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Widow says justice not done in hunting death

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(MCT) — The two father-and-son pairs arrived before dawn, each having received permission to hunt deer on the private land in northwestern Illinois.

John Hanlon, of Inverness, chatted briefly with the other party, making sure they wouldn't interfere with each other's shoots.

Minutes later, Hanlon, 44, lay dying, having been shot by Kelly Jackson, the father in the other party. The shotgun slug traveled through Hanlon's chest and then struck and injured his son Nathan, then 15, in the abdomen.

Nathan later told police that Jackson had said he mistook Hanlon for a deer because he wasn't wearing his blaze-orange vest, as required by law.

Nathan pointed out that his father was wearing the orange vest. It was so dark that Jackson apparently couldn't see it, even as he stood over Hanlon's body.

It was still about 60 minutes before the legal deer hunting hours would commence.

In a relatively rare occurrence for a deer-hunting fatality in Illinois, the person who pulled the trigger was arrested and charged. Jackson, now 54, of East Dubuque, would later plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter for what he admitted to police was a "horrible judgment call."

Still, Hanlon's widow, Leslie, believes Jackson's sentence was far too lenient. Less than a year after her husband's death on Nov. 19, 2011, Jackson has completed his jail term, which originally was set at 180 nights, with work release during the day.

With another deer hunting season fast approaching in November, Leslie Hanlon said a harsher punishment for Jackson — who left jail this month after his sentence was reduced to 60 nights — would have sent a stronger warning to other hunters not to be lax on safety rules.

Jackson had two prior misdemeanor hunting violations from 1999, according to court records. He could have received up to five years in prison for the fatal shooting.

"It's not like the gun just went off," said Hanlon, a mother of four who has filed a lawsuit against Jackson. "This man intentionally pulled the trigger in the dark. He knew there were people out there. It's been unbelievable. The whole sentencing hearing felt like such a charade."

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