Wildlife agency takes
animal's side
By Roger Alford
The Associated
Press
MAYKING, Ky. - Terry Brock walked out his back door early one
morning and came face to face with a black bear.
Startled, the Letcher County man jumped back inside, asked his wife
to call the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife for help, and began
banging on the wall of his mobile home, hoping the noise would frighten the
wild animal away from his terrified dogs and horse.
When that didn't work, Brock, 36, of Mayking, said he grabbed an
heirloom rifle and fired.
Now, Brock faces a criminal charge of illegally killing the bear on
June 2, and the local prosecutor is left with a case that could test how jurors
in eastern Kentucky perceive the shooting of black bears in residential areas.
"The jury would have to decide whether this person acted in a
criminal nature," said Letcher County Attorney Harold Bolling. "There's a big
difference in killing something for sport, and killing something if the person
thought his life or his livestock was in danger."
One other such case is pending in Knox County, where a man allegedly
killed a bear in his garden because it continued coming toward him after he
fired a warning shot.
Black bears thrived in the area more than 100 years ago, before
logging and over-hunting led to their disappearance. Over the past 20 years,
they have been venturing back into Kentucky from forests in Virginia and West
Virginia. Now, for the first time in more than a century, Kentucky has a
self-sustaining black bear population and residents of the mountainous region
along the state's eastern border are having to learn to live alongside them.
Brock, who has pleaded not guilty to illegally killing the bear,
said he couldn't believe he was accused of a crime.
"The bear was taking swipes at our dogs," he said. "I thought our
horse might break a leg trying to get out of his stall. The kids were going to
pieces."
In the chaos, Brock said he grabbed the 30-30 caliber rifle and
stepped back outside in time to see the bear to stand erect.
"I had always heard that they were ready to attack when they did
that," he said. "So I shot it."
Bolling said more details about the case will come out in a hearing
scheduled for Tuesday in Letcher County District Court.
Mark Marraccini, spokesman for the Department of Fish and Wildlife,
said conflicts between bears and people would be unlikely if people
stopped leaving food or household garbage where bears can get it.
"It's not legal to kill bears in Kentucky," Marraccini said.
http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/news/state/9208469.htm
Man who killed bear rejects plea bargain

ROGER ALFORD

Associated
Press

An eastern Kentucky man charged with illegally killing a bear in his
backyard has refused to plead guilty in order to avoid the possibility of jail
time, opting instead to have his case heard in front of a jury.
Terry Brock, 36, of Mayking, said the bear was a renegade and that
he killed it to protect his family.
The Letcher County man faces from 30 days to a year in jail and a
fine of up to $1,000 if convicted. He said the county prosecutor offered a plea
bargain that would have required no jail time but he would have had to pay a
$250 penalty, give up his hunting privileges and the heirloom 30-30 caliber
rifle he used to shoot the bear.
"I didn't want to do that," Brock said. "I don't feel like I did
anything wrong."
District Judge Jim Wood set Brock's trial for Sept. 20.
Brock, who has three children, said he walked out his door on June 2
to see what had his dogs and horse so disturbed and came face to face with the
bear. He said he jumped back inside, asked his wife to call the Kentucky
Department of Fish and Wildlife for help, and began banging on the wall of his
mobile home, hoping the noise would frighten the wild animal away.
When that didn't work, Brock said he grabbed an heirloom rifle and
fired.
"It seems like he had a right to protect his family, his dogs, his
horse, from this bear," said defense attorney Jamie Hatton. "It's not like he
was poaching."
Letcher County Attorney Harold Bolling couldn't be reached to
comment Wednesday. The Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife, which filed
the charge against Brock, doesn't want the case dropped.
"This is our first case," Frank Campbell, a conservation officer
assigned to Letcher County, told WYMT-TV in Hazard. "I feel it's a very
important case for us."
In a region where complaints about the protected animals are on the
increase, a trial could test how jurors in eastern Kentucky perceive the
shooting of black bears that wander into residential areas.
One other such case is pending in Knox County, where a man allegedly
killed a bear in his garden because it continued coming toward him after he
fired a warning shot.
Black bears thrived in the area more than 100 years ago, before
logging and over-hunting led to their disappearance. Over the past 20 years,
they have been venturing back into Kentucky from forests in Virginia and West
Virginia. Now, for the first time in more than a century, Kentucky has a
self-sustaining black bear population and residents of the mountainous region
along the state's eastern border are having to learn to live alongside
them.
Mark Marraccini, spokesman for the Department of Fish and Wildlife,
said last week that conflicts between bears and people would decrease if people
stopped leaving food and household garbage where bears can get it.
Brock, who has pleaded not guilty to illegally killing the bear,
said he couldn't believe he was accused of a crime. He said the bear swatted at
his dogs and had his horse so spooked that he feared it might break a leg
trying to get out of its stall.
"I don't think people should be shooting these bears under most
circumstances," Hatton said. "Under this circumstance only should you be
allowed to shoot a bear.
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