Hunter killed in hunting accident

http://www.thespec.com/news/local/a...ess-shot-and-my-husband-is-taken-away-from-me

‘One careless shot and my husband is taken away from me’
SIX NATIONS

Sabina Marrone knows frustratingly little about the mysterious hunting accident that killed her 28-year-old fiancé Sunday.

She doesn’t understand why a man who police say was deer hunting would fire a shot from the side of a road lined with houses across a vast farm field off-limits to gun hunting.

Her only certainty is her husband-to-be, avid hunter and outdoorsman Peter Kosid, would never have taken the kind of shot that killed him.

“I hope everyone learns from this … Line up your shot, see what you’re shooting at,” said an emotional Marrone, a day after the father of her eight-month-old son died on a Six Nations property.

“I’m told (the hunter is) very remorseful, but that means nothing to me right now. One careless shot and my husband is taken away from me.”

Six Nations police said a deer hunter fired a bullet more than 375 metres from the road into a line of trees on a Third Line Road property just before 8 a.m.

Police wouldn’t comment Monday on the hunter’s target, but the bullet felled Kosid, who was bow hunting on the farm property at the invitation of the landowner.

Unspecified charges are pending against the hunter, said Constable Derrick Anderson, but the Ohsweken resident hadn’t been identified as of late Monday.

Anderson said Six Nations police were still investigating the circumstances of the shooting with help from OPP forensics experts, including whether it was legal for either man to be hunting that day.

Anderson didn’t respond to questions about hunting rules on the reserve, or whether provincial gun and bow regulations are enforced.

He also wouldn’t say what kind of gun was used because the information could be relevant to the ongoing investigation.

The landowner confirmed he had invited Kosid, a friend and colleague, to bow hunt on the property on that and other occasions. No one had permission to hunt with a rifle or shotgun on the Third Line Road farm, he said.

Kosid was shot across a wide-open field, near an outlier of trees that reached from the forest back toward the farm. The section of road near the intersection of Tuscarora Road is lined with farms and small houses.

Marrone said the coroner told her Kosid was shot in the back and died quickly from blood loss.

At her Mountain home Monday, Marrone said she was struggling to come to grips with the loss of the father of their infant son, Robbie, and stepdaughter, Ava, 4.

Marrone tearfully recalled her fiancé’s love of outdoor sports, especially traditional bow hunting. “He was out there every weekend … he was so happy outdoors,” she said, noting the canoe and fishing rods in the garage.

Marrone said she planned to scatter Kosid’s ashes at Turtle Lake, one of his favourite northern canoeing destinations.

Friends and colleagues were shocked by the aspiring electrical forester’s death, said Mike Ritchie, a Hydro One supervisor who helped train Kosid as an apprentice.

“He was one of the best, eager and talented, always with a smile on his face,” he said. “He obviously loved it outside, so it was a natural (job) for him.”

Ritchie said Kosid and many of his colleagues worked and played together, canoeing or hunting. “But he talked the most about his family,” he added.

His co-workers plan to set up a bank account Tuesday for donations to Kosid’s family, he said. Details will be posted to the Hydro One website.

mvandongen@thespec.com

905-526-3241 | @Mattatthespec




very sad news
be safe out there people
 
Senseless loss of life by a hunter too stoopid to be allowed out in public. And to take a life in the commission of a crime - shooting from a roadway, for example, I'd say there's a good argument for Manslaughter.
 
Well this ought to be interesting seeing as the MNR is under a directive to not charge aboriginal peoples....... :stirthepot2:

Maybe you are being facetious, but the regs that apply to non aboriginals do not apply to natives on reservs' I would be surprised to see MnR get involved here in any capacity.
 
We should have minimum 2 years jail time for any death caused by firearms, even it is accidental. You should know your target and beyond. So you kill a person , you should be jailed.

Too bad so many hunters who killed other fellow hunters have got away from punishment.
 
The guy was bow hunting during an open controlled shot gun hunt. So if he was such a devout hunter and good hunter like the article claims him to be he should have known better and might still be alive. I'm not blaming him or saying that the guy who shot him doesnt deserve to be in jail and lose hunting privelages for life. But they were on a Indian reserve and on the six nation reserve there are no laws because they aren't into obeying a white man (Canadian). He will probably get away with shooting him.
 
We should have minimum 2 years jail time for any death caused by firearms, even it is accidental. You should know your target and beyond. So you kill a person , you should be jailed.

Too bad so many hunters who killed other fellow hunters have got away from punishment.

My thoughts exactly. The term "hunting accident" is an oxymoron.

On a reserve, the powers that be should not let a death go unpunished just to show that they are independent of Canadian Law.
 
So I may not be correct about him hunting during the open Shotgun deer hunt or not because I cannot find the date of the shooting. The spec article only states 8 am. Gives no date. Our Nov gun hunt finished on Sunday so if this happened Monday he was okay to be out there bow hunting.
 
This is from the Haldimand Sachem. He was bow hunting on Sunday during an open controlled deer hunt. So he was illegally hunting with a bow even if he was given permission to be on the land.

Tuesday, November, 13, 2012 - 1:01:28 PM
Hunting death in Ohsweken
On November 11 at approximately 8 a.m., Six Nations police responded to an address in a field just east of 2907 Third Line Road, in regards to a hunting accident.
Initial investigation reveals a deer hunter had fired one round from the roadway, into the bush line and struck a male victim, who was bow hunting.
The victim was approximately 375 metres off the roadway.
As a result of being struck by the bullet, the 28-year-old Hamilton man, Peter Kosid, was located and found to be deceased.
Kosid is the father of an eight-month-old son and a four year old daughter.
A bank account for donations to his family will be set up by his coworkers at Hydro One shortly; details will be available on Hydro One’s website.
The two hunters were not known to each other and were not hunting together.
Police continue to investigate. The Ontario Provincial Police forensic identifications branch was brought in to assist.
Firearms charges are pending against a local Ohsweken man.
 
Our Nov gun hunt finished on Sunday so if this happened Monday he was okay to be out there bow hunting.

Unfortunately none of the laws that were put into place to make hunting a safer sport apply to Native or Metis hunters. Running around with rifles in any bow season is inherently dangerous for any camoed hunter. Black Powder and Rifle seasons in Manitoba require Blaze Orange, but any hunter walking out of their treestand or out of a duck marsh in camo is potentially in danger. I've been "scoped" so many times hunting the PFRA that I don't bother hunting that land anymore. A native jacklighting moose was killed by another jacklighter just a couple of years ago and yet this practice is allowed to continue. Our spineless politically correct governments make me sick.
 
This has nothing to do with hunting or the mnr. He is guilty of careless discharge of a firearm and/or manslaughter. He pulled the trigger and a man died. Nobody is disputing that fact, and it doesn't matter if the season was open or not. Poaching is the least of his problems.

Being first nations does not exempt people from criminal code charges.
 
Not only will the shooter not likely be punished, but someone will likely try to make him appear to be a victim. They will likely go on about how he is already suffering, and how he will continue to suffer for the rest of his life. In the end, they will likely blame it on his childhood, or on his ancestors being abused.
 
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