Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry

07/04/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/04/2025 13:44

Ontario Protecting Deer from Illegal Hunting

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The Ontario government is safeguarding deer populations by ensuring hunters use valid tags and comply with provincial hunting regulations.

John Bak of Durham pleaded guilty to unlawfully claiming to have killed a deer which was killed by another hunter and to providing a false statement to a conservation officer. Bak received a fine of $2,500 and is suspended from hunting antlerless deer for two years.

Doug Bell of Durham pleaded guilty to hunting deer without a licence, hunting deer with a center-fire rifle in an archery and muzzleloading guns only season and gun hunting without the proper firearms licencing accreditation. Bell received a fine of $6,000 and is suspended from hunting antlerless deer for two years.

The court heard that on December 4, 2024, a conservation officer working in the Municipality of West Grey contacted Bak and Bell exiting a rural property. Through the investigation that followed, it was determined Bak and Bell had enacted a premediated plan to falsely represent their hunting activity. Bak was found in possession of a muzzleloading firearm and claimed that he had just shot an antlerless deer. Bell denied hunting, or possessing any firearms, and produced an antlered only deer tag.

Upon attending the kill site of an antlerless deer, the conservation officer discovered a loaded centerfire rifle in a hunting blind nearby. It was determined that Bell had killed the deer with the centerfire rifle. Bell was not licenced to hunt antlerless deer or possess firearms.

After killing the deer, Bell contacted Bak to attend and assist with covering up the illegal hunt. Bak attended the kill site, in possession of his muzzleloading firearm, planning to invalidate his antlerless deer tag and falsely claimed to have killed the deer. Bak had not been participating in the hunt at the time of the kill.

Justice of the Peace Gordon Chaput and Justice of the Peace Moira J. Callahan heard the cases separately in the Ontario Court of Justice, Owen Sound, on February 3 and March 24, 2025.

To report a natural resource problem or provide information about an unsolved case, members of the public can call the ministry TIPS line toll free at 1-877-847-7667. You can also call Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-TIPS. For more information about unsolved cases, please visit ontario.ca/mnrtips.

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Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry published this content on July 04, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on July 04, 2025 at 19:44 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at support@pubt.io