Oklahoma Code § 29-10-101

Title 29. Game And Fish: Interstate Wildlife Violator Compact
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The Interstate Wildlife Violator Compact is hereby enacted into
law and entered into with all jurisdictions legally joining therein,
in the form substantially as follows:
ARTICLE 1.  FINDINGS, DECLARATION OF POLICY, AND PURPOSE
A.  The participating states find that the following provisions
apply:
1.  Wildlife resources are managed in trust by the respective
states for the benefit of all residents and visitors;
2.  The protection of the wildlife resources of a state is
materially affected by the degree of compliance with state statutes,
laws, ordinances, regulations, and administrative rules relating to
the management of such resources;
3.  The preservation, protection, management, and restoration of
wildlife contributes immeasurably to the aesthetic, recreational,
and economic aspects of such natural resources;
4.  Wildlife resources are valuable without regard to political
boundaries; therefore, every person should be required to comply
with wildlife preservation, protection, management and restoration
laws, ordinances, regulations, and administrative rules of the
participating states as a condition precedent to the continuance or
issuance of any license to hunt, fish, trap, or possess wildlife;
5.  Violation of wildlife laws interferes with the management of
wildlife resources and may endanger the safety of persons and
property;
6.  The mobility of many wildlife law violators necessitates the
maintenance of channels of communication among the various states;
7.  In most instances, a person who is cited for a wildlife
violation in a state other than that person's own state:

a. is required to post collateral or a bond to secure
appearance for a trial at a later date,
b. is taken into custody until the collateral or bond is
posted, or
c. is taken directly to court for an immediate
appearance;
8.  The purpose of the enforcement practices set forth in
paragraph 7 of this subsection is to ensure compliance with the
terms of a wildlife citation by the cited person who, if permitted
to proceed after receiving the citation, could return to the home
state of the person and disregard their duty under the terms of the
citation;
9.  In most instances, a person receiving a wildlife citation in
the home state of the person is permitted to accept the citation
from the officer at the scene of the violation and immediately
proceed after agreeing or being instructed to comply with the terms
of the citation;
10.  The practices described in paragraph 7 of this subsection
cause unnecessary inconvenience and, at times, a hardship for the
person who is unable at the time to post collateral, furnish a bond,
stand trial, or pay a fine and is thus compelled to remain in
custody until some alternative arrangement is made; and
11.  The enforcement practices described in paragraph 7 of this
subsection consume an undue amount of law enforcement time.
B.  It is the policy of the participating states to:
1.  Promote compliance with the statutes, laws, ordinances,
regulations, and administrative rules relating to management of
wildlife resources in their respective states;
2.  Recognize the suspension of wildlife license privileges of
any person whose license privileges have been suspended by a
participating state and may treat the suspension as if it had
occurred in their state;
3.  Allow a violator, except as provided in subsection B of
Article 3 of this compact, to accept a wildlife citation and proceed
without delay, whether or not a resident of the state in which the
citation was issued, provided that the home state of the violator is
party to this compact;
4.  Report to the appropriate participating state, as provided
in the compact manual, any conviction recorded against any person
whose home state was not the issuing state;
5.  Allow the home state to recognize and treat convictions
recorded against its residents, which convictions occurred in a
participating state, as though they occurred in the home state;
6.  Extend cooperation to its fullest extent among the
participating states for enforcing compliance with the terms of a
wildlife citation issued in one participating state to a resident of
another participating state;

7.  Maximize effective use of law enforcement personnel and
information; and
8.  Assist court systems in the efficient disposition of
wildlife violations.
C.  The purpose of this compact is to:
1.  Provide a means through which participating states may join
in a reciprocal program to effectuate the policies enumerated in
subsection B of this article in a uniform and orderly manner; and
2.  Provide for the fair and impartial treatment of wildlife
violators operating within participating states in recognition of
the violator's right to due process and the sovereign status of a
participating state.
ARTICLE 2.  DEFINITIONS
As used in this compact, unless the context requires otherwise,
the following definitions apply:
1.  "Citation" means any summons, complaint, summons and
complaint, ticket, penalty assessment, or other official document
that is issued to a person by a game warden, wildlife officer or
other peace officer for a wildlife violation and that contains an
order requiring the person to respond;
2.  "Collateral" means any cash or other security deposited to
secure an appearance for trial in connection with the issuance by a
game warden, wildlife officer or other peace officer of a citation
for a wildlife violation;
3.  "Compliance" with respect to a citation means the act of
answering a citation through an appearance in a court or tribunal,
or through the payment of fines, costs, and surcharges, if any;
4.  "Conviction" means a conviction, including any court
conviction, for any offense that is related to the preservation,
protection, management, or restoration of wildlife and that is
prohibited by state statute, law, regulation, ordinance, or
administrative rule.  The term also includes the forfeiture of any
bail, bond, or other security deposited to secure appearance by a
person charged with having committed any such offense, the payment
of a penalty assessment, a plea of nolo contendere, and the
imposition of a deferred or suspended sentence by the court;
5.  "Court" means a court of law, including magistrate's court
and the justice of the peace court;
6.  "Home state" means the state of primary residence of a
person;
7.  "Issuing state" means the participating state which issues a
wildlife citation to the violator;
8.  "License" means any license, permit, or other public
document that conveys to the person to whom it was issued the
privilege of pursuing, possessing, or taking any wildlife regulated
by statute, law, regulation, ordinance, or administrative rule of a
participating state;

9.  "Licensing authority" means the commission, department or
division within each participating state that is authorized by law
to issue or approve licenses or permits to hunt, fish, trap, or
possess wildlife;
10.  "Participating state" means any state that enacts
legislation to become a member of this wildlife compact;
11.  "Personal recognizance" means an agreement by a person made
at the time of issuance of the wildlife citation that the person
will comply with the terms of the citation;
12.  "State" means any state, territory, or possession of the
United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the provinces of Canada, and other countries;
13.  “Suspension" means any revocation, denial, or withdrawal of
any or all license privileges, including the privilege to apply for,
purchase, or exercise the benefits conferred by any license;
14.  "Terms of the citation" means those conditions and options
expressly stated in the citation;
15.  "Wildlife" means all species of animals including mammals,
birds, fish, reptiles, amphibians, mollusks, and crustaceans, which
are defined as "wildlife" and are protected or otherwise regulated
by statute, law, regulation, ordinance, or administrative rule in a
participating state.  Species included in the definition of
"wildlife" for purposes of this compact are based on state or local
law;
16.  "Wildlife law" means any statute, law, regulation,
ordinance, or administrative rule developed and enacted for the
management of wildlife resources and the uses thereof;
17.  "Wildlife officer" means any individual authorized by a
participating state to issue a citation for a wildlife violation;
and
18.  "Wildlife violation" means any cited violation of a
statute, law, regulation, ordinance, or administrative rule
developed and enacted for the management of wildlife resources and
the uses thereof.
ARTICLE 3.  PROCEDURES FOR ISSUING STATE
A.  When issuing a citation for a wildlife violation, a wildlife
officer shall issue a citation to any person whose primary residence
is in a participating state in the same manner as though the person
were a resident of the issuing state and may not require the person
to post collateral to secure appearance, subject to the exceptions
noted in subsection B of this article, if the officer receives the
recognizance of the person that the person will comply with the
terms of the citation.
B.  Personal recognizance is acceptable if:
1.  Not prohibited by state or local law or the compact manual;
and

2.  The violator provides adequate proof of identification to
the wildlife officer.
C.  Upon conviction or failure of a person to comply with the
terms of a wildlife citation, the appropriate official shall report
the conviction or failure to comply to the licensing authority of
the participating state in which the wildlife citation was issued.
The report must be made in accordance with procedures specified by
the issuing state and must contain information as specified in the
compact manual as minimum requirements for effective processing by
the home state.
D.  Upon receipt of the report of conviction or noncompliance
pursuant to subsection C of this article, the licensing authority of
the issuing state shall transmit to the licensing authority of the
home state of the violator the information in form and content as
prescribed in the compact manual.
ARTICLE 4.  PROCEDURE FOR HOME STATE
A.  Upon receipt of a report from the licensing authority of the
issuing state reporting the failure of a violator to comply with the
terms of a citation, the licensing authority of the home state shall
notify the violator and may initiate a suspension action in
accordance with the suspension procedures of the home state and may
suspend the license privileges of the violator until satisfactory
evidence of compliance with the terms of the wildlife citation has
been furnished by the issuing state to the home state licensing
authority.  Due process safeguards will be accorded.
B.  Upon receipt of a report of conviction from the licensing
authority of the issuing state, the licensing authority of the home
state may enter the conviction in its records and may treat the
conviction as though it occurred in the home state for the purposes
of the suspension of license privileges if the violation resulting
in a suspension could have been the basis for suspension of license
privileges in the home state.
C.  The licensing authority of the home state shall maintain a
record of actions taken and shall make reports to issuing states as
provided in the compact manual.
ARTICLE 5.  RECIPROCAL RECOGNITION OF SUSPENSION
A.  All participating states may recognize the suspension of
license privileges of any person by any participating state as
though the violation resulting in the suspension had occurred in
their state and could have been the basis for suspension of license
privileges in their state.
B.  Each participating state shall communicate suspension
information to other participating states in form and content as
contained in the compact manual.
ARTICLE 6.  APPLICABILITY OF OTHER LAWS
Except as expressly required by this compact, nothing herein may
be construed to affect the right of any participating state to apply

any of its laws relating to license privileges to any person or
circumstance or to invalidate or prevent any agreement or other
cooperative arrangement between a participating state and a
nonparticipating state concerning wildlife law enforcement.
ARTICLE 7.  COMPACT ADMINISTRATOR - PROCEDURES
A.  For the purposes of administering this compact and to serve
as a governing body for the resolution of all matters relating to
the operation of this compact, a board of compact administrators is
established.  The board is composed of one representative from each
of the participating states to be known as the compact
administrator.  The compact administrator must be appointed by the
head of the licensing authority of each participating state and
serves and is subject to removal in accordance with the laws of the
state the compact administrator represents.  A compact administrator
may provide for the discharge of duties and the performance of
functions as a board member by an alternate.  An alternate is not
entitled to serve unless written notification of the identity of the
alternate has been given to the board.
B.  Each member of the board of compact administrators is
entitled to one vote.  No action of the board is binding unless
taken at a meeting at which a majority of the total number of the
votes by the board are cast in favor thereof.  Action by the board
may be only at a meeting at which a majority of the participating
states is represented.
C.  The board shall elect annually from its membership a
presiding officer and a vice presiding officer.
D.  The board shall adopt bylaws not inconsistent with the
provisions of this compact or the laws of a participating state for
the conduct of its business and may amend and rescind its bylaws.
E.  The board may accept for any of its purposes and functions
under this compact any and all donations and grants of money,
equipment, supplies, materials, and services, conditional or
otherwise, from any state, the United States, or any governmental
agency, and receive, utilize, and dispose of the same.
F.  The board may contract with, or accept services or personnel
from, any governmental or intergovernmental agency, individual,
firm, or corporation, or any private nonprofit organization or
institution.
G.  The board shall formulate all necessary procedures and
develop uniform forms and documents for administering the provisions
of this compact.  All procedures and forms adopted pursuant to board
action must be contained in a compact manual.
ARTICLE 8.  ENTRY INTO COMPACT AND WITHDRAWAL
A.  This compact becomes effective at such time as it is adopted
in a substantially similar form by two or more states.

B.  1.  Entry into the compact must be made by resolution of
ratification executed by the authorized officials of the applying
state and submitted to the presiding officer of the board.
2.  The resolution must substantially be in the form and content
as provided in the compact manual and must include the following:
a. a citation of the authority from which the state is
empowered to become a party to this compact,
b. an agreement of compliance with the terms and
provisions of this compact, and
c. an agreement that compact entry is with all states
participating in the compact and with all additional
states legally becoming a party to the compact.
3.  The effective date of entry must be specified by the
applying state but may not be less than sixty (60) days after notice
has been given by the:
a. presiding officer of the board of the compact
administrators, or
b. secretariat of the board to each participating state
that the resolution from the applying state has been
received.
C.  A participating state may withdraw from participation in
this compact by official written notice to each participating state,
but withdrawal does not become effective until ninety (90) days
after the notice of withdrawal is given.  The notice must be
directed to the compact administrator of each member state.
Withdrawal of any state does not affect the validity of this compact
as to the remaining participating states.
ARTICLE 9.  AMENDMENTS TO THE COMPACT
A.  This compact may be amended from time to time.  Amendments
must be presented in resolution form to the presiding officer of the
board of the compact administrators and must be initiated by one or
more participating states.
B.  Adoption of an amendment requires endorsement by all
participating states and becomes effective thirty (30) days after
the date of the last endorsement.
C.  Failure of a participating state to respond to the compact
presiding officer within one hundred twenty (120) days after receipt
of a proposed amendment constitutes endorsement thereof.
ARTICLE 10.  CONSTRUCTION AND SEVERABILITY
This compact must be liberally construed so as to effectuate the
purposes stated herein.  The provisions of this compact are
severable, and if any phrase, clause, sentence, or provision of this
compact is declared to be contrary to the constitution of any
participating state or the United States, or the applicability
thereof to any government, agency, individual, or circumstance is
held invalid, the validity of the remainder of the compact is not
affected thereby.  If this compact is held contrary to the

constitution of any participating state, the compact remains in full
force and effect as to the remaining states and in full force and
effect as to the participating state affected as to all severable
matters.

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