Extradition looms for hunter who shot husband

Posted On December 31, 1969

picture-31In Outdoor Canada magazineâs Winter 2010 issue, we published an in-depth investigative report into the shooting death of an American hunter, Mark Harshbarger, during a 2006 hunting trip to Newfoundland. The Meshoppen, Pennsylvania, man was shot by his wife, Mary Beth Harshbarger, who claims she thought he was a black bear.

At the time âAnother Fine Day Afieldâ was published, 44-year-old Harshbarger was in the midst of fighting an extradition order to Canada to face two charges: careless use of a firearm and criminal negligence causing death with the use of a firearm. On March 29, she lost her most recent legal gambit after the Third Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the extradition order, which was issued back in April 2008.

And now just yesterday, U.S. District Judge Thomas I. Vanaskie ordered Harshbarger to surrender to the U.S. Marshals Service by 2 p.m. on May 14. She will then be held in custody pending her extradition to Canada, the date of which has yet to be announced.

While news of the shooting death has been reported in the local Pennsylvania media, the Outdoor Canada story has been cited for revealing previously undisclosed details of the shooting. The NBC affiliate WBRE Eyewitness News, for example, ran a spot on the article back in February. And now, CBCâs premiere investigative news program, the fifth estate, is looking into the case, using the Outdoor Canada story as its springboard, and writer Charles Wilkins as a resource person.

Article courtesy of

Outdoor Canada

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About

Patrick Walsh (Twitter: @OutdoorWalsh)
Patrick Walsh (Twitter: @OutdoorWalsh)

Joined November 18, 2010

///// FOLLOW ON TWITTER: @OutdoorWalsh ///// Outdoor Canada Editor Patrick Walsh grew up fishing and hunting in Bracebridge, Ontario, where he began his magazine career in 1983 as assistant editor of Muskoka Life. Since then, he has worked for a variety of media, both in Canada and abroad, earning numerous writing and editing awards. In both 2011 and 2005, the Canadian Society of Magazine Editors named him Editor of the Year, while Outdoor Canada was honoured as Magazine of the Year. Learn more: www.outdoorcanada.ca.

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