Friday, February 01, 2008

Mystery Bear Killing Solved

On January 19, 2008, I wrote a post of an endangered bear found slain in Sharkey County. In The Vicksburg Post yesterday it stated that it had happened 20 years ago. The body of the bear found on the side of the road in Sharkey County about two weeks ago had led investigators down an unexpected trail leading to what biologist Brad Young calls a "happy ending."

The corpse, which was spotted January 14 by a motorist along a dirt road near Rolling Fork, MS, turned out to be the prize from a Virginia bear hunt more than 20 years ago, according to a press release from the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks. The bear was presumably killed legally in Danville, VA, where black bears are plentiful and may legally be hunted during appropriate season, Young said.

If it was legally harvested, then he wouldn't be in violation," he said.

The full story behind the bear's fate decades ago is hard to know completely, simply because the hunter has since died. However, there's satisfaction in learning the body, initally believed to be a cub, wasn't an illegal kill in the Lower Mississippi Delta where the species is making a slow comeback.

"The guy killed it because he was going to make a bear-skin rug," Young said. "He kept it in a freezer and either forgot about it or didn't do anything."

The bear remained in the freezer at the hunter's house - as the home passed through other family members - until the current homeowner, whose name wasn't released, found the remains and took them from the freezer to the road side in August.

Young said, upon first sight, it was difficult to know for sure that it was a bear that was found. Although five months of exposure to weather, animals and decomposition had taken their toll, its skull and feet acted as determining factors. And, evidence of a bullet in the head began the investigation into who could have killed the animal, endangeered and closely protected in Mississippi.

But, MDWFP and U.S. Fish and Wildlife have closed the case on the dead bear.

"Our officers did a good job and conducted a professional and thorough investigation," said Seve Adcock, MDWFP chief of law enforcement. "We're please to have this resolved and the case closed."

Young, who monitors the movements of six bears with radio collars, said he, too, is happy with the way the case ended.

"It's good, I'm glad we got to the bottom of it," he said. "I'm glad it's not one of our local bears. It's a shame so much fuss was made over it, but at least it wasn't a local bear."

Mississippi is home to about 100 black bears. Killing a protected bear here could carry hefty fines and jail time.

The most recent case of a killed bear in Mississippi was in 2002, when Eric Wade Mobley of Grace was convicted of killing a black bear and dumping its reamins at a hunting club in Issaquena County a year earlier. He was orderd by a judge to pay nearly $10,000, perform 20 hours of community serivce and was placed on a one-year probation that also prohibited him from hunting.

2 comments:

  1. Anonymous3:58 PM

    THE WHOLE BLACK BEAR INCIDENT IN ISSAQUENA COUNTY WAS A WASTE OF TAXPAYER'S MONEY AND THE GUY DID NOT DO 20 HOURS OF COMMUNITY SERVICE BECAUSE THE MDWF INSISTED ON MAKING HIM OUT TO BE A SORRY CRIMINAL WHEN HE ACTUALLY TOOK THE WRAP FOR A FAMILY MEMBER WHO SHOT THE BEAR BECAUSE THEY GOT SCARED WHEN THE BEAR WOULD NOT GO AWAY BECAUSE OF MENSTRUAL CYCLE SMELL ON THE FAMILY MEMEBER. THEY WERE HUNTING ON THE GROUND AND THE BEAR WAS BEING AGRESSIVE, AND THESE TYPES OF ANIMALS ARE NOT WHAT WE NEED IN OUR WOODS ANYWAY. EVERYWHERE THEY FLOURISH ,THE DEER NUMBERS DECLINE, ASK ANYONE ON THE WHITE RIVER REFUGE IN ARKANSAS.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous4:25 PM

    i agree with the coment of waste of taxpayer' money and we don't need bears in our woods

    ReplyDelete

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