Video released shows Alaska father, son illegally shoot bear and shrieking cubs
CBS 4- A year after an Alaskan father and his son were caught on camera killing a black bear sow and her two cubs, the video has been made public.
The Humane Society of the United States used a public records request to obtain the graphic video, which was recorded on Esther Island last spring.
Father Andrew Renner and his son Owen were out skiing on April 14, 2018 when they approached the bears’ den, Alaska Wildlife Troopers said in a statement last August.
Owen Renner fired twice at the adult bear while it slept in its den, the troopers said. Then, Andrew Renner killed the “shrieking” cubs, leaving their bodies outside the den, the troopers’ statement said. The Renners butchered the adult bear and returned two days later to dispose of the cubs’ bodies and collect shell casings, according to the troopers.
What the two men didn’t know was that their actions were caught on tape. The bears were being monitored by a motion-activated camera as part of a study by the US Forest Service and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
Court documents say that Andrew Renner is captured on video saying, “It doesn’t matter. Bear down.”
The men also removed the adult bear’s tracking collar, troopers said.
“They’ll never be able to link it to us,” Owen Renner said, according to court records.
Two weeks later, Andrew Renner took the bear’s skin and collar to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, saying he hadn’t seen the cubs and didn’t know it was a nursing bear, troopers said.
In Alaska, it is illegal to shoot black bears with cubs. Both men will have to pay $1,800 restitution, the amount set by statute for killing black bears, the state’s news release says.
“The defendant, and anyone else that would pursue game in our state, should be on notice that killing a sow with cubs and then poaching the cubs to cover it up, will result in a significant jail term and loss of hunting privileges,” Assistant Attorney General Aaron Peterson said in a statement.
“People must know that poachers will be required to pay large fines and restitution for the illegal killing of the animals and that the vehicles, boat, planes, and instrumentalities used in wildlife crimes will be forfeited.”
Andrew Renner, 41, was sentenced to three months in jail and a $9,000 fine. He was also ordered to forfeit his boat, truck, firearms and poaching gear — and lose his hunting privileges for 10 years, according to a news release from the state of Alaska.
His 18-year-old son, Owen Renner, was sentenced to probation and community service and will be required to take a hunters’ safety course, according to the statement obtained by CNN. His hunting license was also suspended for two years.