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Man shot while detecting!...

Mike from MI "Iron Brigade"

Moderator
Staff member
Seen this on another forum!....
TAZEWELL (WATE) - A Grainger County man wants answers after he was shot Monday night in Claiborne County.

The shooting happened in a field on Old Kentucky Road near Tazewell.

Nicky Hayes says he was metal detecting at the time and from out of no where someone shot him with a shotgun.

"I just heard a loud explosion and I look down and my whole arm started to bleed," said Hayes. "I knew I had been shot by a turkey hunter, I guess. I threw my equipment down and started yelling and screaming."

Hayes says he never saw the shooter, but knows whoever hit him could hear him yelling. He was able to go to a nearby home and call 911. He was flown to UT Medical Center, and was just released from the hospital on Friday.

"If I couldn't have got my self out," said Hayes. "I would have been laying there."

Hayes say he had permission to be on the land, and that he had been out there metal detecting before. He says the land owner also did not allow hunting there.

Hayes counted 47 pellet wounds on his body. One of the pellets went through his bowel and exited his body Friday. Another pellet hit very close to an artery on his neck, and another came inches from hitting his eye.

Hayes' parents just want to know why no one has been arrested for shooting their son.

"You wonder, because if you're a dad or mom and it's your youngin, you wonder," said Nicky's father Gary Hayes. "It's all we want to know is why because it just hurts. There is no feeling like it."

"Why wouldn't you come help me if you knew you had shot me?" said Hayes.

Most of the pellets inside of Hayes' body can not be removed.

6 News made numerous calls to the Claiborne County Sheriff's Department on this incident, but have not heard back yet.

TWRA officials found out about the shooting Friday, and have started their own investigation. They plan to meet with sheriff officials on Monday.
 
n/t
 
This is a prime example of why it's important to hunt with a buddy or mate in secluded areas. You never know when something unusual will happen and, like the 'Ole Boyscout Moto', it's best to be prepared.
 
That is terrible, the shooter had to be close to cause those wounds! He must have been in the woods, a shot gun pelletl loses its energy quickly,
 
n/t
 
I have never been able to wrap my head around hunting accidents. Or, at least most of them. Makes no sense to shoot at sound in the brush. I believe the majority of accidental shootings while hunting are from not identifying the target.

As detectorists if beeping where people can possibly be hunting, we should be wearing hunter orange.

Jeff
 
http://www.chattanoogan.com/2012/6/8/227977/Arrest-Made-In-Claiborne-County-Turkey.aspx

I'm back to work now feeling some better it's been rough.
I hope to get back detecting one day but it will take some time.
Please be careful out there men.
know the closest address to where you are detecting.
and take a buddy if you can.
 
That the guy was caught. God bless and heal you.
 
Glad the person was caught and more importantly that you are still with us. I am glad you are getting better and pray for a complete healing. Take care and God bless - Jim
 
Pleased you are on the mend.
Disappointed that the news article uses the term "accident", does not seem accidental to me!
 
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