Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Anaheim Ducks's Clayton Stoner Banned From Hunting For 3 Years

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jan, 2016 01:36 PM
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Anaheim Ducks defenceman Clayton Stoner was banned from hunting for three years and fined $10,000 for killing a grizzly bear on British Columbia's central coast.
     
    Stoner acknowledged through his lawyer Wednesday that he had breached the provincial Wildlife Act during the hunt in May 2013. Lawyer Marvin Stern said his client mistakenly believed he was qualified to participate as a resident.
     
    Stoner wasn't in the Abbotsford court, and Stern pleaded guilty on his behalf to hunting without a license.
     
    Provincial court Judge Brent Hoy accepted that Stoner thought he was qualified as a resident, but the law had still been breached.
     
    "If one hunts, then one must do so responsibility," he said.
     
    The government dropped four other charges against Stoner, including knowingly making a false statement to obtain a hunting license, hunting out of season and unlawfully possessing dead wildlife.
     
     
    Stoner, who's originally from Port McNeill on Vancouver Island, owns a home in Langford, B.C. To obtain a commercial trophy license, a hunter must reside in B.C. for at least half of each of six months in the previous year.
     
    The case first gained media attention when photos were published of Stoner holding up a bear's severed head. First Nations and environmentalists claimed the animal was Cheeky, a star tourist attraction in B.C.'s Great Bear Rainforest.
     
    After he was charged, Stoner requested a DNA test on the bear. The B.C. Conservation Officer Service conducted the tests and determined the animal was 18 years old, not the 5-year-old Cheeky, Stern told the court.
     
    Outside the court, representatives of the area First Nations and a conservation group maintained that the deceased bear was Cheeky. They said they may have been mistaken on the bear's age, noting guardians had witnessed Stoner interact with Cheeky within hours before the kill.
     
    The government didn't take a position on the identity of the bear.
     
    Government lawyer Jim Cryder said there's a strict definition of resident under the act.
     
     
    "For an NHL player ... they're going to be out of the province for at least seven months," Cryder told the court. "He hasn't, in fact, qualified as a resident."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Rene Angelil Funeral Set For Montreal This Afternoon

    Rene Angelil Funeral Set For Montreal This Afternoon
    MONTREAL — The funeral service for Celine Dion's late husband will be held in Montreal this afternoon.

    Rene Angelil Funeral Set For Montreal This Afternoon

    Edmonton Archbishop Slams Catholic Trustees Over Transgender Policy Debate

    Edmonton Archbishop Slams Catholic Trustees Over Transgender Policy Debate
    Edmonton's archbishop blasted the city's separate school trustees Thursday saying their division on a policy for gay and transgender students is a betrayal of the Catholics who elected them.

    Edmonton Archbishop Slams Catholic Trustees Over Transgender Policy Debate

    LGBT Tories Organizing To Change Party Policy On Same Sex Marriage

    LGBT Tories Organizing To Change Party Policy On Same Sex Marriage
    OTTAWA — A group of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered Tories says now is the time to drop language opposing same-sex marriage from Conservative party policy.

    LGBT Tories Organizing To Change Party Policy On Same Sex Marriage

    Swedish Meatballs And Furniture, Anyone? Ikea To Build Store In Halifax

    Swedish Meatballs And Furniture, Anyone? Ikea To Build Store In Halifax
    HALIFAX — Ikea has announced plans to build a full-size store in the Halifax area, the first of 12 new stores the Scandinavian furniture chain will roll out across Canada over the next decade.

    Swedish Meatballs And Furniture, Anyone? Ikea To Build Store In Halifax

    International Students Eye Top-Notch Education 'At A Reduced Price' In Canada

    International Students Eye Top-Notch Education 'At A Reduced Price' In Canada
    Hundreds of thousands of international students flock to Canadian univesities each year. But prospective students from the U.S. may find Canadian schools even more enticing this year thanks to the low loonie.

    International Students Eye Top-Notch Education 'At A Reduced Price' In Canada

    Falling Crude Prices Not Reflected At The Pump As Low Dollar, Refiners Take Cut

    Falling Crude Prices Not Reflected At The Pump As Low Dollar, Refiners Take Cut
    CALGARY — Low oil prices are hammering Canada's resource economy but drivers aren't seeing the silver lining of equally low prices at the pump.

    Falling Crude Prices Not Reflected At The Pump As Low Dollar, Refiners Take Cut