The Hunter

Yes it is I, the so called irresponsible, trigger happy hunter that shot Fender. I have kept out of this emotionally charged discussion since the incident. I have been attacked repeatedly by members of the community that have been driven by emotion and a one-sided story. Here is my side.
On that day, I was hunting with my fiancé on her family’s property. The property is approximately 100 acres. Also hunting that day was my future brother-in-law. We had been in a stand that was facing away from any populated areas. Our hunting lanes were to the back of the property onto an additional 400 unoccupied acres. We went to the stand on a bright and sunny day. We had been in the stand a short time when I had the opportunity to harvest a deer. I took the shot and unfortunately missed the animal when it ducked. I then had a second opportunity to harvest another deer. I carefully placed the shot and waited for the animal to go down. After waiting for about 20 minutes, my fiancé and I began gathering our gear to go find the animal.
As I stood up, I placed my rifle down and put my gear bag on. We heard a loud noise coming at us from our left. A deer came out of the wood line at a full run for its life. I was unable to gather my rifle to place a responsible shot on the animal. Quickly behind the deer, two dogs were running after it. The animals were snarling and growling. I told my fiancé, who is a certified conservation ranger and current sheriff’s deputy, that I was going to shoot one of the animals. I did not see or hear a collar on either animal. My fiancé agreed with my decision and I shot the dog that was in the rear, a brown boxer that was viciously attacking (pursuing) the deer. Once shot, the dog immediately went down and did not move.
We left the stand and hurried to the dog. As we arrived at the animal, roughly 86 yards away, we found it was wearing a collar. We checked the tag, and saw the owner’s name. We called my fiancé’s grandfather. He told us that he knew the owner and where he lived. As we were getting ready to visit the owner, my future brother-in-law came to us. He told us that he recognized the dog as the same one that had attacked several other deer during his hunt also. My brother-in-law went to find the deer that I shot while we felt obligated to return the dog to its owner. Mr. Edwards lives three (3) properties over, approx 1/3 of a mile away. Not quite the backyard distance as described before.
As we pulled into his driveway, Mr. Edwards met us. I told Mr. Edwards that I had shot his dog because it was chasing deer. I offered my sincere apology and then offered to bury the animal if he wished. He became quiet for a moment before he began yelling, cursing and verbally assaulting my fiancé. I again apologized. We placed the animal where he instructed us to and we left. At no time did I try to hide the fact I shot his dog.
The comment was made that I was trying to hide behind the law. I wasn’t trying to hide. I did what I thought was right and lawful. As I said before, my fiancé is a certified conservation ranger and a current sheriff’s deputy. As a conservation ranger, she was obligated to shoot ALL dogs chasing deer. We honestly thought that the dog was not collared and was likely a dangerous stray. There had been problems recently with wild dogs in that area of Fayette County. This information was obtained from the Department of Natural Resources. Also, there have been specific problems on this particular property in the past. Family pets and other animals have been slaughtered. With several children in the family, would you risk a vicious animal roaming your property?
Comments were also made about the poor defenseless family pet. What about the poor deer? The dog was chasing the deer to kill it for fun. Stray dogs that run deer rarely eat them, if ever. Why is the dog considered more important than the deer? Someone please inform me as to how animal’s lives rank and why. The dog was going home eventually to have a nice bowl of human issued dog food. The deer was going to die for no good purpose. For those of you that say I was killing the deer for sport, no such thing. Every year I harvest deer for food. I eat venison (deer) year round. Also, my fiancé and I hunt deer for her mother. Her mother is severely allergic to beef. One beef taco sent her to the hospital. Her red meat intake is supplied by harvesting deer.
As for the criminal offense, I did not know anything about it until I was notified by mail. I went to the Fayette County Sheriff’s Office and got a copy of the report. The report stated that no criminal offense was committed and that the case was closed. A comment was made implying that the case was closed to protect another cop. The Sheriff’s Office never knew that I was in law enforcement. No one was aware of my employment until the day I went to court for the warrant Mr. Edwards was attempting to obtain.
As for the warrant, Judge Tinsley did not make a decision that day, nor has he since. An agreement was reached between myself and Mr. Edwards. I agreed, voluntarily, to donate the money. Also, I did not loose my license for a year, just the license I had at the time of the incident.
Another comment really hit me. An individual on this newspaper’s website stated, “for all of you manly hunters out there who like to kill deer and support shooting dogs, try hunting something that can shoot back like a terrorist in Afghanistan or Iraq. It's more exciting, more competitive, and actually takes some guts to hunt down a guy that can shoot back and actually knows you are trying to kill him.”
My fiancé and I serve our country/community everyday. We put on a uniform and head off to work where every day we hunt bad guys that shoot back, not knowing if we will come back. And yes, I have been shot at by one of those bad guys and I made it home. I do know what it is like.
As you have also probably noticed, I have referred to both the deer and the dog as animals through most of this writing. That is because they are. Neither is more important than the other and they certainly are not more important than human beings – or even equally so. I know most of you will still think of me as the irresponsible hunter, oh well. This all stems from an irresponsible dog owner that chose not to keep his animal under control. He is bitter and continues to attack me through this newspaper and any way he can. He cannot accept his own personal responsibility for this incident. I took my responsibility from the beginning by taking the animal back to him and agreeing to donate the money. I could have left the dead dog on my fiancé’s property and the buzzards and coyotes would have devoured him in no time. No one would have ever known what had happened to Fender. However, as a responsible, kind and compassionate person who believes in doing what is right, I returned the dog to his home with heartfelt apologies. As thanks for my honesty and good intentions I have paid both emotionally and financially and am still being maligned, not just by Fender’s owner, but by people who don’t even know me. I am comfortable with my actions of that day. I stand by what I did. I do regret that Mr. Edward’s family lost their pet due in part to my actions but also due in part to his own actions. I have taken responsibility for my actions, when will Mr. Edwards take responsibility for his?...and when will Mr. Edwards become mature enough to lay this matter to rest?
T. Grier and Family

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Submitted by oldbeachbear on Sun, 02/04/2007 - 9:06pm.

I have seen dogs chase deer and you insult every one. A deer can outrun a dog any old day, but neither deer nor dog can outrun a bullet from a hunter sitting on his butt with nothing better to do than shoot something defenseless. You make me sick! No amount of heads on your wall [not even a dogs], will make you macho!

Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Sun, 02/04/2007 - 10:05pm.

If I catch a dog crapping in my yard and destroying my property day after day and I decide I've had enough and I shoot the nuisance stray does this make me a bad guy and the irresponsible neighbor a victim? If I did that would you recommend I bring the dog to him and apologize or should I just dump it in the woods so no one will find out about it?

__________

You don't need to defend a Lion. You just need to let him out of his cage.

C.S. Lewis


Git Real's picture
Submitted by Git Real on Sun, 02/04/2007 - 10:24pm.

For the good advice.

__________

You don't need to defend a Lion. You just need to let him out of his cage.

C.S. Lewis


SouthernBelle's picture
Submitted by SouthernBelle on Sun, 02/04/2007 - 2:45pm.

an animal rights activist, I don't think you should be treated the way you have been. I come from a family of hunters, and my father has always taught me to do the right thing, even when you're hunting. (I don't hunt, I target shoot, but if I ever missed....) I think you did the right thing. As much as Mr. Edwards' heart is breaking, (I completely understand) he was wrong too. His dog shouldn't have been out and about, and you should not have HAD to shoot the dog. I say "had" because the way you tell it, you felt like that was the right thing to do. I didn't read that you had a scope, so I'm taking it that you didn't, so you wouldn't have been able to see a collar. Anyway, that's my two cents. You BOTH have my sympathies.

SouthernBelle, GRACE is a VIRTUE


AF A-10's picture
Submitted by AF A-10 on Fri, 02/02/2007 - 6:28pm.

This was a bad situation all the way around. I've got three dogs and I will tell you I was not on your side of this issue, but it took a true sense of integrity to carry a dog you had just killed to his owners. I don't know how many people would have had the cajones to do that. I do hope that the fences will mend over time. You guys, in law enforcement, have a hell of a job. Probably makes it a bit tougher with this kind of cloud over your head. But let's hope everyone has learned something from this: Leash your pet, check and recheck your target. Be safe, and congratulations on the upcomming nuptuals. You probably know not to piss off a woman who can shoot.

Cheers,
Kevin "Hack" King


Submitted by myword_mark on Fri, 02/02/2007 - 6:07pm.

I took the shot and unfortunately missed the animal when it ducked.
How unfortunate.

I carefully placed the shot and waited for the animal to go down.
How humane.

I shot the dog that was in the rear, a brown boxer that was viciously attacking (pursuing) the deer. Once shot, the dog immediately went down and did not move. Why didn’t you shoot the one closest to the Deer? Gee, you saved the deer’s life. He could have been shot!

The comment was made that I was trying to hide behind the law.
You still are by saying what you did was ‘legal’.

Comments were also made about the poor defenseless family pet. What about the poor deer? Uh, didn’t you kill a deer that day too? Seems to me like you enjoy killing the “poor deer” . Some of us, who actually did hunt terrorists in the Middle East, think shooting either one is a load of bull crap.

Someone please inform me as to how animal’s lives rank and why. I think you just did that … you will kill them both – and did that day.

Also, I did not loose my license for a year, just the license I had at the time of the incident. So, you lost your license but not your “license”- gotcha.

Neither is more important than the other and they certainly are not more important than human beings – or even equally so. Then tell me why you shoot deer but not pets…oh, you shoot both, my bad!

However, as a responsible, kind and compassionate person who believes in doing what is right, I returned the dog to his home with heartfelt apologies. You certainly have a high opinion of yourself there cowboy, but “a responsible, kind and compassionate person” doesn’t usually kill family pets.

I do regret that Mr. Edward’s family lost their pet due in part to my actions but also due in part to his own actions. Wait, the animals are the same, right? So who do you apologize to whenever you kill deer? And, since even animal control doesn’t shoot to kill stray dogs, do you think maybe you aren’t as compassionate as you think you are?

Submitted by GloriaG on Fri, 02/02/2007 - 7:52pm.

This issue, for all intents and purposes, was over as far as I was concerned. But since you brought it up, did you really have your scope on the dog and not see the collar? I find that difficult to believe. I really don't blame the owner for getting so mad. You killed his pet.

bad_ptc's picture
Submitted by bad_ptc on Fri, 02/02/2007 - 6:17pm.

Smiling


Submitted by GloriaG on Fri, 02/02/2007 - 9:05pm.

A bullet from a rifle travels at 3,000 FEET PER SECOND! A deer may duck an arrow, not a bullet. I heard someone say this story is as full of crap as a Thanksgiving turkey.

Submitted by JoAnn on Fri, 02/02/2007 - 5:16pm.

I think what you did was fair, responsible and honest. You could just left the dog thete, but you did what was right. And I agree you have taken the shaft during this. Was Mr. Edwards charged for not having his pet on a leash????

Just remember: No Good Deed Never Goes Unpunished...............

Congradulations for the upcoming wedding......... Sounds like you have a good Fiance.

Enigma's picture
Submitted by Enigma on Fri, 02/02/2007 - 7:56pm.

doin suyptim rite after doin suptin rong aint gonna keep ya frum ansuring fer it tho.

no guud deed never gows unpunished?


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