MD Bear Hunting Case placed on Stet Docket

CUMBERLAND — The case of a LaVale man accused of hunting bears during closed season was placed on the stet docket Tuesday, eliminating a jury trial slated for Wednesday in Allegany County Circuit Court and denying the defendant the privilege to hunt for two years.

Charles Frederick Evans III, 31, was charged by Natural Resources Police Officer Cory Garver on the first day of the Maryland deer firearms season in November with shooting two bears, a 180-pound sow that died and a cub that was not recovered, in spite of an effort by a Department of Natural Resources tracking dog. The incident took place on the Green Ridge State Forest along Dailey Road southeast of Oldtown.

The decision to use the stet docket was made Tuesday morning during a case status conference. Evans was represented by Assistant Public Defender James F. Elliott.

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Source:  Cumberland Times-News
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North Carolina man gets prison time for killing bear

ASHEVILLE — A judge sentenced Robbinsville man to five months in prison for violating federal wildlife laws by killing a black bear cub.

Tyler Micaiah Colvin, 20, shot and skinned the cub in the Wayah Bear Sanctuary in the Nantahala National Forest in October 2011, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

“Colvin’s conduct was outrageous, inhumane and illegal, and anyone involved in the illegal killing of black bears will be vigorously prosecuted by this office,” said Anne Tompkins, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina.

Colvin pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Asheville in December to one count of transporting wildlife that had been taken in violation of the Lacey Act, which Tompkins called “an important arsenal in our fight against those who illegally kill endangered and threatened species.”

According to court records, Colvin used a .50-caliber muzzleloader to kill the cub. Bear season was not open at the time, and it’s illegal to kill a bear weighing less than 50 pounds at any time. In addition, killing bears in a bear sanctuary is prohibited evening during hunting season.

After shooting the bear, Colvin skinned it and removed the paws and some meat, leaving the remainder of the carcass in the forest in Macon County. U.S. Forest Service agents apprehended him and found the bear parts in his vehicle, court documents state.

Apprehending those who illegally kill bears is difficult task, said Steve Ruppert, special agent in charge with the Forest Service.

“Officers are faced with bad odds when dealing with poaching in such vast areas, so we urge the public to report all big game violations,” he said. “These types of results definitely sent a message to those who steal from the public.”

In addition to the prison term, Magistrate Judge Dennis Howell this week ordered Colvin to serve one year of supervised release and surrender his hunting license while he is under court supervision. He also was ordered to pay $2,232 in restitution to the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission and forfeit his rifle, a powder horn and a deer call device.

Kristin Bail, supervisor of the national forests in North Carolina, said she hopes Colvin’s prosecution sends a message that illegal bear hunting won’t be tolerated.

The agency is “committed to protecting wildlife to ensure these and other natural resources are available for the next generation of forest visitors,” she said.

Written by:  Clarke Morrison
Source:  Ashville, North Carolina Citizen Times
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Mexican Trophy Hunters fined $80,000 in illegal Polar Bear Export attempt

Polar Bear

“Four Mexican hunters returning from Nunavut paid $80,000 in fines April 5 before they made a hasty retreat from Winnipeg back to Mexico — heading home without their polar bear and narwhal trophies. [File photo]

Four Mexican hunters returning from Nunavut paid $80,000 in fines April 5 before they made a hasty retreat from Winnipeg back to Mexico — heading home without their polar bear and narwhal trophies.

The men paid individual fines ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 to the federal government for offenses under the Wild Animal and Plant Protection and Regulation of International and Interprovincial Trade Act and the Fisheries Act.

They were fined after Environment Canada wildlife officers received a tip last week that hunters were planning to take three polar bear hides and three narwhal tusks back to Mexico in a private jet, but without having first obtained the necessary export permits.

Hector Martinez, a property developer in the northern Mexican hub of Monterrey  his two sons, Hector Armando Martinez and Alejandro Martinez, who work for their father, and Martinez’s godson, Gerardo Jimeno Rodriguez, a businessman, had arrived March 15 in Canada with a group of other Mexican hunters.

The group then split up, with some heading for Resolute Bay and the others to Cambridge Bay.

Rodriguez, Martinez and one of his sons went to Resolute Bay to hunt polar bears. His other son and two other Mexican men headed to Cambridge Bay to hunt muskox.

During an April 5 court appearance in Winnipeg, the men said they were sorry for not obtaining the necessary export permits, Erin Magas, a prosecutor with the Public Prosecution Service of Canada, told Nunatsiaq News April 8.

But that didn’t change the outcome.

The hunters’ Nunavut sports hunting permits were in order, but they lacked the proper export permits they would have needed to leave Canada legally with their trophies.

They would have needed an export permit under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, which takes four to six weeks for Environment Canada to process, Magas said.

Even if they had received an export permit, Mexico does not allow the import of marine mammals, she said.

The three men did have an export license to take the polar bear skulls and hides out of Nunavut to an Edmonton taxidermist.

But, according to testimony from their April 5 court hearing in Winnipeg, the men felt the taxidermist wanted too much money to process the trophies.

That’s why they decided to take the hides to Mexico via Winnipeg where Hector Armando Martinez was waiting for them after he had finished hunting musk ox.

Officers from Environment Canada and the Canadian Border Services confiscated the polar bear hides and narwhal tusks found during a search of the hunters’ private jet at the Winnipeg International Airport.

The $80,000 paid by the hunters will go to a federal program, the Environmental Defense Fund, which distributes money to environmental groups.

For the next five years, the hunters must also provide information on any hunting trip to Canada and provide dates, their mode of transportation, where they are going, the name of the licensed outfitter, duration of the hunt, port of export, number of animals being exported and “any and all applicable exportation documents for those animals.”

The hunters must provide that information to the Environment Canada Wildlife Enforcement Directorate in Winnipeg at least one week before the scheduled hunting trip, the judgment said.

The seizure is the first such seizure in five years, Environment Canada said.

Source: Nunatsiaq Online

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