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				 Allie Carter of 
				Avilla was wounded during a waterfowl hunt on Saturday morning 
				at the Tri-County Fish and Wildlife Area in northern Indiana, 
				according to Indiana Department of Natural Resources. 
				 
				She laid her 12-gauge shotgun on the ground while repositioning 
				herself and her 11-year-old chocolate Labrador stepped on the 
				gun, depressing the trigger, said Indiana Conservation Officer 
				Jonathon Boyd. 
				 
				The safety of the shotgun was not on, so it went off and Carter 
				was shot in the left foot, Boyd said. 
				 
				Carter, who had never completed a hunter education course, was 
				hospitalized. She suffered non-life-threatening injuries from 
				the bird shot pellets and was treated and released, Boyd said. 
				 
				Indiana officials said that users of firearms should always 
				point the muzzle in a safe direction and use the safety 
				mechanism. Anyone born after Dec. 31, 1986 is required to take a 
				certified hunter education course before purchasing a hunting 
				license in Indiana. 
				 
				However, anyone can get up to three apprentice hunter's licenses 
				without taking such a course, if accompanied by a person who has 
				taken it, Boyd said. Carter had an apprentice license and does 
				not face any charges. 
				 
				"We encourage everyone to take a hunter education course before 
				they venture out in the field," Boyd said. 
				 
				Boyd, who has been a conservation officer for seven years, 
				remembered one other occasion when a dog shot its owner - a man 
				hunting rabbits was shot after he leaned a gun against a tree, 
				and his beagle stepped on it. 
				 
				Carter could not be reached for comment. 
				 
				(Reporting by Mary Wisniewski in Chicago; Editing by Sandra 
				Maler) 
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