Pennsylvania man fatally shot by young relative in deer hunting incident, police say

Philly Voice – by Michael Tanenbaum

A 71-year-old man, who was hunting with family members in Cambria County on Saturday, was fatally shot by a child in an apparent accident, authorities said.

The incident happened around 10 a.m. in Jackson Township, about 65 miles east of Pittsburgh.

William Tripp, of Elizabethtown in Lancaster County, was out with family members and friends on the first day of Pennsylvania’s statewide season for antlered and antlerless deer hunting with regular firearms.

The group was hunting along a gas line in the area of Buckhorn Road and Swigle Mountain Road when he was shot in the head, according to investigators.

Cambria County coroner Jeff Lees said a young relative of Tripp’s attempted to shoot a deer and instead struck Tripp, who was about 300 yards away, WJAC-TV reported. Tripp was pronounced dead at the scene.

Pennsylvania State Police and the Pennsylvania Game Commission both are assisting in the investigation.

White-tailed deer are the most common big game species among hunters in the United States. In Pennsylvania, hunters took more than 435,000 deer last year, including 175,000 bucks, according to the Game Commission.

The incident in Cambria County comes after a bear hunter was killed the previous weekend in Warren County. The victim in that incident was identified as 64-year-old Gary Hunt, a retired police officer who was shot when his nephew’s rifle accidentally discharged, investigators said.

Philly Voice

4 thoughts on “Pennsylvania man fatally shot by young relative in deer hunting incident, police say

    1. A 300-yard head-shot by a “young relative?” Might have been “on purpose” if that shot had been made by an army sniper. As it is, that was likely just really bad luck.

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