Here in Louisiana and in most places I would guess.. the actual law is that the game belongs to the state until it is harvested; it is not harvested when I shoot it but is harvested when I locate and pick it up, take physical possession of it..
what is right is a different story.. lots of wrongs being done out there like talked about.... I would like to be able to shoot and track when necessary and not worry about another finding and taking or shooting my dead or wounded animals, but some folks don't see it that way..
I have on two occasions seen wounded deer run stumble and either fall or lie down and die in time ... waited several hours... walked up.. dead deer... checked around the other hunters' camps and campgrounds for stories of wounded deer inorder to give it to the shooter... I get plenty of meat for eating each year not to have to take another hunter's meat..
but I will not let it sit and waste in the feild... and there are more folks than I would like to admit that shoot and if it does not fall down right there on the report, assume it is time to shoot another one and get a bigger gun etc.
don't even look or trail a minute.
that is probably why the game is not owned until located....
interestingly, here it is legal to cross a property boundary to recover game that you have shot for that purpose only.. etc.
I would not want to take a shot and not be able to follow it up...
I do go for instant kills when possible on a heavily hunted area when that occurs, like a spine shot or a neck or head shot on occasion. I have had deeer taken from me that I was trailing or that ran and fell in hearing and ot of sight.
dk
dk