Los Angeles Times

Man is fined for goose hunt

Carlos T. Ortiz is ordered to pay $1,000 for deaths of 258 of the protected birds.

- By Saumya Gupta

The hunters stand, holding their rifles, in front of their kill: birds, by the hundreds. The photo from the U.S. attorney’s office shows the animals lined up, carcass after carcass, some with wings protruding. The 258 snow geese and white-fronted geese were protected birds, officials say.

Now the Northern California man who organized and participat­ed in the 2018 goose hunt has been sentenced. His penalties: a $1,000 fine and a three-year hunting ban.

Carlos T. Ortiz and nine other hunters shot and killed the geese near California’s Sutter National Wildlife Refuge, U.S. Atty. Phillip A. Talbert announced.

Snow geese and whitefront­ed geese are protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, an internatio­nal treaty that prohibits the killing, capture, sale, trade or transporta­tion of protected migratory bird species without prior authorizat­ion from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

If a person receives a permit, the birds must have a tag attached that is signed by the hunter, has the hunter’s address, the total number and species of birds, and the date the birds were killed if the birds are left somewhere other than the hunter’s home or at other exemptions.

None of the 258 birds were tagged, according to the release.

After entering a guilty plea to transporti­ng and receiving untagged migratory game birds, Ortiz was sentenced to a three-year hunting ban, three years of probation and a $1,000 fine in federal court.

The prosecutio­n originally charged him with three counts, but the third count — leaving a game bird in his possession to go to waste through carelessne­ss and neglect — was dismissed, according to court documents.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States