Free: Contests & Raffles.
If you add walking with a gun plus camo and any other hunting gear then your going to have to prove to the judge that you weren't hunting because most likely the officer will cite you. I know somebody who was legally hunting, hunting hours expired so he unloaded but still had about a 1/2 mile to walk to his truck and when he got to the truck there wasn an officer there and he cited him for hunting after shooting hours. He lawyered up and the judge actually still found him guilty in a bench trial. Obviously this example was a little different then your question but still has similar circumstances.
QuoteIf you add walking with a gun plus camo and any other hunting gear then your going to have to prove to the judge that you weren't hunting because most likely the officer will cite you. I know somebody who was legally hunting, hunting hours expired so he unloaded but still had about a 1/2 mile to walk to his truck and when he got to the truck there wasn an officer there and he cited him for hunting after shooting hours. He lawyered up and the judge actually still found him guilty in a bench trial. Obviously this example was a little different then your question but still has similar circumstances.I am NEVER in my vehicle before dark, although I am carrying a bow and not a firearm, 1/2 mile walk is nothing, sometimes I am well over a mile.I would think there was more to this story, or he was in an area that had a "case law" (where weapons must be cased after hours)or the officer heard shooting after legal hours.. but then again, I have heard some pretty silly stories about some ridiculous citations..
Many times I have hiked three to four miles into an area to hunt deer and I would start my hike at around 3:30 in the morning. So I could be cited for hunting before hours? This is just unbelievable. How many people wait until legal hunting time to get out of their truck and start hiking to their hunting area?
Quote from: bobcat on April 17, 2011, 10:28:25 PMMany times I have hiked three to four miles into an area to hunt deer and I would start my hike at around 3:30 in the morning. So I could be cited for hunting before hours? This is just unbelievable. How many people wait until legal hunting time to get out of their truck and start hiking to their hunting area?Well I brought that up as just one (extreme) example. Obviously there are a ton of people who get into/leave the woods before/after hours and aren't cited. It all depends on the officer and how they justified the citation, and in the case I mentioned the judge agreed with the officer.
Quote from: bigtex on April 17, 2011, 10:35:43 PMQuote from: bobcat on April 17, 2011, 10:28:25 PMMany times I have hiked three to four miles into an area to hunt deer and I would start my hike at around 3:30 in the morning. So I could be cited for hunting before hours? This is just unbelievable. How many people wait until legal hunting time to get out of their truck and start hiking to their hunting area?Well I brought that up as just one (extreme) example. Obviously there are a ton of people who get into/leave the woods before/after hours and aren't cited. It all depends on the officer and how they justified the citation, and in the case I mentioned the judge agreed with the officer.Well, the case you mention Bigtex, IMO the WDFW officer should be fired and the judge should be removed. That is total injustice and I wouldn't be surprised if the poor sportsman that got treated so badly never hunts again in this state........I know I wouldn't if I had been treated that way.