N.C. Hunter Killed By 12-year-Old Boy
Posted: Sat Dec 31, 2005 11:56 am
N.C. Hunter Killed By 12-year-Old Boy
POSTED: 11:46 am EST December 31, 2005
UPDATED: 11:46 am EST December 31, 2005
LEXINGTON, N.C. -- A 12-year-old boy with a rifle, encouraged by his grandfather, shot and killed a hunter whom they thought was a deer, officials said.
Prosecutors must decide whether to press charges in the death of Douglas Wayne Murdock, 28, of Thomasville, who was pronounced dead at the scene Wednesday.
Murdock was hunting just before 10 a.m. in a shooting lane in Randolph County when he was shot, said Capt. Chris Huebner, the hunting and boating safety coordinator with the N.C. Wildlife Commission.
The boy and his grandfather, who also were hunting, were riding a four-wheeler through the area when the grandfather thought he saw a deer and told his grandson to shoot.
Murdock, who was wearing a blaze-orange vest and abiding by all hunting regulations, was shot once in the upper chest with a scope rifle, Huebner said.
"He basically was just sitting there in a shooting lane, minding his own business when he got shot," Huebner said. "The worst part is that with a scope rifle (the boy) should have been able to tell that it's not an animal. Definitely, with a blaze-orange vest, he should have been able to tell."
Murdock had attended a hunting-safety course, Huebner said.
The boy had also taken a hunting-safety course and his grandfather had a hunting license, said Gale Wilson, a wildlife enforcement officer investigating the shooting. State law allows children under 16 who have taken the course to hunt under the supervision of a properly licensed adult.
Wilson added that the boy, his grandfather and Murdock were members of the same hunting club.
The boy's name is not being released, pending a decision by the Randolph County district attorney on whether to press charges.
The Randolph County Sheriff's Office is also participating in the investigation, which Wilson said he expects to be completed by the end of next week.
http://www.wral.com/news/5723625/detail.html
Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press.
POSTED: 11:46 am EST December 31, 2005
UPDATED: 11:46 am EST December 31, 2005
LEXINGTON, N.C. -- A 12-year-old boy with a rifle, encouraged by his grandfather, shot and killed a hunter whom they thought was a deer, officials said.
Prosecutors must decide whether to press charges in the death of Douglas Wayne Murdock, 28, of Thomasville, who was pronounced dead at the scene Wednesday.
Murdock was hunting just before 10 a.m. in a shooting lane in Randolph County when he was shot, said Capt. Chris Huebner, the hunting and boating safety coordinator with the N.C. Wildlife Commission.
The boy and his grandfather, who also were hunting, were riding a four-wheeler through the area when the grandfather thought he saw a deer and told his grandson to shoot.
Murdock, who was wearing a blaze-orange vest and abiding by all hunting regulations, was shot once in the upper chest with a scope rifle, Huebner said.
"He basically was just sitting there in a shooting lane, minding his own business when he got shot," Huebner said. "The worst part is that with a scope rifle (the boy) should have been able to tell that it's not an animal. Definitely, with a blaze-orange vest, he should have been able to tell."
Murdock had attended a hunting-safety course, Huebner said.
The boy had also taken a hunting-safety course and his grandfather had a hunting license, said Gale Wilson, a wildlife enforcement officer investigating the shooting. State law allows children under 16 who have taken the course to hunt under the supervision of a properly licensed adult.
Wilson added that the boy, his grandfather and Murdock were members of the same hunting club.
The boy's name is not being released, pending a decision by the Randolph County district attorney on whether to press charges.
The Randolph County Sheriff's Office is also participating in the investigation, which Wilson said he expects to be completed by the end of next week.
http://www.wral.com/news/5723625/detail.html
Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press.