Free: Contests & Raffles.
Seems pretty cut and dried to me. No problem killing a wolf to protect his dogs. Buying a tag after the fact and trying to pass it off as a legal harvest - problem.
Quote from: whacker1 on February 02, 2015, 08:10:48 AMI would also suggest the Jury has to follow the law whether they like the case or not, so he is putting himself at some extreme risk.Not completely accurate. His best defense is to appeal to the jury that the underlying statute(s) are unenforceable. This is called "jury nullification," as has long been part of the English common law heritage. See this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jury_nullificationTo be clear, the bench will be very hostile to any attempt to inform the jury of their prerogative to nullify the law! The American justice system (both at the federal level and the state level) jealously guards against jury nullification. New Hampshire alone specifically allows the defense to notify the jury of this traditional right.I, too, will watch this with interest. My best advice for him? Tell the truth, all of it, and ask the jury to acquit. If the judge is flexible, she will allow the defendant to make his case--and NOT tell the jury that they MUST find guilty if they believe he committed the crime. Under the concept of jury nullification, even if the jury believes him guilty of the crime, they do not have to find him guilty if they believe his actions were justifiable.
I would also suggest the Jury has to follow the law whether they like the case or not, so he is putting himself at some extreme risk.
I will be following this...I would bet given the area that this will be used as a push back against the wolf issue choked down peoples throat. I bet he represents himself as an additional slap.Do you wonder why the $20k reward has not caught the wolf "Poacher" in the NE? How do you think the farmer that shot the wolf Near Pullman is going to work out? 2 can play the "Game"
He's "not a trophy hunter" but he wanted to keep the trophy. He's not going to be convicted for killing the wolf or "trying to protect his dogs". Hes going to be convicted for trying to possess something he didn't have a license to possess. Had he immediately called Idaho F&G and turned it over, he wouldn't be in this mess.