Times Colonist

NHL’s Stoner gets hunting ban, fine for illegally killing grizzly

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ABBOTSFORD — National Hockey League player Clayton Stoner is banned from hunting for three years and must pay $10,000 for killing a grizzly bear on British Columbia’s central coast.

The Anaheim Ducks defenceman, originally from Port McNeill, admitted through his lawyer on Wednesday that he had breached the provincial Wildlife Act. Marvin Stern said his client mistakenly believed he was qualified to participat­e.

Stoner wasn’t in the Abbotsford court. Instead, Stern pleaded guilty on his behalf to hunting without a licence.

In handing down the fine and hunting ban, 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 when handing down his sentence.

The Crown dropped four other charges against Stoner, including knowingly making a false statement to obtain a hunting licence, hunting out of season, and unlawfully possessing dead wildlife.

Stoner was charged in connection to the hunt in May 2013.

The case first gained media attention when graphic 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.

But after he was charged, Stoner, 30, 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 five-year-old Cheeky, Stern told the court.

Stoner has been vilified in the media in both Canada and the United States, Stern said. “It clearly wasn’t Cheeky.” Outside the court, representa­tives of the area First Nations and a conservati­on group still main- tained that the deceased bear was Cheeky. They said they might have been mistaken on the popular bear’s age, noting guardians had witnessed Stoner interact with Cheeky within hours before the kill.

Stern told the court his client simply made an error and believed he had lawfully obtained the licence. He said the residency requiremen­ts are convoluted — to obtain a commercial trophy licence, a hunter must reside in B.C. for at least half of each of six months in the previous year.

“This is a very unique definition, you won’t find it under the Income Tax Act or other provincial or federal legislatio­n,” Stern told court.

He added that Stoner, who owns a home in Langford, spends weeks during off-season at his family home, does some of his training in Victoria and eventually intends to retire on Vancouver Island. “From his perspectiv­e, he’s a B.C. guy.” He said the loss of hunting privileges for Stoner is significan­t, because he has been hunting since he was 10 years old.

 ??  ?? A protester holds a photo of Anaheim Ducks defenceman Clayton Stoner posing with the dead grizzly bear.
A protester holds a photo of Anaheim Ducks defenceman Clayton Stoner posing with the dead grizzly bear.

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