Bill Text: WV SB389 | 2016 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Reducing certain penalties for offenses not resulting in illegal killing of bear
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2016-02-04 - To Judiciary [SB389 Detail]
Download: West_Virginia-2016-SB389-Introduced.html
WEST virginia Legislature
2016 regular session
Introduced
Senate Bill 389
By Senator Karnes
[Introduced January
26, 2016;
Referred to the Committee on Natural Resources; and then to the Committee on
the Judiciary.]
A BILL to amend and reenact §20-2-22a of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, relating to bear hunting; and offenses and penalties.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That §20-2-22a of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended and reenacted to read as follows:
ARTICLE 2. WILDLIFE RESOURCES.
§20-2-22a. Hunting, tagging and reporting bear; procedures applicable to property destruction by bear; penalties.
(a) A person may not hunt,
capture, or kill any bear, or have in his or her possession any bear or bear
parts, except during the hunting season for bear in the manner designated by
rule or law. and as provided in this section. For the purposes of this
section, bear parts include, but are not limited to, the pelt, gallbladder,
skull and claws of bear.
(b) A person who kills a bear shall, within twenty-four hours after the killing, electronically register the bear. A game tag number shall be issued to the person and recorded in writing with the person’s name and address, or on a field tag and shall remain on the skin until it is tanned or mounted. Any bear or bear parts not properly tagged shall be forfeited to the state for disposal to a charitable institution, school or as otherwise designated by the director.
(c) Training dogs on bears or pursuing bears with dogs is the hunting of bear for all purposes of this chapter, including all applicable regulations and license requirements.
(c) (d) It is unlawful:
(1) To hunt bear without a bear damage stamp, as prescribed in section forty-four-b of this article, in addition to a hunting license as prescribed in this article;
(2) To hunt a bear with:
(A) A shotgun using ammunition loaded with more than one solid ball; or
(B) A rifle of less than twenty-five caliber using rimfire ammunition;
(3) To kill or attempt to kill, or wound or attempt to
wound, any bear through the use of bait, poison, explosives, snares,
steel traps or deadfalls or to feed bears at any time. For purposes of
this section, bait includes, but is not limited to, corn and other grains,
animal carcasses or animal remains, grease, sugars in any form, scent
attractants and other edible enticements, and an area is considered baited for
ten days after all bait has been removed;
(4) To shoot at or kill:
(A) A bear weighing less than seventy-five pounds live weight or fifty pounds field dressed weight, after removal of all internal organs;
(B) Any bear accompanied by a cub; or
(C) Any bear cub so accompanied, regardless of its weight;
(5) To transport or possess any part of a bear not tagged in accordance with the provisions of this section;
(6) To enter a state
game refuge with firearms for the purpose of pursuing or killing a bear except
under the direct supervision of division personnel;
(7) To hunt bear with
dogs or to cause dogs to chase bear during seasons other than those designated
by the division for the hunting of bear;
(8) To pursue a bear
with a pack of dogs other than the pack used at the beginning of the hunt once
the bear is spotted and the chase has begun;
(9) (6) To possess, harvest, sell or purchase bear
parts obtained from bear killed in violation of this section;
(10) (7) To organize for commercial purposes or to
professionally outfit a bear hunt, or to give or receive any consideration
whatsoever or any donation in money, goods or services in connection with a
bear hunt, notwithstanding the provisions of sections twenty-three and
twenty-four of this article; or
(11) For any person who
is not a resident of this state to hunt bear with dogs or to use dogs in any
fashion for the purpose of hunting bear in this state except in legally
authorized hunts.
(d) (e) The following provisions apply to bear damaging
or destroying property:
(1)(A) Any property owner or lessee who has suffered damage to real or personal property, including loss occasioned by the death or injury of livestock or the unborn issue of livestock, caused by an act of a bear may complain to any natural resources police officer of the division for protection against the bear.
(B) Upon receipt of the complaint, the officer shall immediately investigate the circumstances of the complaint. If the officer is unable to personally investigate the complaint, he or she shall designate a wildlife biologist to investigate on his or her behalf.
(C) If the complaint is found to be justified, the
officer or designated person wildlife biologist may together
with issue a permit to kill the bear that caused the property damage or
may authorize the owner and other residents to proceed to hunt,
destroy or capture the bear that caused the property damage: Provided, That
only the natural resources police officer or the wildlife biologist may determine
whether to destroy or capture the bear and whether to use dogs to capture or
destroy the bear recommend other measures to end or minimize property
damage: Provided, That, if out-of-state dogs are used in the hunt,
the owners of the dogs are the only nonresidents permitted to participate in
hunting the bear.
(2) (A) When a property owner has suffered damage to real or
personal property as the result of an act by a bear, the owner shall file a
report with the director of the division. The A bear damage
report shall be completed by a representative of the division and shall
state whether or not the bear was hunted and destroyed or killed under
authorization of a depredation permit and, if so, the sex and weight
shall be recorded and estimated age of a premolar tooth
collected from the bear, all of which shall be submitted with the
report. The report shall also include an appraisal of the property damage
occasioned by the bear duly signed by three competent appraisers fixing
the value of the property lost. Bear damage claims will not be accepted for
personal and real property which is commonly used for the purposes of feeding,
baiting, observing or hunting wildlife, including, but not limited to, hunting
blinds, tree stands, artificial feeders, game or trail cameras and crops
planted for the purposes of feeding or baiting wildlife. In addition, in the
event that a bear damages property which is covered under any insurance policy
of the property owner, the claim may not exceed the amount of the deductible
for the applicable policy.
(B) The report shall be ruled upon and the alleged damages examined by a commission comprised of the complaining property owner, an officer of the division and a person to be jointly selected by the officer and the complaining property owner.
(C) The division shall establish the procedures to be followed in presenting and deciding claims, issuing bear depredation permits and organizing bear hunts under this section in accordance with article three, chapter twenty-nine-a of this code.
(D) All claims shall be paid in the first instance from the Bear Damage Fund provided in section forty-four-b of this article. In the event the fund is insufficient to pay all claims determined by the commission to be just and proper, the remainder due to owners of lost or destroyed property shall be paid from the special revenue account of the division.
(3) In all cases where the act of the bear complained of by the property owner is the killing of livestock, the value to be established is the fair market value of the livestock at the date of death. In cases where the livestock killed is pregnant, the total value is the sum of the values of the mother and the unborn issue, with the value of the unborn issue to be determined on the basis of the fair market value of the issue had it been born.
(e) (f) Criminal penalties. (1) Any person who commits a violation of the provisions
of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof, shall
be fined not less than $1,000 $500 nor more than $5,000 $1,000,
which is not subject to suspension by the court, confined in jail not less than
thirty ten nor more than one hundred thirty days,
or both fined and confined. Further, the person's hunting and fishing licenses
shall be assigned six points, however, the hunting and fishing licenses of
any person convicted of a violation of this section which results in the
killing or death of a bear shall be suspended for two years.
(2) Any person who commits
a second violation of the provisions of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor
and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not less than $2,000 $1,000
nor more than $7,500 $3,000,, which is not subject to suspension by the court,
confined in jail not less than thirty days nor more than one year hundred
days, or both fined and confined. The persons hunting and fishing licenses
shall be suspended for life five years.
(3) Any person
who commits a third or subsequent violation of the provisions of this section
is guilty of a felony misdemeanor and, upon conviction thereof,
shall be fined not less than $5,000 $2,500 nor more than $10,000
$5,000, which is not subject to suspension by the court, imprisoned
in a correctional facility confined in jail not less than one
year six months nor more than five years one year, or
both fined and imprisoned confined. The person’s hunting and fishing
licenses shall be suspended for ten years.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to reduce certain penalties for offenses not resulting in the illegal killing of bear and to clarify language associated with reviewing and approving bear damage claims, issuing bear depredation permits, dog training and baiting definitions, and to make technical corrections.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.