I was party hunting deer near Parry Sound very recently. It was the last afternoon of my hunt before we headed home. I was with a group of 10 including my late '20's stepson and my 13 year old son who is a new Hunter Apprentice.
Near dusk, I made my way back to my vehicle parked on a side road. My 13 year old had been in the car for about 45 min because he was cold. I unloaded and made my rifle safe, opened the rear liftgate and put the rifle in with my pack. At that moment, an MNR pickup with two officers drove up. The "good cop" approached me in a friendly manner and asked me to show that the rifle was unloaded and to produce my deer licence. That's when my problems started.
I opened my pack, pulled out my waterproof pouch containing my Outdoors Card, PAL, my 13 year old's Outdoors Apprentice Card, and my stepson's deer licence/seal combo. But where was mine? I initially thought and said that I must have switched them, i.e. had given my stepson mine while I had his. But I had forgotten that my seal was on a deer shot the previous day and hanging back in the hunt camp garage. The licence portion had not been returned to me by the fellow who attached the seal!!!
I explained that I had been carrying all three licences/Outdoor Cards etc because my stepson has a habit of misplacing his stuff in our home since moving back in earlier this year. To be fair, he has not been allocated much space especially for his paperwork. I just was being a thoughtful and thorough dad making sure everything was together so the licences/seals would not be forgotten.
The MNR gentlemen went back to their truck and confirmed online that I indeed had been issued a proper licence and had no record of bad behaviour of any sort. But they still rewarded me with a $365 ticket for "Unlawfully possess another person's seal" under Fish & Wildlife Conservation Act 1997 Reg 665/98, Sec 19.
I have looked up the Act and indeed, it is a very short section saying that you cannot possess another person's seal. There is no interpretation that I have access to, to judge whether there is any precedent for fighting this ticket.
I have two choices beyond just paying up: guilty with an explanation, or not guilty and wishing a trial. I was clearly in violation of the strict reading of the regulation, but my stepson was hunting in the same party (no, they did not ask to speak with him). In a sense, I was holding the seal "in trust" for him. I had no intention of using it without him hunting with us. In fact, we came and left together to the hunt in the same vehicle.
It may be "legal" to penalize me, but certainly this doesn't feel like any sort of justice as I did nothing dangerous, unsafe or unethical.
Any helpful suggestions??