USA TODAY US Edition

Forests grapple with 8,500 gun incidents

Unclear how many shootings tied to hunting

- Nick Penzenstad­ler

CASTLE ROCK, COLO. Perched around a secluded campfire in the Rocky Mountains, Glenn Martin jerked forward, said, “Ow,” and died. The wayward bullet that struck him in the national forest has campers and other users calling for changes in recreation­al shooting policy.

Martin, 60, died July 3 in the Pike & San Isabel National Forest, 30 miles southwest of Denver. The 3.1-million-acre forest holds the record for the most gun-related violations reported in the country, a review of federal records by the USA TODAY Media Network shows.

Since 2010, United States Forest Service officers handled 8,500 shooting incidents across the country. Of those, 926 were in the Pike- San Isabel. The reported illegal shooting has intensifie­d precipitou­sly in recent years.

“You never know when you’re going to go; you could be sitting at a campfire waiting to roast marshmallo­ws with your grandchild­ren,” Martin’s daughter Car- lie Cordova said at a news conference. “We didn’t know what happened. We thought he was stung by a bee or had a heart attack.”

Earlier in the day, Martin’s family reported hearing shots to park rangers. The report was similar to 3,000 others since 2010 nationwide in which a violator was not identified or found in the vast forestland­s.

The Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest in Washington state, and Tonto and Coronado

forests in Arizona each had more than 500 gunfire incidents since 2010. Officers field reports and issue warnings about three times as often as writing actual tickets. Those 2,272 citations usually resulted in fines of between $100 and $400, even though incidents can lead to a $5,000 fine and six months of jail time.

Martin’s case remains unsolved. Douglas County Sherriff ’s tested five volunteere­d rifles since the incident to rule out shooters. None has matched the bullet that killed Martin, said Sgt. Ron Hanavan, the department’s spokesman, who stressed the case is “very much open and active.”

It’s unclear how many incidents are related to hunting, because the Forest Service does not distinguis­h firearm violations. The agency doesn’t track injuries or deaths related to guns in forests, said Denise Ottaviano, a Forest Service spokeswoma­n.

Shooting and hunting are largely allowed across the 190 million acres that make up the U.S. Forest Service — roughly the size of Texas. In recent years, closures of some areas have pushed shooters to illegal areas, said Erin Connelly, supervisor of the Pike National Forest. In Au- gust, a string of incidents prompted the closure of an area just east of where Martin was killed. A couple’s Jeep was struck by a bullet while they ate lunch inside.

She attributes the shooting issues to the proximity to Denver and Colorado Springs, with droves of gun enthusiast­s. Three law enforcemen­t officers patrol the vast forest.

“We’ve heard the concerns about shooting, and what we’ve done is implore folks to make sure they know how to use their firearm and what their target is and what’s beyond,” Connelly said. “Recreation­al sports shooting and its impacts have been an issue we’ve looked at intensely since the 1980s. There’s no easy answer, but we’re exploring how we can allow use on public land and not let this happen again.”

Camping or hiking comes with the nervous sound of ricochets and gunshot echoes, said Mel Bernstein, of Colorado Springs who owns a shooting range.

“It’s getting ridiculous. It’s a shooting gallery up there,” Bernstein said. “No one I know would hike or camp there with bullets that go 3 miles. The Forest Service needs more rangers, but it’s a real mess.”

Just north of Denver in the Arapaho & Roosevelt National Forest, 374 incidents have been reported since 2010.

Rangers there are wrestling with the same questions — and are shaping a new policy on target-practice shooting in designated areas — which might include berms and other safety measures.

The National Rifle Associatio­n issued an alert to members in May to oppose closures. The alert suggested 80% of the forest is “suitable for shooting.”

The organizati­on is in favor of keeping options open for responsibl­e shooters, said Lars Dalseide, a spokesman for the NRA’s Institute for Legislativ­e Action.

“Recreation­al shooting has the lowest injury and death rate of any recreation­al activity on national forest land,” Dalseide said. “(That includes) swimming, boating, hiking, off-road vehicles, etc.”

Forest Service administra­tors say several factors can contribute to variations in shooting issues from forest to forest, including enforcemen­t policies.

There are sufficient “regulatory tools” across the network of forests to mitigate shooting risks, said Ottaviano. “Despite this isolated activity, recreation­ists should feel safe visiting any national forest,” she said.

 ?? KUSA ?? Glenn Martin was killed by a stray bullet.
KUSA Glenn Martin was killed by a stray bullet.
 ??  ?? A sign is peppered with bullet holes near Sedalia, Colo., in the Pike National Forest.
TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY
A sign is peppered with bullet holes near Sedalia, Colo., in the Pike National Forest. TREVOR HUGHES, USA TODAY

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