2 charged after moose shot from side of TCH
Slew of charges laid right across Newfoundland as moose hunting season begins
![](https://i.cbc.ca/1.3135325.1435837881!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_1180/moose.jpg?im=Resize%3D780)
Officers in central Newfoundland were called Friday to investigate complaints of hunting along the Trans-Canada Highway and vehicles in the way of traffic
Fish and wildlife enforcement officers based in Gander apprehended two men from Wareham, Bonavista Bay after a moose was shot on the side of the TCH shortly after midnight on Saturday.
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The incident happened a few kilometres east of Gander.
Officers charged the men with hunting during a closed time, use of an artificial light to hunt big game and shooting from a highway.
Police confiscated a moose, two rifles and ammunition, two big game licences, tags and a knife.
The men were released to appear in provincial court in Gander at a later time.
On the same day, fish and wildlife enforcement officers in Grand Falls-Windsor investigated several hunting violations.
Subsequently, a man from Harbour Breton was charged with killing a wrong sex moose near the Bay d'Espoir Highway and a man from Twillingate was charged with killing a moose in the wrong management area.
In those cases, two moose, rifles, an all-terrain vehicle and hunting paraphernalia were seized.
Charges of transporting a loaded firearm in a vehicle and discharging a firearm from a roadway were laid by fish and wildlife officers in Clarenville, Stephenville and Roddickton.