Trail date set for U.S. hunter who shot husband

Posted On December 31, 1969

picture-31American Mary Beth Harshbarger, charged in connection with the shooting death of her husband during a 2006 hunting trip to Buchans Junction, Newfoundland, will finally get her day in court. Two weeks have been set aside in the Newfoundland Supreme Court starting September 13.

Harshbarger, 45, has already pleaded not guilty to criminal negligence causing death with the use of a firearm. She was extradited to Newfoundland and Labrador in mid-May following a lengthy legal battle with U.S. and Canadian authorities. A second charge of careless use of a firearm was dropped in May during her first court appearance in Grand Falls-Windsor, Newfoundland.

The details surrounding the shooting were the focus of a major investigative article (pictured here) in the Winter 2010 issue of Outdoor Canada magazine. The Meshoppen, Pennsylvania, woman maintains she thought her husband, Mark Harshbarger, was an approaching black bear when she shot him six minutes before the end of legal light with a scoped .30-06 at 65 yards.

Harshbarger was granted bail last month, but has yet to post the requisite $200,000 bond. In a recent interview with CBC Radio, Mary Beth Harshbargerâs current partner, Barry Harshbarger, suggested she declined bail in order to garner time served against any future potential sentence. The brother of Mark Harshbarger, Barry Harshbarger had accompanied the pair during the ill-fated hunting trip.

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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