Free: Contests & Raffles.
Here's a "What If"........What if a guy had an "any bull" permit for a neighboring GMU and he calls wdfw and asks "Hey, I have a "any bull" permit for GMU 328 but I see a real nice bull in GMU 334. Can I go ahead and shoot that bull instead of finding one in 328?I would hope the answer would be "no".......or a laugh followed by "hell no!".But what if that same guy calls up and says "I have an 'any bull' permit and I see a bull in a firearm restricted area, can I go ahead and shoot him with my muzzleloader?" Well, then I could see the wdfw employee saying sure "a muzzleloader is allowed in a firearm restricted area". The employee might not ask or connect the dots that the firearm restricted area is in the wrong GMU.Could it have been an honest mistake? I don't know. Maybe. Could the phone call to WDFW have been purposely stated to be misleading into getting permission? I don't know........maybe.The case is definitely interesting though.........and no jealousy at all here.
Quote from: JDHasty on May 20, 2016, 11:27:48 AMQuote from: Curly on May 20, 2016, 11:24:24 AMI believe that he could have thought the helicopter was legal. I do remember the ad in the regulations for hiring a helicopter. I'd even given it some thought (not serious thought, but a little thought) about using a helicopter to access some land for elk hunting. There are also ads for four wheelers in the Game Regs, does that introduce any confusion regarding the legality of operating them on Green Dot roads? No. But I think the green dot road rules were/are very clear. I didn't get the impression that the flying rules were that clear (or easy to find). I just think it is possible to give the guy the benefit of the doubt in the helicopter deal.The bullwinkle case, I still can't understand why he would even want to shoot a tame elk (and in a closed unit). Why even ask for permission to shoot him when it was obviously illegal?
Quote from: Curly on May 20, 2016, 11:24:24 AMI believe that he could have thought the helicopter was legal. I do remember the ad in the regulations for hiring a helicopter. I'd even given it some thought (not serious thought, but a little thought) about using a helicopter to access some land for elk hunting. There are also ads for four wheelers in the Game Regs, does that introduce any confusion regarding the legality of operating them on Green Dot roads?
I believe that he could have thought the helicopter was legal. I do remember the ad in the regulations for hiring a helicopter. I'd even given it some thought (not serious thought, but a little thought) about using a helicopter to access some land for elk hunting.
Quote from: PlateauNDN on May 20, 2016, 11:38:02 AMSo, he plead guilty and was convicted of lying? And not poaching or wildlife related offense for the 2007 offense?Yes.
So, he plead guilty and was convicted of lying? And not poaching or wildlife related offense for the 2007 offense?
Quote from: JDHasty on May 20, 2016, 11:42:01 AMQuote from: PlateauNDN on May 20, 2016, 11:38:02 AMSo, he plead guilty and was convicted of lying? And not poaching or wildlife related offense for the 2007 offense?Yes. Not that I have experience as a judge but I see this not affecting the current case as much. He plead out for 2007 for lying. Sure there were other incidents involved but that's not what he was convicted of. There's no legal pattern of behavior for wildlife convictions so it presents itself as this being the first offense and he'll probably drag this out and fill this year's tags then plead out and get a slap on the wrist. Just saying, not agreeing
I think my cd player is scratched because same things keep playing over and over. wait, since it's being called a "pet" does that mean he shot a nuisance pet that trespassed on someone else's property? I mean, the argument is sound, all the news articles and even on here its been clearly argued that this was a "pet" for a decade?
I think Plat meant the pet trespassed onto someone else's property and got shot because of it.I'm not liking the whole "this guy shot a famous elk in a field and that's what we're mad about" vibe in these articles. The fact remains you can shoot the friendliest, cutest, nicest most photogenic elk around, provided it is in an open unit. Let's not confuse the attempt by the media to get clicks by pulling on the heartstrings of bunny huggers with the real issue here - that the accused is charged with killing a branch bull closed to all branched bull hunting.