Four charged under Manitoba’s new law that bans night hunting with spotlights

WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government says four men have been charged under the province’s new law than bans hunting at night with lights.

The province says wildlife officers nabbed two men in December from the Lake Manitoba First Nation near Asher.

They were also charged with carrying a loaded firearm in a pickup and hunting on private land without permission.

In another case, officers arrested an Alberta man near Inglis and a man from the RM of Riding Mountain West and charged them both with hunting at night with lights. 

In both cases the trucks, firearms and spotlights were seized as evidence.

The government passed the law last year despite protests from some Indigenous groups that said banning spotlight hunting infringes on their constitutional rights.

Premier Brian Pallister has called spotlight hunting inhumane.

 

The Canadian Press

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