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Eye On Boise

Target shooter whose exploding target ignited wildfire to pay $168K for suppression costs

An Illinois man who ignited a 440-acre wildfire in central Idaho in 2012 while shooting at an exploding target will pay $168,500 toward fire suppression costs, under a settlement announced today by the U.S. Attorney's Office for Idaho. State law prohibits exploding targets on public lands from May 10 to Oct.10, but Jeffrey Kerner was target shooting on private land on July 18, 2012, near Salmon in Lemhi County, when his target blew apart and ignited the blaze that later spread to adjacent federal land. It was 95 degrees at the time. The AP reports that no lawsuit was filed, but federal officials negotiated with an insurance company representing Kerner to reach the settlement; click below for the full AP report.

Feds collect $168K from exploding target fire
By JOHN MILLER, Associated Press

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — The federal government said Thursday it is collecting $168,500 to cover fire suppression costs after an Illinois man ignited a 440-acre blaze in central Idaho in 2012 while shooting at an exploding target.

The U.S. Attorney's Office announced the agreement after Jeffrey Kerner was target shooting on July 18, 2012 on private land near Salmon in Lemhi County. As temperatures hit 95 degrees, prosecutors say Kerner's target blew apart and ignited the blaze that later spread to adjacent federal land.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Amy Howe in Boise said the settlement was reached after negotiations with an insurance adjustment company representing Kerner.

Though the fire was relatively small at less than a square mile and was contained within 48 hours, costs quickly escalated as federal firefighters arrived in force to keep the flames from consuming at least two nearby homes.

Howe said the incident — during high summer, when temperatures were climbing — underscores the danger of shooting at exploding targets that produce a large cloud of smoke when struck by a bullet. Federal and state agencies across the West have enacted a patchwork of regulations designed to limit or ban exploding targets on public land, though there's little uniformity.

"We have an inordinate number of fires all around the West from these exploding targets," Howe said. "A lot of these fires start on private land and spread to public land, which is what happened here."

The money will be paid into the coffers of the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service, to reimburse them for their costs of fighting what became known as the "Tenmile Fire."

Kerner, listed on his website as a career coach from Wadsworth, Ill., didn't immediately return a phone call on Thursday.

Amid what was a tough fire season this summer, the Forest Service moved in August to ban exploding targets from public land in five states —Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota — on grounds that their incendiary properties caused at least 16 wildfires since 2012.

Meanwhile, regional foresters in Washington and Oregon have banned exploding targets year-round, a prohibition that's slated to last until at least next year. That's as Washington state legislators in 2009 enacted a year-round ban on exploding targets and tracer ammunition on state-managed lands.

And the BLM, which oversees 264 million acres of public lands in the West in 12 states, has varying regulations for target shooters who use exploding targets.

In Oregon or Washington, anybody who shoots at an exploding target on BLM land faces a $1,000 fine and a year in prison, according to a ban enacted in June.

In Idaho, exploding targets are forbidden on public lands from May 10 to October 10, according to a state law.

Though the agreement announced Thursday in Idaho with Kerner was reached without a lawsuit, other cases where exploding targets have caused fires have resulted in criminal charges.

Last February, for instance, two Washington state target shooters who started a fire in Utah in June 2012 that cost $2 million to suppress pleaded no contest in state court to using an exploding target, in violation of a county ordinance that banned the use of them, and were hit with a $10,000 fine.


 

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press



Betsy Z. Russell
Betsy Z. Russell joined The Spokesman-Review in 1991. She currently is a reporter in the Boise Bureau covering Idaho state government and politics, and other news from Idaho's state capital.

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