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>Hunting provider fined $1,500 for bear-baiting

>From Staff Reports
Cumberland Times-News The Cumberland Times-News Thu Jan 27, 2011, 02:56 PM EST

OAKLAND — A Garrett County hunting provider who pleaded guilty in district court Thursday to a black bear violation was fined $500 and also ordered to pay $1,000 in restitution to the Wildlife Conservation Enforcement Fund, according to Sgt. Art Windemuth of the Maryland Natural Resources Police.

Lee C. Brenneman, 64, Accident, had been charged on the opening day of bear season in October with using corn and molasses to attract bears to his property near Bittinger.

A utility vehicle, seized at the time by Cpl. Walter May, was returned to Brenneman by Judge Leonard J. Eiswert.

Brenneman’s client that day, Donald D. Gutermuth, 53, Baldwin, had been charged with hunting bears with the aid of bait. Gutermuth chose to pay a fine of $500 rather than stand trial.

Other hunters were charged on the opening day of bear season.

• Charles D. Crigger II, 52, Middle River, hunting near Swanton, paid fines of $447 for hunting with aid of bait, $177 for not wearing orange and $227 for not staying in visual contact with his bear-hunting partner.

• Earnold L. Crigger, 52, Middle River, hunting near Swanton, has court date of March 10 for hunting with aid of bait and not keeping visual contact.

• Jerome S. Ziemski, 55, Baltimore, hunting near Swanton, has Feb. 17 court date for hunting with aid of bait and not keeping visual contact.

• Rex A. Penick, 55, Westminster, hunting near Grantsville, paid $500 fine for hunting with aid of bait.

• Terri L. Penick, 48, Westminster, hunting near Grantsville, paid $500 fine for hunting with aid of bait.

• Donald Sneckenberger, 75, and Doy Sneckenberger, 46, both of Hagerstown, hunting near Little Orleans, do not have trial dates determined yet for hunting with aid of bait.

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Maryland black bear hunt closes after 67 kills in five days

Baltimore Sun staff

12:55 p.m. EDT, October 30, 2010

The state Department of Natural Resources says Maryland’s bear hunt is closed after 67 kills in five days.

The seventh annual black bear hunting season, which opened Monday in Allegany and Garrett counties, was officially closed at 9 p.m. Friday.

“The 2010 bear hunt was another unqualified success,” Harry Spiker, Game Mammal Section Leader for the department’s Wildlife and Heritage Service, said in a release. “Unseasonably mild weather made the first part of the season a challenge and kept hunter success low. Despite marginal conditions we safely reached another harvest quota while allowing the first five-day bear hunt in Maryland history.”

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27 bears killed at Maryland hunt season start

From the Washington Post:

Maryland natural resources officials say 27 bears were killed on the first day of this year’s black bear hunting season.

State officials say the season lasts through Saturday, but hunting will be stopped once the quota of 65 to 90 bears is reached. The quota is five more than last year when hunters killed 68 bears.

Harry Spiker, a bear biologist with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, says Leslie Nightingale of Lonaconing killed the first bear, a 234-pounder she caught in Garrett County just west of Deep Creek Lake on Monday.

This year marks Maryland’s seventh bear season since hunting resumed in 2004 after a 50-year ban. Hunting is limited to Allegany and Garrett counties.

— Associated Press
By Washington Post editors | October 26, 2010; 10:31 AM ET

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