You are correct about the original question not being about Indiana. It was about the 44 Mag's effectiveness on deer. It got around to Indiana because of their regulations - Not allowing bottle necked cases to be used for deer hunting in a rifle making the 44 Mag a viable choice. I am not sure about your comment concerning living cheek to jowl and not having freedom??? I am not sure about the reasoning behind Indiana's DNR decision not to allow "high powered" rifles. I do know they did not have a deer hunting season at all at one time (before 1964) mainly because there were not enough deer to hunt. When they opened it up to hunters were allowed to hunt with slugs of 20 gauge or bigger. I am not sure why they only allowed a slug gun to be used. It maybe because of high population, but I suspect they wanted to limit the range so the new hunters would not be wounding a bunch of deer. The 20 gauge or 12 gauge does put deer down with authority. Hunters were thrilled to have the opportunity to go deer hunting, no matter the restrictions. That was before the saboted slugs and rifled barrels, I am talking smooth bores and a solid chunk of lead that did not spin or spun very little. They designed those slugs weight forward with skirts to make them fly as straight as possible. Through pressure of different groups the IDNR let muzzle loader, handgun, and archery hunters in the door. The theory of being too close and being restricted to low powered guns goes out the window when you are speaking of hand gun hunting. Single shot handguns are allowed and they have to be of .243 caliber or bigger. A 15" 243 Win will generate around 3000 fps and has a fairly long range. A 7mm-08 in a 15" barrel gets around 2700 fps with 120 grain bullets, still legal. So why not a 7mm-08 in a rifle? who knows. but if living cheek to jowl had any thing to do with it, it does not make sense that Handguns with 300 yard ranges would be allowed. I live in Indiana and I do not feel my freedoms have been restricted any more than someone that lives in Michigan, I can still shoot a 22-250, 243, or a 30-06 if I feel like it at groundhogs, just not deer. Why not deer too, I do not know. Will a 44 mag kill a deer? It most certainly will, just limit your distance and put it where it counts, down they go. It is simply choices. IF a deer is seen at a distance it will just have to be passed up, there are lots of deer here now and another one will come along that is closer or move your stand closer to the action, we just have to use some restraint and pick our shots. I think if you did a survey 90% of the deer shot here are with in 75 yards. All most 100% of the deer are shot from tree stands (think woods and along fence rows) If you move the range out to 100 yards you will probably catch another 7% or 8 %. Not very many deer are shot beyond 100 yards.