her own land digging for gemstones when she was killed.

Authorities say a 38-year-old Hebron man fatally shot 34-year-old Karen Wrentzel on Saturday morning. Officials have still not publicly identified the man, and did not say if he was on Wrentzel’s land when he shot her.

The Maine Warden Service concurred that Wrentzel was not hunting at the time, and had no affiliation with the shooter — who officials say was hunting with his father.

The warden service is investigating the shooting and says it is working with the Maine Attorney General’s Office on the case.

Mother Debbie Morin says Wrentzel didn’t know Saturday was opening day for hunting season in Maine.

Copyright 2017 The Associated Press.

Raquel Pennington breaks leg in scary hunting accident, out of planned UFC title fight

https://www.mmafighting.com/2017/10/27/16562834/raquel-pennington-breaks-leg-in-scary-hunting-accident-out-of-planned-ufc-title-fight

Raquel Pennington
Esther Lin, MMA Fighting

On the cusp of her first world title shot, Raquel Pennington instead finds herself dealing with the worst setback of her fighting career.

The 29-year-old women’s bantamweight contender verbally agreed to meet divisional champion Amanda Nunes at UFC 219 on Dec. 30, but she suffered a severe leg injury in an ATV accident earlier this week and now expects to be on the shelf for the foreseeable future.

Pennington’s injury and her aborted bout with Nunes were first reported by Combate. MMA Fighting reached out to Pennington, who provided details of the frightening scene.

“It happened four days ago,” Pennington told MMA Fighting’s Ariel Helwani on Friday. “I was on my yearly hunting trip with my uncles and cousins, we were hunting that morning and coming down from the mountain in our side-by-sides (ATVs). It was snowing and when we went to turn the side-by-side flipped. It threw me out the side the same time it was flipping and the roll cage caught my leg and pinned me. My cousin fell out the driver seat on top of me, crawled out the window, and lifted it the best he could so I could drag myself out.

“They rushed me to the hospital. Thank God for my tall hunting boots because it protected my leg from fully shattering, which if that happened I would have to get my lower leg amputated. Also, where my bone is broken is the main nerve to your foot; luckily, the feeling came back and I passed the test otherwise I would have [drop foot], never being able to control my foot again. My calf is totally smashed in. Had an MRI of my knee and lower leg, they were worried I tore everything. If I tore from behind the knee they can’t fix it, but results came back and calf is just smashed bad. Should recover and in time the nerves will repair. So three to four month recovery.”

Winner of her last four fights, Pennington has not competed since taking a unanimous decision over Miesha Tate at UFC 205 last November. During a recent episode of The MMA Hour, she discussed prior injuries that prevented her from getting back into the cage earlier this year.

“I had three major surgeries after I fought Miesha,” Pennington said. “I had my shoulder completely redone, my right shoulder. And then I had to have wrist surgery and I had mouth surgery.”

“I started feeling it actually two weeks prior to the fight,” Pennington continued. “I couldn’t even lift my arm. So if you watch the fight with Miesha and you can see me throwing a million jabs it’s because mentally I could not get my right arm to fire. I was just having way too much pain. During the fight, in that moment where I picked her up, I felt something – it was like this weird flush that went through my arm and then after that I was completely done.”

As for Nunes, she now finds herself without an obvious challenger having successfully defended her title against Valentina Shevchenko this past September in her lone Octagon appearance this year. “The Lioness” won the women’s bantamweight championship from Tate at UFC 200 and she has since fended off Ronda Rousey and Shevchenko.

Nunes’s team told MMA Fighting’s Guilherme Cruz that they don’t expect Nunes to book any other fight before the year is through, as Pennington was the only challenger that made sense to them.

“This is as serious as it gets”, woman killed in Hebron hunting incident

Hunting Accident:

http://www.wcsh6.com/news/local/woman-killed-in-hebron-hunting-accident/486831900

A 34 year-old woman is dead after a hunting incident in Hebron, the first such death in Maine in four years.
Game Wardens say the woman was killed around 10:30 a.m. Saturday in the area of Greenwood Mountain Road.

Wardens say they have a lot of work to do in Hebron to figure out what happened.

According to Warden Service Corporal John MacDonald, investigators believe the woman was alone.

He says wardens aren’t sure what the woman was doing in the woods before she was shot and killed by a 38-year-old man.

They say that man was with a small group of hunters but aren’t saying what he was doing before firing his gun.

They say the group called 9-1-1 immediately once they realized what happened.

Saturday was the first day of Maine’s firearms deer hunting season but wardens also won’t say whether the victim was wearing high visibility clothing while out in the woods.

“The details behind this and what led up to it, what those circumstances were, we just don’t know for sure,” said MacDonald.

To gather that missing information, police and wardens are asking key questions, why and how did this happen.
Investigators will also spend a lot of time gathering evidence from the wooded area the woman was killed in.

“We have specialized teams of forensic mappers, people who map these scenes digitally,” said MacDonald.

The wardens say the woman lived near where she died and plan to block off the area around the incident scene for as long their search for answers goes on.

“This is as serious as it gets,” said MacDonald.
He also added investigators are up against the clock to finish their work because of an approaching rainstorm.

They expect to return to the incident scene for days, if not weeks.

As of Saturday evening, neither the woman nor the hunter’s names had been released by police yet.

Wardens say the man who killed her could eventually face charges but they will be determined by the findings of their investigation.

They add the hunters are cooperating with investigators.

© 2017 WCSH-TV

Hunter shot and killed by another hunter in Maine

https://wtop.com/national/2017/10/hunter-shot-and-killed-by-another-hunter-in-maine/

 HEBRON, Maine (AP) — Authorities say a hunter has been shot and killed by another hunter in Hebron, Maine.

The Maine Warden Service says the dead hunter is a woman in her mid-30s.

 Authorities tell the Lewiston Sun Journal that the shooter was a man who was with a different hunting party out on Saturday morning. He has been identified and was being interviewed by the Warden Service.

Hebron is about 48 miles north of Portland. Saturday was “Maine Resident Only Day” for moose and deer hunting.

Maine’s last hunting fatality was in 2012. William Briggs, of Windham, Maine, was later convicted of manslaughter in the shooting death of Peter Kolofsky of Sebago, Maine.

___

Information from: Sun-Journal, http://www.sunjournal.com

Father, daughter rescued after hunt

To Alexandria’s horror, her father soon rolled the ATV, disappearing underneath the overturned machine, which was still running…

Father, daughter rescued after hunt
Payette residents Michael Meacham, left, and daughter Alexandria Meacham were both on crutches last week following a weekend hunting trip in Washington County that ended with a search and rescue effort after the father rolled his ATV.

Photo by Rob Ruth | Independent-Enterprise

A hunting trip for three members of a Payette family and a family friend was nearly in the books as a pleasant if uneventful success as night approached on Oct. 15.

Nicole Meacham, one family member who wasn’t on that trip into Washington County, said she received a phone call at home at roughly 8 p.m. from her husband, Michael Meacham, informing her that the hunting party would be loading up soon for the return trip home. First, however, Michael Meacham and the couple’s 16-year-old daughter, Alexandria, needed to retrieve a deer that had been shot minutes earlier by Michael and Nicole Meacham’s 11-year-old son.

Nicole said she received a call later that night from Washington County dispatch informing her that Alexandria had phoned in a report of an ATV accident involving her dad. By now darkness had fallen, the temperature would be dropping to below freezing, and the stranded father and daughter were the focus of a search and rescue effort.

Although Alexandria had barely managed to get enough signal on high ground to place her 911 call, Nicole said, the daughter was also able to receive a text message that Nicole now sent. Nicole asked about Michael’s physical condition. Alexandria texted back with a piece of bad news: Dad had a broken leg.

Nicole said she decided to phone her own father, Payette resident Phil Burley, to have him drive out and participate in the search, especially since Burley was well familiar with the terrain. She said Burley quickly rounded up several friends and headed out.

The deer hunt took place off of Sheep Creek Road and over Dodson Pass, on Bureau of Land Management ground, Michael Meacham said. He said Alexandria had shot her own deer fairly early in the day, but her brother didn’t hit his until shortly before dusk. The deer took off running before it died, traversing approximately a mile of ground, Michael said. He added that they could pretty readily see where it had gone, however, so he decided to take Alexandria with him on his ATV to retrieve the animal while the other adult in the party, friend Josh Lucas, of Payette, went back to the pickup with Meacham’s son, who is also named Michael.

Obstacles

Partway to their intended destination, Meacham and his daughter were slowed by ground obstacles.

“I couldn’t navigate myself through the dark and the rocks and stuff, and I got myself into trouble trying to go through a little draw or ravine,” Meacham recalled.

He instructed Alexandria to wait on higher ground, out of harm’s way, while he tried to drive the ATV out of the draw. Dutifully, she walked up the slope and seated herself on a big rock to watch and wait.

To Alexandria’s horror, her father soon rolled the ATV, disappearing underneath the overturned machine, which was still running.

“I couldn’t see him and I couldn’t hear him,” Alexandria said.

After that very anxious long moment, she did hear him, however. Meacham was at least conscious enough to shout to be heard above the sound of the engine. He told Alexandria to switch off the motor. The father then struggled to slide himself out from underneath the machine and into the open.

Alexandria was meanwhile “freaking out” over the situation, Meacham said. “I drug myself from under there and told her to calm down,” he said. Meacham couldn’t go any farther, however, because his ankle was badly broken.

Alexandria responded well, and began performing the tasks most immediately needed, starting with going to higher ground to try and connect with 911.

The Weiser Signal American later reported that the girl’s call went to Baker County, which relayed the emergency information to Washington County. Matt Thomas, Washington County sheriff, told the Weiser newspaper that, in addition to local resources, the search and rescue effort also featured a helicopter from Two Bear Air Rescue in Kalispell, Montana. The helicopter is specially equipped to hoist an injured person from a constricted space.

Thomas told the Independent-Enterprise the special helicopter was indeed put to use lifting Meacham out of the narrow draw.

Waiting for help

That rescue didn’t occur until Monday morning in daylight, though, and the intervening night was a long one. Meacham said his daughter built a small fire a few different times. The fires furnished only a modest amount of heat. At other times Alexandria slept with her head on her father’s chest. He said he feared that she might suffer physical damage from the cold air if she slept too long, so he periodically awakened her and contrived various errands to get her walking around.

Meacham told the Independent-Enterprise that he was proud of how well his daughter took care of him.

 “She was my hero. … She got all the calls made that she could make. She made sure that I was covered up and warm,” Meacham said.

“I was desperate and I was scared, but I didn’t have a choice. I had to help,” Alexandria said.

Sometime after daybreak, Alexandria encountered her first searcher. It happened to be none other than her grandpa, Phil Burley.

Meacham and Alexandria were soon both transported together via Life Flight to St. Alphonsus in Ontario, where the father had to remain a couple of days.

Recovery

Meacham said he underwent a surgery which included inserting a titanium rod just below his knee and continuing far down his leg. On Friday, two days after he was released, he said he was currently experiencing some pain, but the good news was that his leg was expected to “fully recover in about a year … like it never happened.”

Meacham and Alexandria were both on crutches last week, but they said Alexandria’s injury was only an ankle sprain. She had sustained the injury while stumbling around in the dark the night of their ordeal. On Friday she said the sprain wasn’t serious, and she was nearly ready to put the crutches aside.

Meacham said he drives a tow truck for a living, but he also manages the towing company, so there will be plenty of desk work to keep him busy once he returns to work.

He said one lesson he takes from the hunting trip’s mishap is to delay retrieving an animal if it’s too far away and the sun is going down.

“What I should have done was waited till morning,” he said.

Infamous ‘Lion Killer’ Perishes After Falling 100 Feet During Hunting Trip

https://animalchannel.co/hunter-dies-trip/

written by Britanie Leclair on October 9th, 2017

According to Google Dictionary, karma is a belief based in Hinduism and Buddhism that says a person’s actions dictate their future. It’s also a term that a number of animal lovers have been using to describe the following story.

In November 2015, an Italian hunter named Luciano Ponzetto drew the wrath of the internet after the public got a hold of photos of him smiling next to the body of a hunted lion.

According to Safari Club Italy (of which Ponzetto was a member), the photos were originally posted to the club’s Facebook page to showcase the winners of its annual Chapter Trophy Award competition— a competition in which Ponzetto had won a 3rd place prize.

The photos and subsequent media coverage made Ponzetto infamous. He was criticized and ultimately forced to resign from his role as the medical director of a business kennel.

The Sun also quoted him as saying, “I am being criticized by people who do not know me. I have always loved my work and I have always loved animals… I will carry on hunting until the law changes.”

Source: ATI

But Luciano no longer hunts. It isn’t because the laws have been changed, however— it’s because he died in a manner that many are calling an act of karmic retribution.

One year following the initial controversy, media outlets reported that Ponzetto had died as a result of falling into a 100-foot ravine during one of his regular hunting trips. According to ATI, Ponzetto was hunting wild birds with friends in the Colle delle Oche hills near Turin, Italy, when he slipped on a patch of ice, ultimately falling to his death.

According to sources, prior to the incident, Ponzetto had recently returned from Canada and had bragged about catching a number of kills. An Italian spokesperson (via The Sun) said, “His body was recovered by helicopter and taken to a local hospital… He died instantly and there was nothing that could be done.”

Now, I’m not one to talk ill of the dead, but I can say that the news of Ponzetto’s death received very little sympathy. As mentioned, people considered the circumstances ironic, believing the hunter had finally paid the price for his hunting ways.

Dog killed by bow hunter inspires new bill to restrict hunting

http://newjersey.news12.com/story/36623273/dog-killed-by-bow-hunter-inspires-new-bill-to-restrict-hunting

TRENTON –A New Jersey lawmaker is set to propose a new bill Wednesday aimed at restricting hunting near residential property.

It’s called Tonka’s Law and is named for a dog killed by a bow hunter in September in Readington Township. The bow hunter was about 50 feet from the property line of the dog’s owners.

Officials said the hunter, Romeo Antonuccio, of Kenilworth, was charged with careless discharge and damage of property after he told police that while trying to shoot deer from a tree stand, he thought the dog was a coyote.

State Sen. Raymond Lesniak plans to announce the new bill Wednesday night on Facebook Live.

Man fatally shot while hunting in Wadi Mujeb

http://www.jordantimes.com/news/local/man-fatally-shot-while-hunting-wadi-mujeb

By Rana Husseini – Oct 14,2017

AMMAN — Police are questioning a 23-year-old hunter who allegedly shot and killed another hunter in Wadi Mujeb area over the weekend, official sources said.

The suspect turned himself in to the police shortly after allegedly shooting the 42-year-old victim while they were both hunting animals on Friday night, Police Spokesperson Lt. Col. Amer Sartawi said.

“At this point, we are treating this incident as accidental, but we are still investigating the shooting,” Sartawi told The Jordan Times.

A second source told The Jordan Times that “the suspect was hunting late at night in Wadi Mujeb area when he heard a noise near him and thought it was a wild anima”.

“The suspect shot at the direction of the noise with his pump action rifle but discovered that he had shot a person so he immediately turned himself in,” the second source added.

The victim was rushed to a nearby hospital where he was declared dead on arrival, the source added.

A team of government pathologists headed by Saif Hamarneh performed an autopsy on the victim and concluded that he “received a fatal bullet wound to the back and head,” a senior medical source told The Jordan Times.

 The Criminal Court prosecutor is currently questioning the suspect who is detained at a correctional and rehabilitation centre pending further investigations, the second source added.