That would probably depend on where the deer was hit at the time. In Ohio the police and insurance companies frown on motorist's who purposely drive through Deer Parks or any other type of Wildlife Preserve purposely trying to run over an animal, deer in particular.
You see, aside from being Tree Huggers our Ohio State Highway Patrol members are also big time Animal Lovers. They blow their horns every time they pass a dead animal carcass on the side of the road believing this grants the animal its wings so it can get into heaven. No, they won't stop their patrol car and move the dead animals off to the side of the roadway so that no one else runs it over, but they will blow their horns. Great bunch of horn blowers them guys, salt of the earth.
So anyhow, I'm sure the Pennsylvania police are about the same or close to the same as Ohio's traffic division is, whereas you only get points if you really tried to hit the deer, otherwise no points.
Hope this helped.
When John was driving on the road he had to veer to the right to avoid hitting the deer.
if you are HITTING a deer in Indiana then you should probably stop.
Indubitably.
no sorry about your luck if it took out your windshield it was a taller deer
Yes! I did it and had to pay my deductible.
Only if you report it accurately.
From 1908 to 1948, Olympic shooters com- peted in Running Deer events, a hunting-inspired competition. Shooters fired at moving deer silhouettes placed from 100 meters away, scoring points only by hitting within one of three concen- tric circles placed in the deer's vitals.
yes you do, especially depending on where your getting the deer from.
Maybe, maybe not. How many points he develops depends on how long he lives compared to his father, and how healthy he is. Consider this: if a deer always had more points than his father, then given that there have been hundreds of thousands of generations of deer since deer began, today's mature deer would have hundreds of thousands of points.
The driving distance from Red Deer to Calgary, Alberta is about 142 km
Driving deer means to force them into an area where a hunter is waiting to shoot them. It's a cowardly way of hunting.
If you hit a deer while driving, your rates should not increase. If you swerve to hit a deer and hit a tree, your rates should increase. The thought behind this is anyone could say they swerved to miss a deer when an accident happens and their rates would not increase. If you hit the deer, there will obviously be proof coming from your front end.