17-320. Jaguar; protection; violation;
classification; civil liability; exception


A. Notwithstanding section 17-239 or any other provision of this title, if the
secretary of the interior publishes in the federal register a determination for the
removal of jaguar (felis onca) from the list as required under section 4(c) of the
endangered species act of 1973, as amended, (P.L. 93-205; 87 Stat. 884; 16 United States
Code sections 1531 through 1544):


1. It is unlawful for a person to knowingly kill, wound or possess a jaguar or any
part thereof.


2. A person who unlawfully kills, wounds or possesses a jaguar or any part thereof:


(a) Is guilty of a class 1 misdemeanor.


(b) Is liable for civil damages of not more than seventy-two thousand five hundred
dollars for each violation pursuant to procedures set forth in section 17-314.


B. Subsection A of this section does not apply to:


1. A jaguar or parts of a jaguar that were lawfully possessed under state and
federal law before August 21, 1997.


2. Any person who kills or wounds a jaguar, if it can be shown by a preponderance
of the evidence that the person committed an act based on a good faith belief that the
person was acting to protect himself, a member of the person's family or any other
individual from bodily harm from a jaguar.


C. A person shall notify the department within five days after killing or wounding
a jaguar under subsection B, paragraph 2 of this section. A jaguar killed or wounded
pursuant to subsection B, paragraph 2 of this section shall not be retained, sold or
removed from the site without authorization from the department.