2'76 GAME. GAME. (a.B. 1 33.) AN ACT TO AMEND SECTION THREE (3) OF CHAPTER FORTYFIVE (45) OF THE GENERAL STATUTES OF THE STATE OF COLORADO, ENTITLED "GAME," AND REPEALING INCONSISTENT ACTS. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Colorado: SECTION I. Section three (3) of chapter forty-five (45) of the General Statutes, is hereby amended . so that Buffalo. it shall read as follows: SEC. 3. No person shall kill, wound, ensnare or trap any bison or buffalo within the State for a period of ten (io) years, from and after the approval of -this act. No person shall kill or wound, Mountain ensnare or trap any mountain sheep within this State for sheep. a period of eight (8) years, from and after the approval of this act No person shall kill or wound, ensnare or trap Goats any ibex or Rocky Mountain goat within this State for a period of ten (io) years, from and after the approval of Deer, elk, fawn this act. No person shall kill or wound, ensnare or trap or antelope. any deer, elk, fawn or antelope within this State for any purpose whatever, except as provided in section 4, chapter XLV., General Statutes. No person shall kill or wound, ensnare or trap any deer, fawn, - or antelope between the first day of December and the first day of September of the succeeding year, except those which have horns. No person shall kill or wound, ensnare or trap any elk between the first day of January and the first day of October, except those which have horns. Nor shall it be lawful at any time for any person to kill, ensnare or trap any deer, elk, -fawn - or antelope for the sole purpose of securing the skins or horns of any such Not to be killed animal. Nor shall it be lawful for any person or persons for their skins or corporation to have in possession any of the game GAME. 277 herein mentioned, for any purpose whatever, except as provided in section four (4) of said chapter forty-five (45), General Statutes. Any person or persons offending Penalty. against the provisions of this section shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof, as in proceedings in cases of assault and battery, before any justice of the peace, shall be fined in any sum not less than fifty ($50) dollars, nor more than two hundred (Poo) dollars for the first offense, and for each subsequent offense shall be fined in any sum not less than fifty ($5o) dollars, nor more than two hundred (Poo) dollars, and be imprisoned in the county jail not less than thirty (30) days, nor more than ninety (9o) days. Any person arrested and brought before any justice of the peace for any violation of the provisions of this section, shall be entitled to a trial by a jury of six (6) unless he shall waive the same, and if the jury find him guilty the justice of the peace ;hall assess the fine and costs, and fix the term of imprisonment, as the case may be. The whole amount of said fine shall go to the school fund of the county where such fine is collected. • , SEC. 2. All acts or parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this act are hereby repealed. Approved March 22, 1887. Repeal. • 172 GAME. ( H. B. 143 ) An Act TO AMEND SECTION THREE OF CHAPTER XLV. OF THE GENERAL STATUTES OF THE STATE OF COLORADO, ENTITLED "GAME," BEING GENERAL SECTION FIFTEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY— FIVE. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Stale of Colorado: Section three of chapter XLV. of the SECTION I. General Statutes, entitled "Game," being general section fifteen hundred and forty-five, is hereby amended so that it shall read as follows: SEC. 3. No person shall kill, Can not kill, wound, ensnare wound, ensnare, or trap, any bison or buffalo within the zrja atiy State for the period of ten (io) years, from and after the ll kill or wound, approval of this act; no person sha Mountain sheep. ensnare or trap, any mountain sheep within this State for a period of eight (8) years from and after the approval of this act; no person shall kill or wound, ensnare or i i this State Ibex or Rocky trap, any ibex or Rocky Mountain goat within mountain goat. for a period of ten (io) years from and after the approval of this act; no person shall kill or wound, ensnare or Deer, elk, fawn trap, any deer, elk, fawn, or antelope within this State .or antelope. for any purpose whp.tever, at any time, except that those which have horns may be killed between fuly first and December first of the same year, for food purposes, as provided in section four, chapter XLV. of the General Statutes of Colorado; nor shall it be lawful at any Not lawful. time, for any person to kill, ensnare or trap any deer, elk, fawn, or antelope for the sole purpose of securing Skins or horns. the skins or horns of any such animal, and the selling, or offering for sale; or the shipping, or the having in possession for the purpose of transporting out of the State, any of the skins or horns of such animals shall be Prima facie .prima facie evidence that such animals were killed for vidence. such purpose; nor shall it be lawful for any person or Cannot have in Persons, or corporation, to have in possession any of the possess ion any game herein mentioned, except during the times above game mentioned. specified, for any purpose whatever. Any person or persons offending against the provisions of this section, GAME. 173 i of a shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon con- mi dty eanor" viction thereof, as in proceedings in case of assault and battery, before any justice of the peace, shall be fined • in any sum not less than fifty (50) dollars nor more than two hundred (200) dollars for the first offense, and for each subsequent offense shall be fined in any sum not less Fine and (200) imprisonment. than fifty (50) dollars nor more than two hundred dollars, and be imprisoned in the county jail not less than thirty (30) days nor more than ninety (9o) days. Any person arrested and brought before any justice of Arrested persons buro s eitope ped fore ce a peace for any violation of the provisions of this section, shall be entitled to a trial by a jury of six (6), tried jurY• unless he shall waive the same, and, if the jury find him guilty, the.justice of the peace shall assess the fine and costs, and fix the term of imprisonment, as the case may be; one-half of the fine in all such cases shall be paid to the person informing against such offender, and 0 9e-half of Sim the other half of said fine shall go to the school fund of paid t° informer. the county where such fine is collected; Provided, Proviso. That nothing in this section or act, or in the acts of which this amendatory, shall be construed to give justices of the peace exclusive jurisdiction over such offenses; but such offenders may be prosecuted in other courts having jurisdiction over misdemeanors. . SEC. 2. All act or parts of acts inconsistent with the Repeal_ provisions of this act are hereby repealed. Approved March 26, 1889. 1887 COLORADO LAW PROTECTS ROCKY MOUNTAIN GOATS Rocky Mountain goats, bighorn sheep, buffalo, deer, elk and antelope were first protected in Colorado when the Legislature stopped hunting for several years,. HB133 in 1887 and HB 143 in 1889 were designed to stop so-called 'market hunting' of Colorado's native species. That type of hunting was believed to be the cause of wiping out Colorado's Rocky Mountain goat populations, which were reintroduced in 1948. The Colorado Wildlife Commission reaffirmed the native status of the Rocky Mountain goat in March 1993. INTERNATIONAL ORDER OF ROCKY MOUNTAIN GOATS POST OFFICE BOX 401 SALIDA, COLORADO 80201 FOUNDED 1966 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE -k gb Contact: Arch Andrews 303494-+896" 79g 1887 LAW PROTECTS COLORADO ROCKY MOUNTAIN GOATS 3/12/93 Denver — The discovery of a 1887 state law has lead to the designation of native status for Colorado's Rocky Mountain Goats. The action was taken yesterday (Thursday) by the Colorado Wildlife Commission following a presentation by Mike Wynn, President of the Colorado based International Order of Rocky Mountain Goats. Wynn said, "In addition to the 1887 law, 3 other pieces of evidence were discovered, plus 8 additional items that lead to the conclusion that the Rocky Mountain Goat is indigenous to the State of Colorado. In 1889 the Legislature reaffirmed the protection of the goats as well as other big game animals with House Bill 143. At the turn of the century, two books by President Theodore Roosevelt, who hunted in Colorado, stated "Rocky Mountain Goats are found in Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico." Another book, discovered in a Leadville antique shop, titled "Where to Hunt American Game" was published by the United States Cartridge Company of Lowell, Mass, and quoted Gordon Land, the Commissioner of the Colorado Fish and Game Department in 1898 who said in the chapter on Colorado, "...there are some Rocky Mountain Goats but they are not abundant." Hearsay reports of the existence of Rocky Mountain Goats as late as 1937 were considered to be rumors and as a result of that kind of speculation (true or false) over the years, and the transplanting of Rocky Mountain Goats from Montana in 1948, many Coloradoans were lead to believe the goats were not native to the state. "Not so," said Wynn, "and we are delighted that the Rocky Mountain Goat now enjoys the same native status as the deer, elk, and Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep." ### DEDICATED TO PROFESSIONAL WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT...AND TO THE MAGNIFICENT ROCKY MOUNTAIN GOAT 10 MOWS=Stzgrar Rocky Mountain New ANMEMWOMMEWORAMOMMKISMOMMM.,ximmakzawfmmvmm':u, aze,mma'sua-momuranrim1103/00httmONR COLORADO & THE WEST 7/ 9/9-7 Steve Campbell, State/Region Editor • 892 5381 - Rocky Mountain goat declared native / Wildlife officials unsure of impact, say decision could affect management where other species live By Gary Gerhardt Rocky Mountain News Staff Writer The state Wildlife. Commission caught Division of Wildlife officials off guard Thuriday when it passed a resolution declaring the Rocky Mountain goat a native species in Colorado. The status of the high-altitude dwellers has bccn debated for years and it was generally accepted they were an "exotic" species, having been introduced into the state between 1948 and 1975 through wildlife trades with other states and Canadian provinces. State wildlife manager Len Carpenter said Thursday he wasn't sure what ramifications the commission's decision will have, but it could affect the management of goats in areas where they conflict with other species, especially the state animal, bighorn sheep. "We advised the commission to reject the resolution until we had more time to study the information concerning these animals," Carpenter said. "Now I don't know how it will affect our management decisions." The resolution was presented by members of the International Order of Rocky Mountain Goats, a group started in 1966 to support professional management of goats that boasts "herds" (chapters) in two dozen states and England. "We presented historic proof, including the fact the state legislature acknowledged existence of goats in Colorado on March 22, 1887, when it prohibited killing them for a period of 10 years," Gary Gerhardt/Rocky Mountain News Wildlife officials have debated the exotic-vs.-native status of the Rocky Mountain goat for years. said Arch Andrews, a member of the International Order. The group cited two accounts of President Teddy Roosevelt hunting in the 1890s in which he accurately described goats in Colorado. In Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail published in 1901, Roosevelt states his guide killed five goats, the first of which was shot near Canon City. Having never Colorado: "Mountain sheep are seen a goat before, the guide bur- not abundant; perhaps there are ied it to avoid trouble, and it 100 in Routt and Rio Blanco counwasn't until "14 years later, when ties. They are protected by law." State wildlife officials said the he shot another near Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, he became aware resolution could affect National Park Service policy, calling for reof what he had killed." In 1898, U.S. Cartridge Co. of moval of goats wandering into Lowell, Mass., published a hunt- Rocky Mountain National Park, ing book and stated in a chapter on because they were exotic species.