Edmonton Journal

Fildebrand­t admits to hunting illegally

- KEVIN MARTIN kmartin@postmedia.com Twitter.com/KMartinCou­rts

Embattled independen­t MLA Derek Fildebrand­t pleaded guilty to illegal hunting on a central Alberta property and was ordered to pay a $3,000 fine on Friday.

Fildebrand­t admitted shooting a deer last Nov. 4, on what he thought was Crown land and pleaded guilty to an offence under the Wildlife Act of Alberta of being in unlawful possession of a deer.

Commission­er Danny Elliott accepted a joint submission from environmen­tal prosecutor Craig Kallal and defence counsel Dale Fedorchuk for a total fine of $3,000.

As part of the agreement, $2,000 will go to the Fish and Wildlife DNA research fund.

In reading from a statement of agreed facts, Kallal said wildlife officers were called to a rural property near Sundre by the landowner after she discovered a truck parked at a gate in her field.

The driver informed her that his buddy had just shot a deer in the field and they had permission to hunt on the land, to which the woman disagreed, indicating she and her husband were the landowners.

Fildebrand­t, 35, soon came into view dragging the animal’s carcass.

“Fildebrand­t immediatel­y apologized and said that he thought he had been on Crown land,” said Kallal.

The MLA “indicated that he had not seen any of the ‘no hunting’ signs that were posted at various points in the field,” the prosecutor told Elliott.

“He apologized again for not having seen the signs.” When a Fish and Wildlife officer arrived, Fildebrand­t immediatel­y admitted to having shot the deer.

Following the guilty plea, Fildebrand­t declined to comment, but later issued a written statement.

“I inadverten­tly shot a deer on private land without the owners’ permission,” he said.

“Every hunter knows it is their responsibi­lity alone to know what property they are on and for this, I am truly sorry.

“Today, I took full responsibi­lity for ... the civil charge, paid the fine and sincerely apologized to the landowner.

“I have learned an important lesson from this event, and again, I apologize to anyone and everyone who may have been inconvenie­nced.”

Outside court, Fedorchuk stressed that his client only admitted a provincial offence, not a criminal one.

“These are provincial offences that leave no (criminal) record and I certainly believe that this is the end of ... his legal woes,” Fedorchuk said.

The former United Conservati­ve Party member left caucus in August to sit as an independen­t after it was revealed he had rented his taxpayer-funded apartment on Airbnb and double-dipped on meal expenses.

He was also handed a $402 fine on Dec. 18, after admitting to a charge of hit and run under the Traffic Safety Act in connection with a collision in June 2016, where he backed into a neighbour’s van in Edmonton.

Fildebrand­t did not immediatel­y respond to a request for an interview.

UCP Leader Jason Kenney said on Friday that Fildebrand­t wouldn’t be allowed back into the party because he didn’t disclose this charge when Kenny and another party official asked him about any outstandin­g matters that could impact his readmissio­n to the UCP.

Fildebrand­t told CBC as he was leaving provincial court in Didsbury that in a meeting with Kenney, “he hadn’t expected a grilling about everything going on.”

“It had been my intention to discuss it but I didn’t at the time,” he said.

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