Has anyone killed more that one animal with one shot?

Yes - I have shot a couple ground squirrels using a Kimber Model 82 Government (22LR)

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I was hunting elk this year and the opportunity presented itself to shoot 2 elk, one perfectly right behind the other.
I didn't, but for a second I thought about it knowing I had the horse power of a rifle. However, knowing the many variable decided not. So I waited a few minutes and still shot 2 but separately.

Now I have shot varmints, 2 for 1. I am curious who has attempted this on purpose or not with anything from muledeer, hogs, elk, rabbits etc.

What were the results?
Would you do it again?
I had a similar opportunity on muleys and antelopes—a buck (front) and a doe (behind)—but, like you, I passed, even though I have the tags for both. Also, on a depredation hunt, two whitetail does presented me with a shot, but again, I passed despite having multiple tags.

The only times I killed two animals with one shot were with gophers, quails, and ducks.
 
Out west where most are lucky to have one tag a year for dear or elk if it does happen it's unintentional but I hear of it happening almost ever year. Usually involves someone with "elk fever" that just can't wait other for animals to clear before taking a shot.
 
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back when i and my brother were hunting turkeys we set forth with our .410's. mine being a single shot and his being a pump action. we got within 50' and fired............well i did as his action wasn't fully closed (i was 6 or 7 and he was 3 years older). 2 dropped dead and 2 others were wounded enough to not get far. when you're that age (6 or 7) it isn't fun to clean 4 turkeys by yourself as we had to clean what we killed. 52-53 years later i still DON'T eat turkey!
 
My buddy killed a cow elk after the bullet went thru a bull. She was bedded down about 30 yards behind the bull. This was with a 300wm and a hot loaded 215 berger hybrid. We couldn't even find what killed her until we skinned the animal. A small fragment literally hit the cow elk between the vertebrae at the base of the neck. Attached is the fragment weight. Talk about minimal meat damage.
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