Shortstack
Silver Member
- Jan 22, 2007
- 4,305
- 419
- Detector(s) used
- Tesoro Bandido II and DeLeon. also a Detector Pro Headhunter Diver, and a Garrett BFO called The Hunter & a Garrett Ace 250.
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
In the last couple of weeks, 2 individuals were given sentences of 100+ years in prison for armed robbery of elderly women. These 2 punks were not operating together. They just happened to develop their individual ideas for quick money at the same time. In Mississippi, prison terms can be doubled if victims are over 50 years of age. One of these lowlifes, along with three buddies forced their way into a RURAL mobile home and roughed-up an 80 year old lady. He got a sentence of 140 years and his accomplices are awaiting sentencing. He is 22 years old and his life is wasted. Do I feel sorry for him? NO. He's the one who decided to do the deed.
Now for our problem. This attack (and others not mentioned) happened in a county where some serious Civil War fighting took place and these sites are all on PRIVATE LAND. My son and I will not be pulling into any driveways to knock on strangers' doors to ask permission to hunt. Folks are rightly on super-guard now and we wouldn't want to frighten any elderly folks, get shot at, or have "911" calls made to the county "cop-shop" about us. So, we will be using two techniques for our searching.
(1) Hunt just the road right-of-ways and the areas around public access points to the river and creeks in the area.
(2) Ask a county sheriff's deputy to introduce us to a big land owner as a way to avoid suspicion.
Either way, I'm planning to visit the Sheriff's department and introduce myself to them and give them my car's license plate number so they can identify us should they get any calls about us parking on the shoulder of the road or driving suspiciously slow on the back roads.
I'm posting this piece to give folks a heads up to check their own areas for this type of situation. It just might save a whole lot of headaches and embarrassment.
Now for our problem. This attack (and others not mentioned) happened in a county where some serious Civil War fighting took place and these sites are all on PRIVATE LAND. My son and I will not be pulling into any driveways to knock on strangers' doors to ask permission to hunt. Folks are rightly on super-guard now and we wouldn't want to frighten any elderly folks, get shot at, or have "911" calls made to the county "cop-shop" about us. So, we will be using two techniques for our searching.
(1) Hunt just the road right-of-ways and the areas around public access points to the river and creeks in the area.
(2) Ask a county sheriff's deputy to introduce us to a big land owner as a way to avoid suspicion.
Either way, I'm planning to visit the Sheriff's department and introduce myself to them and give them my car's license plate number so they can identify us should they get any calls about us parking on the shoulder of the road or driving suspiciously slow on the back roads.
I'm posting this piece to give folks a heads up to check their own areas for this type of situation. It just might save a whole lot of headaches and embarrassment.
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