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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Deer Hunting Forum
A Bad Experience with Tennessee Wildlife Enforcement.
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<blockquote data-quote="Andy S." data-source="post: 5150495" data-attributes="member: 131"><p>I have a question of clarification: take your hunter hat off, put your lawyer hat on to answer this question. Was the hunter "<strong>totally not allowed</strong>" on the State Park, or was he not allowed on State Park to "<strong>retrieve the animal</strong>"? Two totally different questions. In other words, what law would he have been breaking if he told the Ranger "I want to walk (<em>without weapon of course</em>) over there and look at that pretty tree on this State Park, and just happened to go the way the buck ran? I realize he could not legally retrieve it (<em>per the Park Ranger he dealt with</em>), but could he have at least walked over there, looked at the buck and possibly took a photo of it? Food for thought.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andy S., post: 5150495, member: 131"] I have a question of clarification: take your hunter hat off, put your lawyer hat on to answer this question. Was the hunter "[B]totally not allowed[/B]" on the State Park, or was he not allowed on State Park to "[B]retrieve the animal[/B]"? Two totally different questions. In other words, what law would he have been breaking if he told the Ranger "I want to walk ([I]without weapon of course[/I]) over there and look at that pretty tree on this State Park, and just happened to go the way the buck ran? I realize he could not legally retrieve it ([I]per the Park Ranger he dealt with[/I]), but could he have at least walked over there, looked at the buck and possibly took a photo of it? Food for thought. [/QUOTE]
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A Bad Experience with Tennessee Wildlife Enforcement.
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