Or. Rev. Stat. § 496.002

Short title

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      496.002 Short title. ORS chapters 496, 497, 498 and 501 may be cited as the wildlife laws. [1973 c.723 §2]

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 11 cases (5 in the last 5 years), 1989–2025 · leading case: State v. Couch
State v. Couch (2006) or · cites it 2× “See ORS 496.002 (so stating). [2] We note that the captions for counts 48-50 in the information refer to "ORS 496.”
State v. Wilder (2020) orctapp “270, which followed a separate prosecution for unlawful hunting, ORS 496.002 and ORS 496.992. Defendant assigns error to the trial court’s denial of his motion to dismiss the possession charge on the basis that the former jeopardy statute, ORS 131.”
Hood River County v. Stevenson (2001) orctapp “n only for: “(a) Boating violations under ORS chapter 830, or any violation of rules adopted pursuant to ORS chapter 830 if the violation constitutes an offense; *84 “(b) Traffic violations under ORS chapters 801 to 826, or any violation of rules adopted pursuant to those…”
State v. Shockey (2017) orctapp “ORS 496.002 (so stating). Although the misdemeanor complaint did not identify what wildlife law or rule defendant’s possession of the hawk violated, it appears that the state’s theory of the case likely was that defendant’s conduct violated former OAR 635-044-0130 (Aug 6, 2012),…”
State v. Mankiller (2025) orctapp “Mankiller and trapping regulations, as well as miscellaneous wildlife protective measures; and chapter 501 addresses wildlife ref- uges and closures.”
State v. Hammond (1989) orctapp “” ORS 496.002(1) defines “resident” for purposes of the wildlife laws as “a person who has resided in this state at least six consecutive months immediately prior to the date of making application for a license, tag or permit issued by the [State Fish and Wildlife Commission].”
State v. Couch (2006) or · cites it 2× “See ORS 496.002 (so stating). We note that the captions for counts 48-50 in the information refer to “ORS 496.”
State v. Kight (2025) orctapp “ORS 496.002 (providing that “the wildlife laws” include ORS chapters 496 and 498).”
State v. Mankiller (2025) orctapp “Mankiller and trapping regulations, as well as miscellaneous wildlife protective measures; and chapter 501 addresses wildlife ref- uges and closures.”
State v. Kight (2025) orctapp “ORS 496.002 (providing that “the wildlife laws” include ORS chapters 496 and 498).”
Boaters Rights Association v. Early (2024) ord · cites it 2× “ORS § 496.002 (“ORS chapters 496, 497, 498 and 501 may be cited as the wildlife laws”).”
— Or. Rev. Stat. § 496.002(1) — 1 case
State v. Hammond (1989) orctapp “” ORS 496.002(1) defines “resident” for purposes of the wildlife laws as “a person who has resided in this state at least six consecutive months immediately prior to the date of making application for a license, tag or permit issued by the [State Fish and Wildlife Commission].”
— Or. Rev. Stat. § 496.002(19) — 2 cases
State v. Couch (2006) or “See ORS 496.002 (so stating). [2] We note that the captions for counts 48-50 in the information refer to "ORS 496.”
State v. Couch (2006) or “See ORS 496.002 (so stating). We note that the captions for counts 48-50 in the information refer to “ORS 496.”
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