Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

Two Fort St. John men facing several charges under Wildlife Act in moose ‘riding’ incident

Two men from Fort St. John, B.C. are facing three charges under The Wildlife Act following an investigation into a video posted on social media of a boater jumping on top of a moose swimming in Tuchodi Lakes near the town of Fort Nelson in June 2015.

Story continues below advertisement

Jaysun Pinkerton and Bradley Crook have both been charged with the following: harassment of wildlife with the use of a boat; an attempt to capture wildlife, and hunting big game that is swimming. The charges laid are a result of a year-long investigation by the B.C. Conservation Service.

The video, which was posted to YouTube in June 2015 but believed to have taken place in 2014, showed people riding in a boat on Tuchodi Lakes and a moose is in front of them, moving through shallow water. When the boat gets close enough to the moose, one man jumps on its back.

His friends are laughing, the moose groans and sinks underwater, before dipping back up. The man then rides the moose for 15 seconds before he’s thrown off. The moose, now in deeper water, emits another groan and wades away.

“I’ve never seen something this awesome!” says one of the friends watching the proceedings.

But few people agreed with the participants. The video was originally posted on Facebook but has since been taken down.

Story continues below advertisement

At the time the video surfaced, Global News spoke to David Vince, a sergeant in the B.C. Conservation Service in the North Peace zone who said the video shows the participants “clearly harassing wildlife, chasing it with a jet boat and then jumping on its back” and that “you could just see the fear in the animal’s eyes.”

Vince said he has never seen anything like this before. “I’ve never seen anybody go out of their way to scare wildlife,” he said.

The pair’s first court appearance is set for August 8 at the Fort Nelson Provincial Court.

~ with files from Justin McElroy

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article