ORIGINAL: brucelanthier
ORIGINAL: YooperMike
I thought I had answered it in mine...but perhaps not to exact specifications. I'm not getting the deer. My feet are far too big to not know who did it. When a deer dies from a broadhead, there is a lot of blood, meaning that if the landowner is out cruising his property, which it sounds like he would be if he was that adamant about letting no one on it, he is going to see exactly what happened. His CO buddy I'm sure woul dbe more than willing to come investigate and hand out a ticket. The risk is FAR too big for the reward IMO. My dad shot across a fence, lost his license for 3 years because of it. It was the same scenario, uncooperative landowner found the blood marks and disturbed leaves and things, called the CO, came to the house, arrested my dad. Any more clarification needed preach?
I wonder if folks would be so quick to recover their deer if the knew this would happen to them. I am betting a whole lot of answers would change LOL

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How about you PreacherTony? If you
knew you would be caught would you still trespass to recover your deer?
He is option 1 I believe, shooting a deer on someelse property, Option 2 was the deer laying 10 yds over the line. If one gets busted for option 1 in MI
For the record I have caught 3 people looking for the deer on our land. We did not call DNR, we help them find their deer. We did say next time we will, but if you ask, we will help you
In MI it's 50 fine for TP
Here is the issue in MI, why we don't bother to call.
Unfortunately, many police agencies (i.e. county sheriff departments, city police officers, etc.) and prosecuting officials (i.e. county prosecutors, city or township attorneys, the Michigan Attorney General's office, etc.) are reluctant to prosecute trespassers—it is simply not a high priority in most jurisdictions. Many law enforcement officials will tell a complaining property owner that they cannot prosecute a trespasser until the offender trespasses a second time.