Alberta Cree man successfully challenges illegal fishing ticket 
By Andrea Huncar CA Source: CBC News 10/3/2018
Andrea Huncar
Clayton Cunningham grew up fishing for walleye in the pristine waters of Beaver Lake in northern Alberta, just like his father and grandfather before him.

Last year he was passing the Cree tradition down to his two children when a conservation officer charged him with illegal fishing and confiscated their fish.

"It was embarrassing because essentially people were looking at us like we were poachers when we're just exercising the treaty rights that we've always had," Cunningham said in a recent interview with CBC on the shores of Beaver Lake, as he recalled the May 21, 2017 incident.
 

Under treaty rights, Indigenous people who acquire a licence can harvest an unlimited number of walleye with a net. But under Alberta government's rules, at that time, all walleye caught for sport had to be released.

Cunningham, who had a licence, said he was fishing with a rod for food. The conservation officer told him that was considered sportfishing.

Cunningham handed over his catch and then tried to explain to his eight-year-old son why the conservation officer took their fish.

"He (conservation officer) didn't understand what treaty rights are," Cunningham, who has a master of laws specializing in Aboriginal and treaty rights, explained to his son. "We have a treaty right to catch fish but he didn't understand what it means, so now I have to go to court and talk to the judge and explain what a treaty right is and why we have a treaty right to keep these fish."

 
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