Guilty pleas for Marten River moose hunting violations

9.3mauser

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Super GunNutz
Rating - 100%
104   0   0
An eye-opener for certain members on here that think hunting from a motorboat is ok.

https://www.baytoday.ca/local-news/guilty-pleas-for-marten-river-moose-hunting-violations-3943926?utm_campaign=snd-autopilot&fbclid=IwAR08ReCiouh2OCGX3BZt_ilcXH2sQv1t8kCivluOuPY3yZE_SOMZZaD9COo

The court heard a cow moose was harvested from a powerboat on the Marten River

A valid licence and tag are required to legally hunt moose in Ontario and the Ontario government is sending the message to hunters that it is enforcing hunting rules to ensure a healthy moose population. Violations can be costly.

On April 8, Justice of the Peace Theodore Hodgins heard a case remotely in the Ontario Court of Justice.



The court heard, in October 2017, John Schaafsma of Lasalette harvested a cow moose from a powerboat on the Marten River. He did not have a moose hunting licence in 2017. Later that fall, a second cow moose was unlawfully shot by a third party whose charges remain before the court. All members of the group assisted in processing and/or moving that second unlawfully shot cow moose.

Schaafsma pleaded guilty to unlawfully hunting a moose without a licence and was fined $2,000 and suspended from hunting in Ontario for two years. He was also fined $1,500 for discharging a firearm from a vessel and $500 for possessing unlawfully killed wildlife.

Robert Ogorek of Southwold and Donald Rowe of St. Thomas both pleaded guilty to being in possession of illegally killed wildlife and were each fined $400.

Conservation officers continue to patrol and protect our natural resources during the current COVID-19 pandemic and would like to remind everyone that by respecting seasons, sanctuaries, bag and possession limits, we all help ensure our natural resources stay healthy. Visit Ontario’s website to learn more about how the province continues to protect Ontarians from COVID-19.

To report a natural resource violation or provide information about an unsolved case, members of the public can call the ministry TIPS line toll-free at 1-877-847-7667. You can also call Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-TIPS. For more information about unsolved cases, please visit ontario.ca/mnrftips.
 
Without revealing too much about how I know, but even as a kid years ago I knew that he had had at least one run in with law enforcement prior to this. I'm surprised the punishment wasn't harsher than just paying a few grand in fines.
 
Schaafsma pleaded guilty to unlawfully hunting a moose without a licence and was fined $2,000 and suspended from hunting in Ontario for two years. He was also fined $1,500 for discharging a firearm from a vessel and $500 for possessing unlawfully killed wildlife.

Sure glad the judge was tough on him.

No kidding 'eh!

Boy oh boy, a two year ban from hunting, for a guy already hunting WITHOUT a licence? FacePalm! And the total fine was 4K, which he will probably just ignore as well... Sigh
 
Beat me to it Jay.
Got to love our Court system...no mention if they seized his rifle, boat, truck, wife, first born child...
That's like giving a gang member in TO a fine for not having his RPAL for his hand gun, then saying he can't own a hand gun for 3 years.
Daa.
 
You can hunt and shoot from a boat in Sask, but motor has to be in neutral or shut off.

Yes. Same as hunting from a helicopter is legal in some jurisdictions and not in others.
Many on this forum would like to see executions for those who don't follow entirely arbitrary local regulations to the letter. I shake my head.
 
Some years ago in our local court house I witnessed a convicted drug dealer fined 150.00 for possession for the purpose. Later that day in Provincial offense court I witnessed an individual with no record fined 1500.00 for having two walleyes over limit. I don't condone drug dealing or poaching but something is out of balance here.

Darryl
 
Eye opener, my posterior.... provincial regs differ. The motorboat sounds like an afterthought in this case. No license probably is the true headline.
 
When we are in a motorboat while moose hunting the general plan is to travel close to shore as possible and if a moose is spotted then head to shore and the guy in the front of the boat jumps out, loads and goes hunting.(It has never happened yet but we have a plan.)
 
So they were fined around the cost of going to the store and buying that meat except they get healthy hormone free table fare , sure taught them a lesson
 
So they were fined around the cost of going to the store and buying that meat except they get healthy hormone free table fare , sure taught them a lesson

I'm with others on this thread. Punishments approaching actual costs of said items sort've rendering the whole enforcement, apprehension and processing a bit of a joke. No forfeiting boat, long term bans or real consequences? Sounds like the regular justice system.
 
It would appear that the MNRF doesn’t value a cow moose much more than a few big mac meals...What a joke. $500 for killing a moose without a tag. Cheaper than an outfitter.
 
Ive always been really disappointed in the mnr with how they treat what I consider to be serious hunting violations. A couple grand out of the pocket book for an illegally taken moose is disgusting as far as I’m concerned.
 
Beat me to it Jay.
Got to love our Court system...no mention if they seized his rifle, boat, truck, wife, first born child...
That's like giving a gang member in TO a fine for not having his RPAL for his hand gun, then saying he can't own a hand gun for 3 years.
Daa.

Funny you mention Toronto, one suspect in the recent shooting of a child's first birthday party was literally on bail awaiting trial for other offences. Police said 21-year-old Kevin George of Toronto has been charged with four counts of aggravated assault, four counts of discharging a firearm with intent to endanger life, several other firearms-related offenses and one count of failing to comply with recognizance. The judicial system has failed for years so I'm not surprised with OP's story.
 
Back
Top Bottom