If he hit her shooting at a deer the wound would have been in the side of the head (unless he was shooting at Rudolf or Pranser). If he did shoot in the air it would have been in the top of the skull IMHO.
You're assuming on level ground.
LOOK I'm not saying that he couldn't have launched his projectile that far...,
WHAT SMELLS to me is what you all have proven..., you guys are scholars and have brought forth esoteric information of extremely long shots with a muzzle loader AND a conical bullet.
Would this fellow have known that?
:hmm:
What made me suspicious is WHY does a fellow who was likely to have average knowledge of firearms, and average expectations of how far the bullet may travel (he has to take a hunter safety course as part of his sentence; ergo he hasn't had that training yet) even suspect that his discharging of his rifle to begin cleaning had gone that far and killed that person? So he then comes forward. My conclusion, he was a lot closer to her when he fired, so he had some indication of what he'd done.
Hey I stopped barking squirrels with my .54 years ago since the branches wouldn't stop the ball and I would be shooting upwards. I'm not advocating firing into the sky or ignoring directions of muzzle discharge. When I unload by firing it's into a specific oak stump..., a) I know where the shot has gone, and b) my Scottish genes like that I can recover the ball and recast it later.
LD