Sunday, February 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Nov, 2014 11:39 AM
  • Yukon man tells court he can legally shoot wolves because of aboriginal rights

WHITEHORSE — A First Nations' man who claims to have an aboriginal right to shoot wolves has pleaded not guilty to three charges under the Yukon Wildlife Act.

Clayton Thomas told a Yukon territorial court that he acted in accordance with his aboriginal rights when he shot two wolves in a Whitehorse subdivision last year.

Thomas, a 33-year-old member of British Columbia’s Tahltan First Nation, is charged with 10 infractions of the act.

Prosecutor Lee Kirkpatrick said the Crown will proceed on three charges: illegal hunting, the careless use of a firearm and trafficking in wildlife.

Thomas doesn’t dispute that he shot the two wolves last year.

He argued he was justified in doing so, that the wolves were a safety concern in the neighbourhood, and as an aboriginal, his actions were legal.

Representing himself, Thomas said he plans to call six witnesses — including Tahltan elders from Watson Lake and Dease Lake, B.C. — to testify when his hearing resumes in December.

When the trial started Monday, Kirkpatrick read a statement of agreed facts by Thomas and the Crown.

On April 17, 2013, Yukon conservation officers received a complaint from a resident in the Mount Sima subdivision that wolves killed his dog at the end of his driveway.

A statement said a week later that an unnamed source told the conservation officers that Thomas, also a neighbourhood resident, had killed a black wolf the night the dog was killed, and texted a photo of the wolf to friends.

Conservation officers received a second tip that Thomas had sent around a photo of him holding up a grey wolf carcass. The source reported hearing gun shots at about 11 p.m. April 17, and more gunshots at about midnight on April 22.

Conservation officers served a search warrant at Thomas’ home on May 3.

Officers seized 47 items, including five wolf hides, sheep horns, firearms, ammunition and computers. The five wolves, Thomas said, were harvested in B.C. under his subsistence rights.

The statement said Thomas admitted to shooting two wolves in the neighbourhood.

Thomas did not have residents' permission to be hunting within one kilometre of houses, Kirkpatrick said, as wildlife laws dictate.

Three days have been set aside for Thomas' witnesses to testify about Tahltan culture and hunting and trapping practices, starting Dec. 8.

MORE National ARTICLES

Gaglardi's Jet And Other Flight Legends On Display At BC Aviation Museum

Gaglardi's Jet And Other Flight Legends On Display At BC Aviation Museum
SIDNEY, B.C. — A shiny, chrome-coated Beechcraft 18 aircraft that was once used by former provincial cabinet minister Phil Gaglardi to inspect the province's highways is one of the historic exhibits at British Columbia's Aviation Museum.

Gaglardi's Jet And Other Flight Legends On Display At BC Aviation Museum

Kaci Hickox, U.S.'s 'Ebola Nurse' Chides Canada's West Africa travel Clampdown

Kaci Hickox, U.S.'s 'Ebola Nurse' Chides Canada's West Africa travel Clampdown
WASHINGTON - She took on American politicians. Now a nurse who castigated what she considered ignorant and electoralist Ebola policies in her own country has a few words for the Government of Canada.

Kaci Hickox, U.S.'s 'Ebola Nurse' Chides Canada's West Africa travel Clampdown

Stephen Harper Homeward Bound After G20 Summit

Stephen Harper Homeward Bound After G20 Summit
BRISBANE, Australia - Canada will soon contribute to a United Nations climate fund that helps impoverished nations cope with climate change and to develop cleaner sources of energy, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Sunday.

Stephen Harper Homeward Bound After G20 Summit

Teaching Consent At A Young Age Could Help Prevent Sex Assaults, Say Experts

Teaching Consent At A Young Age Could Help Prevent Sex Assaults, Say Experts
Sexual assault allegations against former CBC Radio host Jian Ghomeshi have sparked a national conversation about how to facilitate the reporting of such incidents, but some advocates say the focus should instead be on prevention.

Teaching Consent At A Young Age Could Help Prevent Sex Assaults, Say Experts

Municipal Elections In B.C. End In Defeat For Several Longstanding Mayors

Municipal Elections In B.C. End In Defeat For Several Longstanding Mayors
VANCOUVER — As Vancouver's mayor won a decisive victory in this weekend's municipal election, communities across the province were electing new mayors, sometimes at the cost of the incumbents.

Municipal Elections In B.C. End In Defeat For Several Longstanding Mayors

Vancouver's Mayor Gregor Robertson Wins Re-election

Vancouver's Mayor Gregor Robertson Wins Re-election
VANCOUVER - Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson won re-election Saturday, soundly defeating a former journalist despite indications late in the campaign that the mayor's bid for a third term was in trouble.

Vancouver's Mayor Gregor Robertson Wins Re-election