![]() ![]() ![]() “Many residents … consider a visiting backyard moose to be a pleasurable diversion a cause to pull out a camera and boast to friends and neighbors when a particularly majestic specimen appears,” they wrote. They wrote that Mileur lives in a suburban neighborhood, not the wilds, and that moose rarely need to be shot in self-defense. He included two photos of Mileur’s backyard moose.įederal prosecutors oppose the request. Mileur thus respectfully requests that the conditions of his probation be modified so that he may defend himself and his property against potential moose on his property,” Ohm wrote. Moose can be dangerous, the Washington, D.C.-based lawyer wrote, citing two commercial websites. Not possessing firearms was a condition of probation.īut Assistant Federal Public Defender Eugene Ohm wrote that, within days of his sentencing hearing, Mileur saw a moose on his property. Three other charges were dismissed in exchange for his guilty plea. ![]() He pleaded guilty to a charge of demonstrating or parading in the Capitol building. He wants to be allowed a firearm, to protect himself from moose.Ī federal judge in Washington, D.C., sentenced 43-year-old Aaron James Mileur to two years of probation last month. 6, 2021, is asking a judge to loosen a condition of his probation. ![]() This story originally appeared on Alaska Public Media and is republished here with permission.Ī Wasilla man sentenced for storming the U.S. Surveillance footage showed Aaron Mileur and his cousin in the Rotunda of the U.S. ![]()
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