Ronald Martin sentenced for cross-border hunting violations - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 07:51 PM | Calgary | 2.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Ronald Martin sentenced for cross-border hunting violations

An Alaska hunting guide with dozens of convictions in the United States was sentenced Friday for his cross-border violations.

Martin admitted to guiding American friends in Yukon and smuggling trophies to the U.S.

Ronald Martin has been convicted for hunting violations on both side of the border. (Becky Bohrer/The Associated Press)

An Alaska hunting guide with dozens of convictions in the United States was sentenced in Whitehorse onFriday for his cross-border violations.

Ronald Martin was fined $20,000 and banned from hunting in the Yukon for at least 10 years.

The 74-year-old Kluane First Nation beneficiary was described by his lawyer as a Vietnam vet, with "old school" attitudes.

Martin admitted he guided American friends in the KluaneGame Sanctuary, an area just outside Kluane National Park,then smuggled their trophies to the United States.He wasconvicted on Friday of sheep and moose kills in thesanctuary.

Yukon authorities say they were suspicious of his cross border trips for almost 20 years. In 2002 they teamed up with Alaska officials on an investigation that produced dozens of hunting and smuggling charges on both sides of the border.

His lawyer said border authorities won't let him back into Canada so there's little chance he'll be poaching again in the Yukon.

Martin has already been convicted and sentenced in Alaska.

Illegal trophy still in Alaska

Yukon conservation officers are still working to have one of the illegal trophies returned to the Yukon.

Ryan Hennings, who manages the Environment Yukon conservation branch, wants to repatriate a trophy ram currently on display at the Haines Bald Eagle Foundation museum.

"The person that currently has possession of that wildlife has not been very forthcoming and not been co-operative in having that returned so there are some legal challenges in getting that back to Canada," he says.

Hennings says the poached sheep was killed in KluaneNational Park, and Martin donated it to the museum.