Bambistew
Well-known member
Maybe this has been beaten to death, but...
After seeing the lady get charged by the feds for taking a picture of a bear, and the "charges" they are sticking her with, makes me wonder if they plan to enforce these same regulations for all wildlife in the parks, or if its just bears?
This is insanity. $10,000 and up to a year in prison for standing there taking a picture? She's guilty of being stupid but willfully remaining within 100 yards of animal is a crime? Holy shit... How many terrorists remain within 100 yards of wildlife on a daily basis in YNP? I would venture to guess every one of them.
The bear cub ran into the woods when mama bluff charged, mama scared it not the lady.
If you honk your horn at the buffalo (or squirrel) on the road, is that a $10,000 offense? What about your car on the road frightening an animal as you drive by? You intentionally approached, frightened and disturbed wildlife. Yep, definitely worth a year in the federal pokey.
How would this "crime" pass the 8th amendment. A year in jail for taking a picture?!?
The others that stayed in their vehicles, willfully remained and were also filming wildlife inside 100 yards. I sure hope those criminals get charged as well!
After seeing the lady get charged by the feds for taking a picture of a bear, and the "charges" they are sticking her with, makes me wonder if they plan to enforce these same regulations for all wildlife in the parks, or if its just bears?
This is insanity. $10,000 and up to a year in prison for standing there taking a picture? She's guilty of being stupid but willfully remaining within 100 yards of animal is a crime? Holy shit... How many terrorists remain within 100 yards of wildlife on a daily basis in YNP? I would venture to guess every one of them.
The bear cub ran into the woods when mama bluff charged, mama scared it not the lady.
If you honk your horn at the buffalo (or squirrel) on the road, is that a $10,000 offense? What about your car on the road frightening an animal as you drive by? You intentionally approached, frightened and disturbed wildlife. Yep, definitely worth a year in the federal pokey.
How would this "crime" pass the 8th amendment. A year in jail for taking a picture?!?
The others that stayed in their vehicles, willfully remained and were also filming wildlife inside 100 yards. I sure hope those criminals get charged as well!
Cellphone snapshot of grizzly has Yellowstone tourist facing federal charges
An Illinois woman is facing federal charges for allegedly disturbing wildlife in Yellowstone National Park after a video surfaced of her attempting to get an up-close cellphone photo of a momma grizzly bear and her three cubs. Bob Murray, the U.S. attorney for the district of Wyoming, announced...
www.yahoo.com
Bob Murray, the U.S. attorney for the district of Wyoming, announced on Monday that charges have been filed against 25-year-old Samantha R. Dehring of Carol Stream, Illinois.
Dehring is ordered to appear before a magistrate judge in Mammoth Hot Spring, Wyoming, on Aug. 26 to answer to charges of willfully remaining, approaching and photographing wildlife within 100 yards. She is also charged with one count of feeding, touching, teasing, frightening or intentionally disturbing wildlife.
If convicted, she could be sentenced to up to a year in prison and ordered to pay a $10,000 fine, Murray said in a statement.
The incident unfolded on May 10, in the Roaring Mountain area of Yellowstone, Murray said.
"While other visitors slowly backed off and got into their vehicles, Dehring remained," Murray said.
A video shot by a tourist showed Dehring standing roughly 15 feet from a grizzly bear taking a photo of the animal with her cellphone. She backed away only after the bear briefly charged at her and then retreated. Other bears nearby appeared to be startled by the encounter and ran into the forest.
Murray said U.S. Park Rangers from Yellowstone provided the results of their investigation to U.S. Rangers in the area where Dehring lives and they served her in person with the violation notices.