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French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court - Crime - Nairaland

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French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Kudotap: 10:26am On Nov 17, 2022
French hunter who killed man after ‘mistaking him for boar’ to appear in court

A hunter, who shot dead an Anglo-French man after allegedly mistaking him for a wild boar, will appear in court on Thursday accused of manslaughter.

Morgan Keane, 25, was hit in the chest as he was cutting wood outside his home in a village north of Toulouse, in south-west France, two years ago.

The hunter, Julien Féral, 35, had obtained his hunting licence only six months before the tragedy and admitted he did not know the area. Laurent Lapergue, 51, who organised the hunt, is also on trial for manslaughter.

The case has amplified calls for a crackdown on hunt safety and growing anger over the perceived impunity of France’s powerful hunting lobby, which has the backing of Emmanuel Macron. Since Keane’s killing, two other civilians have been shot by hunters.

Keane’s death sparked a social media campaign by his friends called “One day, one hunter”, which led to a petition signed by more than 100,000 people. A subsequent parliamentary inquiry resulted in a 140-page report published in September that recommended, among other safety measures, banning hunters from drinking but rejected activists’ calls to outlaw hunting on Sundays and Wednesday when many children have no school.

Members of the National Hunters’ Federation (FNC) rejected the Sénat’s proposals and reacted angrily, saying they were being “stigmatised” and caricatured.

The indictment states that Keane was chopping wood on his private land at a place called Garrigues near Calvignac at about 4.30pm when Féral, “believing he was shooting at a boar”, fatally hit him from a distance of 75 metres with a Remington pump-action rifle.

Féral, who had a valid gun permit and a recent hunting licence, told police he had joined the hunt with his brother-in-law but was not familiar with the area or which parts of it were private. He said he was standing in a field where he saw “no car, no habitation, no person”, heard a cracking and spotted a boar, which turned and ran into the wood. When he spotted movement nearby, he said he shot again assuming it was the boar.

Keane and his brother Rowan lived alone at the property following the death of their parents. Their mother was French, and the brothers were born and raised in France. The indictment stated that Keane’s late father, Michael, whose nationality was recorded as British when he died in July 2019, had clashed with local hunters two years previously accusing them of coming too close to his land.

Lapergue admitted Féral was inexperienced at boar hunting and did not know the area, but denied any responsibility in the killing. He was accused of manslaughter for allegedly failing to give adequate security instructions before the hunt, which he denies. He also rejected investigators’ findings that the hunt was “totally disorganised” and “intrinsically dangerous”.

Maître Benoît Coussy, Rowan Keane’s lawyer, has called for heavier penalties for irresponsible hunters.

“The term “accident” has been used incorrectly since the beginning of this case and it seems to me inappropriate because it refers to what could be called the hunting excuse,” Coussy told French journalists.

“It’s time to create a hunting crime with heavier and more dissuasive penalties.”

Official figures show that during the 2020-21 hunting season there were 80 shooting accidents, seven of them fatal. Last year there were 90 accidents, eight leading to deaths. An estimated 150 people are injured in hunting accidents every year; most of the victims are those taking part, but in February a 25-year-old woman hiking on a marked trail path with a friend in the Cantal region was shot dead. In October 2021, a 67-year-old motorist was killed after being hit in the throat by a hunter’s bullet as he was driving on a dual carriageway from Rennes to Nantes.

In 2017, a 69-year-old woman was killed when a hunter shot at her garden hedge claiming he had seen a deer. The following year, a 24-year-old hunter killed Welsh restaurant owner Marc Sutton, 34, while he was out on his mountain bike in the Haute-Savoie where he lived. The hunter was sentenced to four years in prison, three of them suspended. Three other hunters and the wife of an accused were given suspended sentences for tampering with evidence.

The shooting of innocent civilians, some on their own private property, has raised questions over how the French countryside is shared. The FNC, which represents 800,000 licensed hunters, dismissed the Sénat report as a “millefeuille of restrictions” that were “not appropriate or realistic”.

The federation’s chairman, Willy Schraen, a larger than life figure who has the president’s ear, caused outrage in June after suggesting country dwellers and activists who feared local hunters should stay at home.

“They should just walk at home then they won’t have a problem … you can always be hit by a stray bullet, but don’t worry, you’ve more chance of being killed by a murderer in France than a hunter,” he told BFMTV.

However, Schraen said in the case of Keane’s killing it appeared “the basic rules were not respected”.

“If one shoots, you have to know what you are shooting at,” Schraen said.

About 90 species can be hunted in France thoughrestrictions on times and numbers apply. The country has 1,313,000 hunters, according to the FédérationNationale des Chasseurs, and hunting is the third most popular sport, after football and fishing.

The trial, which is expected to last one day, opens on Thursday in Cahors. Féral and Lapergue face up to three years in prison and a fine of €75,000 each, as well as a ban on having a firearm for five years or the permanent removal of their hunting licence if convicted.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/17/french-hunter-who-killed-man-after-mistaking-him-for-boar-to-appear-in-court
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Thortp(m): 10:26am On Nov 17, 2022
How? If I may ask
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Kudotap: 10:27am On Nov 17, 2022
.

2 Likes

Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by ejikoz(m): 10:43am On Nov 17, 2022
Lol. France and their crazy news
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by meobizy(f): 4:00pm On Nov 17, 2022
Lol. Life is funny. One mistake and your whole world ends.
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Truvelisback(m): 6:38pm On Nov 17, 2022

Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Allison012: 9:39pm On Nov 17, 2022
They would have allowed him eat the pig before arresting him.

If na me, i go chop my human-pig before them carry me.

1 Like

Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Eyinju112(f): 10:12pm On Nov 17, 2022
Shey the man fat like pig grin

1 Like

Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Jakumo(m): 3:26am On Nov 18, 2022
ejikoz:


Lol. Kudotap with his crazy news.

Mistaking a man for a pig indeed. That's not a mistake. It's intentional homicide.

I have hunted for a good while and can assure you that it is indeed possible to mistake a person for an animal while hunting, ESPECIALLY in the case of hunters with many years of experience, and here is the reason.

In thick grassland or in forests with lots of undergrowth it is rare that a hunter will see the entire body of any animal that he or she is about to shoot. Most likely, a portion of the animal's body will be visible as it ducks and hides in the undergrowth. Hunters learn with time to take aim quickly and fire at those small portions of the animal's anatomy that are generally only seen for a fleetingly brief window of time during the hunt.

Hunters who develop that fast reflex to shoot at a portion of an animal's body the instant it becomes visible are therefore MORE likely than a new inexperienced hunter, to take that shot even before they can distinguish the full outline of the target animal. If a person happens to be in the forest for whatever reason during a pig hunt with dogs used to drive the animals, it is tragically possible that such a person could get shot in error.
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by temitope27(m): 6:08am On Nov 18, 2022
Village people dey France too? cheesy
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by HolyMan12: 7:15am On Nov 18, 2022
Pocohantas, may this never be your portion in Jesus name grin
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by SHINJA: 7:49am On Nov 19, 2022
HolyMan12:
Pocohantas, may this never be your portion in Jesus name grin


Is she fat like a pig?
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by IamtheTruth1(m): 8:28pm On Nov 19, 2022
Kudotap:
French hunter who killed man after ‘mistaking him for boar’ to appear in court

A hunter, who shot dead an Anglo-French man after allegedly mistaking him for a wild boar, will appear in court on Thursday accused of manslaughter.

Morgan Keane, 25, was hit in the chest as he was cutting wood outside his home in a village north of Toulouse, in south-west France, two years ago.

The hunter, Julien Féral, 35, had obtained his hunting licence only six months before the tragedy and admitted he did not know the area. Laurent Lapergue, 51, who organised the hunt, is also on trial for manslaughter.

The case has amplified calls for a crackdown on hunt safety and growing anger over the perceived impunity of France’s powerful hunting lobby, which has the backing of Emmanuel Macron. Since Keane’s killing, two other civilians have been shot by hunters.

Keane’s death sparked a social media campaign by his friends called “One day, one hunter”, which led to a petition signed by more than 100,000 people. A subsequent parliamentary inquiry resulted in a 140-page report published in September that recommended, among other safety measures, banning hunters from drinking but rejected activists’ calls to outlaw hunting on Sundays and Wednesday when many children have no school.

Members of the National Hunters’ Federation (FNC) rejected the Sénat’s proposals and reacted angrily, saying they were being “stigmatised” and caricatured.

The indictment states that Keane was chopping wood on his private land at a place called Garrigues near Calvignac at about 4.30pm when Féral, “believing he was shooting at a boar”, fatally hit him from a distance of 75 metres with a Remington pump-action rifle.

Féral, who had a valid gun permit and a recent hunting licence, told police he had joined the hunt with his brother-in-law but was not familiar with the area or which parts of it were private. He said he was standing in a field where he saw “no car, no habitation, no person”, heard a cracking and spotted a boar, which turned and ran into the wood. When he spotted movement nearby, he said he shot again assuming it was the boar.

Keane and his brother Rowan lived alone at the property following the death of their parents. Their mother was French, and the brothers were born and raised in France. The indictment stated that Keane’s late father, Michael, whose nationality was recorded as British when he died in July 2019, had clashed with local hunters two years previously accusing them of coming too close to his land.

Lapergue admitted Féral was inexperienced at boar hunting and did not know the area, but denied any responsibility in the killing. He was accused of manslaughter for allegedly failing to give adequate security instructions before the hunt, which he denies. He also rejected investigators’ findings that the hunt was “totally disorganised” and “intrinsically dangerous”.

Maître Benoît Coussy, Rowan Keane’s lawyer, has called for heavier penalties for irresponsible hunters.

“The term “accident” has been used incorrectly since the beginning of this case and it seems to me inappropriate because it refers to what could be called the hunting excuse,” Coussy told French journalists.

“It’s time to create a hunting crime with heavier and more dissuasive penalties.”

Official figures show that during the 2020-21 hunting season there were 80 shooting accidents, seven of them fatal. Last year there were 90 accidents, eight leading to deaths. An estimated 150 people are injured in hunting accidents every year; most of the victims are those taking part, but in February a 25-year-old woman hiking on a marked trail path with a friend in the Cantal region was shot dead. In October 2021, a 67-year-old motorist was killed after being hit in the throat by a hunter’s bullet as he was driving on a dual carriageway from Rennes to Nantes.

In 2017, a 69-year-old woman was killed when a hunter shot at her garden hedge claiming he had seen a deer. The following year, a 24-year-old hunter killed Welsh restaurant owner Marc Sutton, 34, while he was out on his mountain bike in the Haute-Savoie where he lived. The hunter was sentenced to four years in prison, three of them suspended. Three other hunters and the wife of an accused were given suspended sentences for tampering with evidence.

The shooting of innocent civilians, some on their own private property, has raised questions over how the French countryside is shared. The FNC, which represents 800,000 licensed hunters, dismissed the Sénat report as a “millefeuille of restrictions” that were “not appropriate or realistic”.

The federation’s chairman, Willy Schraen, a larger than life figure who has the president’s ear, caused outrage in June after suggesting country dwellers and activists who feared local hunters should stay at home.

“They should just walk at home then they won’t have a problem … you can always be hit by a stray bullet, but don’t worry, you’ve more chance of being killed by a murderer in France than a hunter,” he told BFMTV.

However, Schraen said in the case of Keane’s killing it appeared “the basic rules were not respected”.

“If one shoots, you have to know what you are shooting at,” Schraen said.

About 90 species can be hunted in France thoughrestrictions on times and numbers apply. The country has 1,313,000 hunters, according to the FédérationNationale des Chasseurs, and hunting is the third most popular sport, after football and fishing.

The trial, which is expected to last one day, opens on Thursday in Cahors. Féral and Lapergue face up to three years in prison and a fine of €75,000 each, as well as a ban on having a firearm for five years or the permanent removal of their hunting licence if convicted.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/17/french-hunter-who-killed-man-after-mistaking-him-for-boar-to-appear-in-court


How person take resemble Pig?
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by ejikoz(m): 11:12pm On Feb 06, 2023
Truly crazy country
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by mysticwarrior(m): 3:29am On Feb 07, 2023
Please what is the English word for someone suffering from a disorder that makes him mistook humans as a animals?
Re: French Hunter Who Killed Man After Mistaking Him For A Pig To Appear In Court by Jakumo(m): 7:24am On Feb 07, 2023
mysticwarrior:
Please what is the English word for someone suffering from a disorder that makes him mistook humans as a animals?

Poor eyesight, mistaken identity, or simple trigger happiness in some cases. Hunting accidents are very common. Never hunt with a group of hunters, because careless shooters might be among them. In Nigeria, any hunter who gets hit by another hunter's shot is presumed to have offended the God of Iron by perhaps stealing, and thus deserved to be shot. Case closed. Never go hunting with a group of hunters anywhere.

Be the lone wolf
, but carry a small high-speed battery-powered rotating blade saw to free yourself if you step on a metal trap while out alone. Carry first aid bandages, and a canteen of drinking water when out in the wilderness.

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