Canadian True Crime - 73 The Harshbarger Family
Episode Date: October 1, 2020NEWFOUNDLAND & LABRADOR:In 2006, a family left the US for a hunting trip in Newfoundland. Not all of them would come back. Thanks for supporting my sponsors!See the special offer codes hereAD... FREE Exclusive feed - Canadian True Crime supporterAccess ad-free episodes, bonus episodes, and more Learn moreRead the award-winning long-form article from Outdoor Canadahttps://www.outdoorcanada.ca/harshbarger/Scroll to halfway down the page to see the link to download the PDF.Podcast recommendationTrue - bizarre stories that are always trueCredits:Research: Gemma HarrisAudio editing and production: We Talk of Dreams Disclaimer voiced by the host of TrueTheme Song: We Talk of Dreams All credits and sources can be found on the page for this episode at www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi there and welcome to the next season of Canadian True Crime. I hope you're as well
as can be expected in these crazy times and I wanted to thank you for your patience as
I took some time to catch my breath over the summer. The podcast is now back to the regular
schedule with new episodes coming on the 1st and the 15th of each month. And with that,
it's on with the show.
This podcast contains course language and content of a violent and disturbing nature.
Please be advised that this episode also includes details about the hunting of large
animals as a sport, although no graphic details are given.
It was September 2006 and the Harshbarga family were travelling from where they lived in
Pennsylvania in the US to the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador. It was their
third hunting trip to Newfoundland. Parents Mark and Mary Beth were avid hunters. In fact,
they loved it so much that photos from their wedding day showed them posing with rifles
and they even went hunting on their honeymoon. Mark and Mary Beth's farmhouse was filled
with hunting trophies like bearskins, deer heads and caribou antlers from the various
hunting trips they had taken. By day, Mark was an environmental projects assessor and
Mary Beth was a stay at home mum but they lived for their next hunting trip. The fact
that they had two young children didn't hamper their plans. Hunting was a family tradition.
While Mark had hunted in Newfoundland before, he was excited this time to bring along his
wife and two kids, a four year old daughter and a seven month old son. 42 year old Mark
also asked his older brother Barry to come along. Mark's favourite spot to hunt from
was Moose Head Lodge in the Buckins area of Newfoundland and they held current licences
for hunting moose, caribou and bear in that area. In the first few days, Mark had shot
a caribou as well as a small bear. His wife, 41 year old Mary Beth, was intensely competitive
and just as good of a marksman as her husband, she was waiting for her own bear to shoot
and it was now 24 hours before they would have to return home. On September 14th 2006,
the Harshbarga family left the lodge in the mid to late afternoon with their guide, a
man called Lambert Green. Bringing a hunting guide is a good idea because they know the
local area and can make sure that the hunt is safe, the local environment is protected
and the rules are followed. One of those rules is that hunting is only permitted in Newfoundland
for 30 minutes after sunset because once it starts getting dark, visibility issues arise
which can make the hunt less safe. Several Canadian provinces require an orange safety
vest to be worn while hunting but Newfoundland and Labrador is not among them. Neither the guide
nor the Harshbargas were wearing one. The guide Lambert drove his pickup with Mary Beth and the
two kids in the cab and Mark and his brother Barry in the back of the truck keeping an eye
out for game. As they drove up the road, Barry saw a bare tree stand, basically a wooden loft
built in a tree that allows hunters better views and more protection. So they dropped Barry off
and arranged to come back and get him later. The truck continued down the various gravel roads
with the Harshbargas continuing to look out for moose and bear. After not finding any as they
drove, the guide Lambert stopped the truck so he and Mark could get out and do a quick check on foot
for signs of animals nearby. Mary Beth stayed in the truck to watch the kids. The two men returned
without finding anything so they all drove on to another area parking on a logging road. It was now
late in the day and they would soon be running out of legal light for hunting. Again Lambert and
Mark left the truck to hunt and Mary Beth and the kids stayed behind. Both men were aware that Mary
Beth was a skilled and experienced hunter and even though she was watching the kids, she had her rifle
and would shoot if by chance she saw a moose or a bear while the men were gone. In fact earlier in
the week they'd discussed the possibility that the two men going out to hunt might inadvertently
end up flushing animals out of the hunting area. It was understood that a moose or a bear might come
out of the woods so Mary Beth was primed and ready for any animal that she saw.
In the bush Lambert and Mark proceeded to walk through a clearing along an old logging trail with
uneven water ruts, old and new grown vegetation and falling rocks and trees. It was tricky to walk on
and they really had to watch their step because of the uneven ground. Mary Beth was watching them
as they moved towards a bunch of spruce pine trees up an incline and once they got to the trees
they were no longer visible from where she was at the truck. After a while the men had been gone for
around 30 minutes and the sun had set. The hunting rule stated that they could only hunt for 30 minutes
after sunset so their opportunity for squeezing the last drops of legal light would be gone soon
and they still had to pick up Mark's brother Barry. Lambert and Mark decided to cut their losses.
They had one last chance to hunt on this trip so they planned to go back to the truck, drive to
get Barry and hunt from the truck as it drove. As they started walking back from the pickup
Lambert stopped to relieve himself. Mark walked ahead looking down to make sure he kept his footing
in the rough terrain as he entered tall overgrown grass around four to five feet in height.
Back at the pickup truck Mary Beth saw something emerge from the forest. It was weaving in zigzag
movements bobbing its head up and down. She continued to watch it carefully looking through
the scope of her gun to confirm her suspicions that it was a black bear. When the object was
around 200 feet or 60 meters from the truck it appeared to head back into the woods away from
the pickup. Having decided it was a black bear Mary Beth took the shot. Suddenly Lambert the
hunting guide heard a shot and a scream and the sound of air rushing out of something. He didn't
know what it came from but figured a moose or bear had been shot. He ran out from the woods and into
the tall grass where he saw Mark Harshbarger lying face down on the ground. His navy blue
overalls were stained with blood. Lambert took the gun off Mark's shoulder, turned him over and
checked for a pulse but it was too late. The single gunshot had killed Mark instantly.
Lambert looked up and saw Mary Beth standing by the truck. He called out to her and asked if she'd
shot her rifle. She replied, I shot at a bear did I get him? Lambert responded no you got Mark.
Mary Beth had shot her own husband.
I'm Christy an Australian who's called Canada home for more than a decade
and this is my passion project. Join me to hear about some of the most thought-provoking and
often heartbreaking true crime cases in Canada. Using court documents and news archives I take
you through each story from beginning to end with a look at the way the media covered the crime
and the impact it had on the community. This is Canadian true crime.
Lambert Green the hunting guide ran back to the pickup where Mary Beth was standing.
She asked if Mark was okay. Lambert had to give her the devastating news that her husband was dead.
Mary Beth went into hysterics screaming and crying oh god I shot my husband I shot my love.
As you remember the couple's two young children were in the back of the truck's cab. The seven
month old baby was too young to know what was happening but their four-year-old daughter saw
her mum's distress and jumped out of the truck also now hysterical. Mary Beth did her best to
comfort her daughter. They had no cell phones so they had to find a landline and Barry was still
waiting down the road to be picked up. Mary Beth and Lambert decided their best course of action
was to put the kids back in the truck pick up Barry and drive back to the lodge where they
would call the RCMP. Mark's body would be left where it was. When they reached Barry Lambert gave
him the terrible news. His brother was dead and Mary Beth said she had fired the shot. Barry became
very upset. When they got to the lodge they discovered that there was no working phone so
they had to drive to a nearby town to call the RCMP and report Mark's death. The group returned to
the lodge just before 8 30 pm and they waited for the officers to arrive. As they waited Mary Beth
talked to various people working at the lodge. The owner, Reg White, observed her to be hysterical
and was talking about taking her own life. Quote, if I didn't have my children I'd be with him now
I don't want to live without him. She also told her account of the story to the lodger's cook
who noted at that point that she seemed to be fairly calm almost in a trance. According to the cook
Mary Beth couldn't believe that she had shot her own husband. In recounting her movements
she said she used the scope of her rifle which magnifies vision from a distance
to look at the object but she insisted she didn't see the navy blue of her husband's overalls
but the black of a bear. Quote, I shot my beloved I fucking shot my husband my whole world.
No matter who Mary Beth spoke to her account was consistent. She shot her husband because she
thought he was a bear and she said the same thing to the RCMP major crime unit when they
arrived hours later. By this time it was late at night and too dark to investigate the scene
of the shooting so Mark's body was covered and left at the scene overnight. In the meantime
Mary Beth gave a recorded statement of her version of events. Quote, I was with the children
in the truck and I got out and I stood up in case a moose came out or a bear and I stood in
the back of the truck because the children were being quiet and I was looking around for probably
15 minutes and I saw a bear in the woods on the edge like in front of me. The truck was parked
this way and I was looking off this way and I saw a bear come out and walk around along the edge
and go back in and I raised my rifle and I was trying to get a good scope on him. It was black
you know and a big black thing and I fired a shot. She said that what she heard next was a
God awful scream. She told the RCMP that the sun was positioned behind the trees where Mark and
Lambert had gone which made it lighter where Mary Beth was and darker in the area up by the trees.
She was asked what time the shooting happened. At first she said she was waiting at the truck
for Lambert and her husband Mark to return estimating the time at between 7 30 and 8 p.m.
It wasn't completely dark yet but there wasn't full daylight either. Mary Beth continued to answer
a series of questions put to her by the RCMP about how she came to identify the object as being a bear
and not a human. She reiterated that first she saw with her naked eye what she thought was a bear.
It was weaving in those zigzag movements and she said she continued to watch it carefully for about
two to three minutes looking through the scope of her gun to make sure. She said that she held
onto the gun put her head up to look again and then back down peering again through the scope.
When asked why she thought it was a bear she explained that to her it appeared low to the
ground black rounded at the back and had the head of a bear. She recounted to the police that when
the bear was around 200 feet or 60 meters from the truck it appeared to head back into the woods
away from the pickup and this is when Mary Beth took the shot. She maintained she didn't see Mark
at all. She was asked again whether she actually knew it was a bear when she first saw it or if
she perhaps only thought it was. She said that when she first saw it she didn't know for sure
whether it was a bear but the more that she looked at it she was convinced that it was.
The officer asked Mary Beth what she thought had happened. Where did things go wrong? She said that
she shouldn't have taken the shot because it was too dark. Quote I thought I had a clear view but
obviously not. When Mary Beth was asked more about the lighting conditions she said that it wasn't dark
but it was dusky. She was asked if there was sufficient light to see things clearly in the
bush and she replied no. She later provided a better estimate of the time the shooting occurred.
She said it was around 25 minutes after the sun had set so five minutes before the end of legal
light on the last hunt of their trip to Newfoundland. Throughout her statement to police
Mary Beth had been speaking steadily and calmly and other than some minor clarifications
her story was fairly consistent. The police asked if she and Mark had any marital troubles.
She said no. She loved Mark so much. She told the officers that just before he walked into the woods
he kissed her. Quote we have the perfect life, the perfect family, the perfect everything.
We had a great life, we had so much in common.
Mark Harshbarga was born in 1963 in Lewiston, Pennsylvania to a family that were well known for
their ties to the great outdoors. His father Leonard, known as Lee, was a former conservation
officer and retired regional supervisor with the Pennsylvania Game Commission.
Mark was the youngest of five children with two brothers Barry and Dean who both worked for the
Game Commission too as well as two sisters Sharon and Susan. Mark loved sports and being physically
active. In high school he was on a championship wrestling team and after graduation he enlisted
in the US Air Force starting service as a military police officer. After eight or so years he got out
of the force and started working as an environmental projects officer. He began a serious long-term
relationship with a woman who had two sons. Their father had been killed in a car accident
so Mark stepped up to help his partner raise her boys. Six years later after Mark's own mother
passed away he started spending a lot of time with his father, Lee, fishing, camping and hunting.
Lee would later tell the court about the type of person his youngest son was.
Quote, if ever I needed help with anything I would give him a call and he was always there.
He would drop what he was doing and come and help me.
Mark was already an avid fisher but he and Lee started going to hunter education classes together
which kicked off Mark's obsession with all things hunting. In 1997 when Mark was 34 his father came
back from a trip to Newfoundland with a bull moose he'd shot. Lee described the landscape there as
gorgeous with a plentiful supply of sizable moose and black bears. Mark was seriously impressed
and planned to visit Newfoundland himself. He took his first trip there the following year 1998. He was hooked.
A few years later Mark was working at a school clearing asbestos. That was where he met Mary
Beth Kintner who was helping her dad with scrap metal. The pair both in their mid 30s started
chatting and soon discovered a mutual love of the outdoors. The next day they snuck away on their
lunch break to go fishing. This was the start of a whirlwind romance which would soon see Mark leave
his partner of 12 years and her kids to be with Mary Beth. While his family were shocked
Mark was over the moon that he was able to find someone who shared his love of hunting.
See Mary Beth had learned all about the sport from her own father from an early age including
what various large animals looked like their size shape and color as well as how they moved.
She was also an experienced marksman according to Outdoor Canada magazine she was so accurate that
she could consistently put rounds into a set target from around a thousand meters or just over
half a mile away. Even more shocking to Mark's family was the news that he and Mary Beth had
decided to get married just a few months after they met. His family didn't really know Mary
Beth at all but they could see Mark was clearly besotted with her. Mark's brother Dean would
say it was clear that Mark had found the woman of his dreams a woman who was all about hunting and
fishing. The wedding day came and the couple incorporated their love of hunting into their
wedding celebration with Mary Beth getting outside in her wedding gown and a rifle to shoot at clay
pigeons. She was thrilled to join an established hunting family who were into the same things that
she was. According to Outdoor Canada magazine's investigative piece called another fine day afield
by Charles Wilkins while the marriage between Mark and Mary Beth seemed to go well at first
it disintegrated after a year or so into a minefield of chaos and uncertainty. After the honeymoon
period wore off Mark's family saw that Mary Beth was prone to frequent mood swings and bad
temper tantrums. As Mark's brother Dean would say to Outdoor Canada magazine quote Mary Beth would
fly off the handle go ranting around threatening everyone and Mark would calmly take her out in
one of the farm jeeps and that get back a little while later and she'd be as quiet as a lamb. I
don't know what it was but he had some leverage with her. He seemed to know something about her
past some secret and he could control her with it. Mark's sister Sharon told CBC's the fifth estate
that Mary Beth was quite the actress one who would manipulate the situation by turning her
emotions on and off like a faucet.
See Mary Beth Haasbarga was a woman who had quite a history. She was born in 1965 in Miss Sharpen,
Pennsylvania one of three children to parents who owned a farm and ran a grocery store. There
isn't much information about her childhood but what we do know is that friends described her as
very competitive and that sometimes made her difficult to deal with. According to her friend
Bill Ives she had a black trans am and she would often drive it through the town smoking the tires
and racing other cars on a Saturday night. Mary Beth was known to be someone who speaks her mind
the opposite of warm and fuzzy and she had a reputation for her temper and erratic behavior
long before she met Mark Haasbarga. According to the fifth estate she had a long list of ex
boyfriends that she was not on good terms with. One upset her so much that she reportedly drove
her car into his house and she fired a gun at another luckily he was unharmed. On yet another
occasion Mary Beth fired up at a woman who had the nerve to talk to her boyfriend. She entered
the woman's home at night with a gun and threatened her. Mary Beth would be convicted of simple assault
for this. A few years before she met Mark Mary Beth's parents were heading to Florida for the
winter. Given her history of volatile behavior they asked her friend Bill to keep an eye on her
while they were gone. Bill noticed over time that her mood swings were becoming more frequent and
were coming on even more quickly than usual. Her mood was now changing at the drop of a hat.
Bill felt there was something wrong and called Mary Beth's father with his concerns.
Her dad flew back from Florida and arranged for her to get medical attention immediately.
She was diagnosed with bipolar effective disorder a mental health condition that causes
extreme mood swings that include emotional highs or mania and lows or depression.
She was prescribed medication as treatment. When she later got together with Mark she didn't
tell him that she had received this diagnosis or that she had been prescribed medication.
But when she became pregnant with the couple's first child things started to reveal themselves.
She went off her medication and Mark's family witnessed a descent into even more erratic
behavior. Mark's older brother Dean described her as being violent and out of control. He told
Outdoor Canada magazine that one time Mary Beth slapped her husband so hard that his lips were
swollen and bloody and his only defense was just holding his hands out to keep her away.
Dean said I don't know why he took it from her. He didn't have to. He was a big guy about six
foot two. Mark desperately needed help dealing with her because she was stubborn and refused to
get help for herself. So he asked his brother Dean to stay and help. Dean knew there was something
serious happening because Mark rarely ever talked about his problems with Mary Beth.
Everyone knew that Mary Beth had a strong intimidating personality and Dean would say
that she proclaimed herself to be the alpha dog the one in charge. Whatever the case Dean assumed
that the reason Mark didn't talk about his issues with Mary Beth much was because he was too proud
to admit the marriage he jumped into so quickly was a disaster. Mark wanted Mary Beth to voluntarily
check in to a mental health facility. She fought hard against it as she didn't want to go but under
Pennsylvania law if she was involuntarily committed she would be prohibited by law from possessing a
firearm and even worse that meant their extensive collection of around a hundred firearms would
be in jeopardy. It was this that was the deciding factor for Mary Beth. She reluctantly checked
herself in. Bill the family friend told the Fifth Estate that as Mary Beth was about to return from
the hospital he checked with Mark that all the firearms had been stashed away safely. Mark said
yes but told Bill he was welcome to come and double check. Bill looked under her side of the
mattress and found a 12 gauge shotgun there fully loaded and under another piece of furniture was
another fully loaded gun. After this Mark's sister Sharon advised him that for the safety
of the family he needed to make sure that Mary Beth got the help she needed on an ongoing basis
and most importantly she said Mary Beth should not be hunting again. Mark took offense to that
since hunting was a big part of their life together.
Mark and Mary Beth had their second child and continued to build their lives in Miss Sharpen
Pennsylvania. They made some wise investment decisions. They owned two farms located on
top of a rock quarry as well as several homes including an investment property and a new log
home they were building. The couple also earned an income on their land by leasing out parts of
it to companies drilling for natural gas but while the harsh bargers earned a decent living
Mary Beth was a spender. Mark's brother Dean would say that she had a need to have more and
better things than everyone else whether it was boats, cars, furniture or guns.
Mark had been on three hunting trips to Newfoundland and they were planning a fourth this time as a
family. Mark was looking forward to showing his kids the beauty of Newfoundland and taking them for
a ride on the marine Atlantic seaferry that runs between Sydney, Nova Scotia and Porter
Basque, Newfoundland and he'd given Mary Beth a rifle the previous Christmas. A weatherbee
Mark V Deluxe with a leopard VX7 scope whatever that means and they both wanted to try it out.
It was that rifle that would end up causing his death. According to Outdoor Canada magazine
Mark's father Lee had concerns about his son's planned trip. Mark and Mary Beth had just spent
hundreds of thousands of dollars building that big new log house and it was still in
the finishing stages. Lee carefully raised his concerns telling them that with licences, guides,
travel, accommodation and everything else the Newfoundland trip was likely going to cost around
$10,000 so why don't they just stay home and hunt for free. According to Lee Mark listened
and realized his father made sense so started thinking about not going but Mary Beth wasn't
having it. She called up the owner of Moosehead Lodge in Newfoundland a man called Reg White
and bargained with him to drop his price saying that the family would sleep in their own camper
and even cook their own meals. The trip was back on. Mark really wanted his older brother Barry to
come with them. According to Barry Mark hounded him to come and finally he said yes. The plan was
that the five people would drive to Newfoundland in the family camper a journey that would take
around 30 hours or three days. The night before they left Mark stopped over at his father Lee's
house to pick up a trailer. They wanted to haul their deep freezer to Canada so they could bring
back the meat they anticipated they'd hunt from the trip. Just before he left Mark told his
father that Mary Beth could shoot a tiny plastic bottle just an inch wide from 250 meters away.
Boy she's good he said. Mark was proud of his own shooting skills but equally as proud of his wife's.
Only days before they left Mark had joked to a coworker that Mary Beth might one day shoot him.
The coworker told the fifth estate that he thought it might have been ingest so he asked Mark to
explain what he meant. Mark stared him in the eyes and said yeah I believe one day she'll shoot me.
He added but at least it will be quick.
Do you have a passion project that you're ready to take to the next level? Square
Space makes it easy for anyone to create an engaging web presence grow a brand and sell
anything from your products to the content you create and even your time. When I launched this
passion project six years ago I needed some kind of online hub to manage all the non-podcasting tasks
that come with podcasting. I chose Square Space because it's an all-in-one platform that seamlessly
helps me achieve multiple goals. It's important to have a website that looks good and I was inspired
by Square Space's wide selection of clean and modern templates. They can be easily customized
with pre-built layouts and flexible design tools to fit your needs and you can even browse the
category of your business to see examples of what others have done. I use the built-in
blogging tools to create a new page for each episode and there are so many intuitive options
from embedding an audio player so listeners can stream episodes to scheduling posts to be
published on a certain date an easily moderated comment section and automatically displaying
recent episodes on the home page. Every Square Space website and online store includes SEO tools
to help you maximize your visibility in search engines and I love the powerful insights I can
get from the analytics tools helping me better understand who's visiting the site where they
came from and how they're interacting with it. Do you have a passion project or business idea or
something to sell? Go to squarespace.com slash ctc for a free trial and when you're ready to launch
use offer code CTC to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain that's squarespace.com
slash ctc with offer code CTC and get your passion project off the ground today.
Back in the interview room Mary Beth Harshbarger was still giving her statement to the RCMP.
She had appeared calm and level headed throughout only losing control of her emotions at the very
end. An RCMP officer familiar with the case would tell Outdoor Canada magazine that at that point
it wasn't overly surprising that the RCMP officers were sympathetic towards Mary Beth.
Quote, I mean what woman would intentionally shoot her own husband in front of her children?
But there were a couple of strange things that stood out to the RCMP. After Mary Beth shot Mark
she didn't ever go to his body even though she was only standing 60 meters away from him when
she fired that shot. As you'll recall their guide Lambert confirmed that Mark was dead
and then walked over to Mary Beth at the truck and then they left to drive back and pick up Barry
and then find the nearest phone to call the RCMP. So Mary Beth never actually went to her husband
to check him herself. The RCMP asked her about this and she explained that the children were
screaming from the truck and she had a blister that stopped her from walking the 60 meters.
Another thing was a question about the route taken by Mark and the guide Lambert after they
left the truck to hunt. Surely if Mary Beth knew their route in and presumably they'd take the
same route back why would she shoot something she saw on that route? But getting a straight answer
was difficult. At one point she seemed to indicate she knew the general route that the men took
but at another point she stated she was preoccupied with her kids at the time
so she couldn't be sure of their route into the wooded area. Police also asked her about
life insurance policies. Mary Beth told them that just months beforehand she and Mark were trying to
get their assets in order and decided to increase their life insurance coverage. She casually blamed
the insurance agent for talking them into it but went on to tell the police that on the new policy
Mark's coverage had gone up from 150,000 to 500,000. Mary Beth added that she too was
covered for 300,000. She also told police that there were additional life insurance policies for
Mark, one worth $100,000 and another through his employer that she believed was worth around
$60,000. The police had some investigating to do but it would need to wait until the morning.
As daylight broke the RCMP were able to attend the scene of Mark Harshbarga's death.
They found two sets of footprints one leading to the spot where Mark was shot and the others
belonging to Lambert the guide. None of the officers noticed any bear tracks or signs of
animal activity in the immediate area but court documents noted they failed to conduct a full
and proper search. Also a lot of the grass in the area was trampled down on the path
because of the traffic in and out of the site where Mark's body fell.
Mark Harshbarga's body was removed by a search and rescue vehicle and transported for autopsy.
The cause of his death was a single gunshot wound to the abdomen. The bullet entered Mark's sternum
on an angle ripped through his heart and spine and exited between his shoulder blades.
The RCMP had to determine whether Mark's death was accidental or intentional and if it was intentional
then that made it a criminal act. So within days they set up a reenactment of the incident at the
scene. It was the same time that Mark was shot and under similar lighting conditions.
Guide Lambert Green and the owner of Moose Head Lodge Reg White
participated in this reenactment as experienced local hunters. Lambert's pickup truck was parked
in the same location as it was when the shooting occurred. Although he wasn't wearing a watch
during the reenactment he assessed the lighting and was of the view that the shooting had occurred
around 7.55 pm. The target they used in place of Mark Harshbarga was an RCMP officer who was in
the same position as Mark before he was shot and dressed similarly to how Mark was dressed
with a dark blue sweater and blue denim overalls. But Reg White the owner of Moose Head Lodge wasn't
sure about the target he thought it resembled an animal more than a human. He would say
with the grass so high it didn't look like a man to me. In any event the RCMP confirmed
Mary Beth's account of things. The area near the tree where Mark was standing when he was shot
was darker than the area that Mary Beth was shooting from. The RCMP determined that it would
have been too dark for Mary Beth to know it was Mark that she was shooting at. They said it was
looking like the shooting was an accident. Mark's family were not happy with this. They wanted Mary
Beth to be charged with something but the RCMP didn't have the evidence for a charge of manslaughter
let alone murder. Even though the investigation wasn't yet closed Mary Beth Harshbarga was allowed
to leave Canada and return home to Miss Sharpen, Pennsylvania. While Mark's family were disappointed
that the RCMP hadn't been able to dig anything up his sister Sharon told Outdoor Canada that she
didn't blame them. Quote, not at all. I mean this woman can feign sincerity when she has to. I'm sure
she was very persuasive with them and they knew nothing about her past.
As well as the fact that Mary Beth didn't go to Mark's body and of course the life insurance
policy fiasco the Harshbarga family had several additional concerns of their own. Some things
just didn't make sense. Like after the RCMP were first called they would have expected Mary Beth to
call Mark's family in Pennsylvania to let them know that he had been shot dead but instead
she called Bill the family friend who was also a contractor working at their new log house.
In fact Mary Beth didn't tell Mark's family at all. At 1am it was Mark's brother Barry who called
their sister Sharon in Pennsylvania to give her the tragic news and she said he was very short.
He simply said, Mark's gone. Sharon asked him, gone where? Barry said he'd been killed.
They'd been an accident. Mary Beth had shot him while hunting. Sharon immediately offered to fly
up to Newfoundland to help out her sister-in-law and perhaps drive back in the camper with Barry
so Mary Beth and the kids could fly straight home. She assumed that Mary Beth would be stressed and
grieving and could use the help but Mary Beth was the opposite. She seemed calm and almost
detached from the situation and insisted on driving the camper back with the kids herself
even though it would take three days to get home. Sharon hung up puzzled. Later that night she went
over to their father Lee's house. It was clear that she was going to have to be the one to tell him
that his youngest son was dead. Lee would say, it felt like somebody stuck something right
through my heart. It really hurt. But as he thought about it more some things didn't make
sense to him either. Sharon told him that Mary Beth said she had mistaken Mark for a bear.
Lee, an experienced hunter, thought to himself, a bear doesn't walk upright. While they are able
to stand and walk on their hind legs they generally only do it briefly when trying to get a better
look at something. They usually prefer to stand or walk on all four legs. And remember Mary Beth
said she'd been looking at the bear for two to three minutes before she took the shot.
Lee wondered how could anyone mistake a man in an upright position for a black bear?
And the strange behavior didn't stop there.
Barry, Mark's brother, was also grieving. The day after the shooting he had called
his wife Linda back in Pennsylvania telling her that he wanted nothing more than to get on a plane
and come home. But for some reason in the hours after that call Barry changed his mind. He decided
to take the three-day drive home with Mary Beth and the kids. According to Outdoor Canada magazine
when the group got home Barry made a strange comment to a group of relatives who had gathered.
He said he felt that when Mark left for Newfoundland his brother knew he probably wouldn't be coming
back alive and quote if he was okay with that we should all be okay with it.
And Barry wasn't the only one acting strange. When Mark's father Lee heard that Mary Beth and
the kids had arrived back home in their camper he went straight over to the house with his partner
Carol. Mary Beth greeted her father-in-law civilly but coldly without even mentioning what had happened
and went about her business. She seemed very busy. Carol asked what she could do to help
thinking she could help with the kids or with funeral arrangements. Mary Beth told her to
mind the kids because the animals they'd brought back were still in the long haul freezer and
needed to be butchered. Without saying another word she left the kids with Carol and went off
with Barry to process the meat from the hunt a priority that Carol thought was strange.
The next day Mary Beth shocked the family again by going to Mark's workplace to clear out his office.
And Barry's strange behaviour continued too. After telling his wife that he couldn't wait
to get home he changed his mind on that as well. Once he got home he told her that things had
changed and he wanted to separate and he asked her to give a message to the rest of the Harshbaga
family. They were not allowed to contact Mary Beth directly they had to go through him instead.
At the time Linda was obviously upset but she hoped that maybe it was just the obvious stress
of having just lost his brother and Barry would come good but then he did something that shocked
them all. He started spending most of his free time over at Mary Beth's house. Linda asked him
what was going on. Were he and Mary Beth now a couple? Barry denied it saying he was just helping
out with the chores and with the kids but Linda told the Fifth Estate that she believed in her
heart that something had happened between Barry and Mary Beth on that drive back from Newfoundland.
The family were beside themselves at this new development and they even wondered if a relationship
had started before the Newfoundland trip. Suspicions were growing. When they asked Barry about it he
refused to discuss the issue just as he had with his wife. The only thing he would say was that he
was helping Mary Beth to take care of the kids. Another strange occurrence happened when my
body arrived from Newfoundland by air. Before his family even knew it had arrived,
Mary Beth had sent it straight to be cremated. His family were devastated that they weren't
able to view his remains and say goodbye. There were even issues with the death certificate.
It seemed that Mary Beth didn't want Mark's family to see it. She was evasive every time they asked
for it. When they finally received their own copy from the Chief Medical Officer they saw
that the death was marked homicide. To Mark's father Lee that represented murder. He also noticed
that the shooting was described as an incident not an accident. He acknowledged that maybe it was
all just standard terminology used when someone kills someone else but he questioned Mary Beth's
motives and trying to hide Mark's death certificate from his own family.
With Mark's remains back in Pennsylvania the family held a memorial service.
His obituary read, Mark passed away doing what he loved best, being outdoors.
The harsh bargers noticed that even at her own husband's memorial service Mary Beth remained
calm and appeared detached. She was not observed to show any emotion and barely spoke to any of
her husband's family except of course Barry. In the time after the funeral she instructed her two
children not to speak to their grandfather Lee under any circumstances. Naturally he was
devastated. He enjoyed a great relationship with his grandkids and not only had he lost his son Mark
but he'd lost the kids as well. And it was becoming clear that he'd also lost Barry.
Mark's other brother Dean saw Barry at the county fair with his arm around Mary Beth
and one of the kids on his shoulders. To Dean it looked like they were a happy couple.
He told the Fifth Estate that they were also spotted hugging and kissing at the local bar.
Despite their refusal to talk about it it was clear that the two were very much an item.
An awkward moment for the family happened when Dean and his girlfriend were dining out with
his father Lee and his partner Carol. Also dining in the same restaurant was Mary Beth,
the kids and Barry. Lee missed his grandkids so he found a moment to wave over at them.
The kids waved back albeit tentatively but as the group left the restaurant they marched past
Lee's table acting like they weren't there.
So given the issues around the increased life insurance before the shooting
and Mary Beth's behaviour after the shooting, not to mention Barry's, the family had enough
to question. But when it came to the scene of the shooting there were questions there too.
According to Mark's brother Dean, Mary Beth had been hunting obsessively since she was 12 years old
and she knew the rules of hunting safely inside and out. You have to positively identify your
target, you have to be 100% sure. Their father Lee agreed. Remember he was a former conservation
officer and retired game warden. He told Outdoor Canada that he saw a lot of infractions with
hunting over the years and had come to the conclusion that if Mary Beth could see her target
well enough to accurately shoot at it she should have been able to see well enough to know that it
wasn't a bear. Mark's family continued to keep in touch with the RCMP urging them to continue
looking into it. There was a feeling growing on Mark's side of the family. Could Mary Beth have
planned this? The RCMP consulted Les Ball, a veteran hunter and conservation officer from
Newfoundland. He was part of the search and rescue team that first secured Mark's body and the scene.
He would tell Outdoor Canada that he questioned Mary Beth's perception of seeing a dark mass
blobbing up and down zigzagging from side to side. Like Mark's father Lee, Les Ball said that
Mary Beth's description suggests that she believed a bear would or could walk out of the woods on
its hind legs. Quote, if she knew anything about bears she'd have known that it's only in the
circus that they stand up and walk around. To see a creature walking around upright should have been
all the evidence she needed that it wasn't a bear, not that it was.
But Mary Beth had friends and relatives on her side too, especially when it came to her appearance
of being detached. The 5th estate spoke to Amy Robinson, a friend of Mary Beth who offered
an alternate view. Amy said she interpreted her friends withdrawal and detachment as a defense
mechanism at an awful time. She went on to say that grief does funny things to people and everyone
is different in the way they deal with a situation. She suggested that Mary Beth had to continue to
be strong for the sake of her kids and she had no opportunity to break down and show her emotions.
Amy acknowledged that it did seem cold and calculating but insisted that that was not
who Mary Beth was. A cousin of Mary Beth said that Mark's side of the family didn't understand
what her true feelings were. He disclosed to the 5th estate that she was seeing two therapists at the
time to deal with her feelings about the fact that it was she who pulled the trigger and was
responsible for her husband's death. But because she refused to speak to Mark's family about any
of it, her silence was interpreted as guilt. In any event, the RCMP decided to investigate a bit
more. Two officers travelled to Pennsylvania not to interview Mary Beth more but to take down the
family statements in person, except Barry of course. By this time Barry was completely estranged
from the rest of his family because of his allegiance to Mary Beth. After hearing from everyone,
the RCMP determined that the increases in life insurance was a possible motive
and there were some interesting coincidences and behaviors. But this information was only
circumstantial. According to the official RCMP reports, by the end of that year 2006,
the officers who originally investigated the shooting had accepted Mary Beth's explanation
as being plausible. But the investigation was not closed yet.
The rift in the Harshbarga family continued to get deeper. Barry was now living at Mary Beth's
full time and told his wife that he wanted a divorce. The Harshbargas said that they took
his actions as cutting himself off from the family. So not only did they lose one brother and son,
but they lost two. Barry later put it all down to a vendetta against the fact that he got together
with Mary Beth. He told the Fifth Estate, I have a life to live as I choose to live it.
People can't tell me how to lead my life. By now, Mark's entire family, except Barry,
were adamant that Mark had been murdered. They urged the police to keep investigating.
What about another reenactment? The RCMP decided to revisit this,
but it had to be in the exact same lighting conditions as the actual event.
The second reenactment was conducted on September 13, 2007, the day before the
first anniversary of the shooting. Many of the same people came back for this reenactment,
including Lambert Green, the hunting guide, and Reg White, the owner of the Moosehead Lodge.
This time, they filmed the reenactment, trying to capture the light conditions on camera as
much as they could. Sadly, they weren't able to make any conclusions that were different from
the first reenactment. They still didn't have enough evidence to charge Mary Beth,
but they still didn't close off the investigation.
Months later, almost 18 months after Mark's death, Mary Beth still hadn't received his
life insurance money worth $550,000. See, two insurance companies were withholding it based
on a Pennsylvania law that states a person cannot benefit from an intentional wrongdoing.
And even though Mary Beth hadn't been charged with a crime, the insurance companies had used
the circumstances of the shooting as a reason to refuse to pay out the benefits.
They cited the Slayers Act, which defines a slayer as any person who participates in the
willful and unlawful killing of another person. And under that act, a slayer is not to acquire
property as a result of slaying. The insurance companies told Mary Beth that they would await
completion of the investigation before processing her claim. So, Mary Beth decided to sue both
insurance companies alleging breach of contract and bad faith insurance practices.
In a written statement, Mary Beth's lawyer told CBC that there was no proof that the
shooting wasn't an accident. And in any case, the insurance companies have to pay either way,
because even if a judge rules that Mary Beth shouldn't get the money,
it should still go into a trust fund for Mark's children.
Just weeks later, the RCMP were finally ready to lay charges on Mary Beth. They decided against
higher charges like manslaughter or even murder, because there wasn't enough evidence and they
didn't believe the chances of getting a conviction on those charges were high. So, they charged her
with two lesser charges, criminal negligence causing death and careless use of a firearm.
Unlike the other offences, a criminal negligence charge doesn't require proof of malice or an
intention to commit the offence. It's more about the person's actual conduct than their intent.
In this case, the charges hinged on the fact that it was too dark for Mary Beth to fire a gun
safely, which put her at fault of criminal negligence causing death. A US District Court
Judge would need to review the case and rule on whether she should be extradited to Canada
to face the charges. In the meantime, both of the life insurance companies were ordered to pay up.
In March of 2009, two and a half years after Mark Harshbarga's death, Mary Beth was ordered to be
extradited to Canada. She was asked to turn herself in to the US authorities by March 13th.
She fought it, first asking for 60 extra days. She got seven. Then she appealed again,
presenting evidence that questioned whether her case met the threshold for criminal
negligence. Her appeal was denied and she was ordered to surrender by April 27th.
There were more shenanigans, which pushed out her extradition by another year, an extension to May
of 2010. Finally, she surrendered and was extradited back to Newfoundland. By this time, the charge
of careless use of firearm was dropped, leaving only the criminal negligence causing death charge
to be fought in court. The next month, Mary Beth Harshbarga pleaded not guilty.
The media interest in this case was fairly high. Mark's father, Lee, was speaking out to media
outlets, saying that not only did he lose his son Mark, but he was devastated that he hadn't
spent time with Barry or his grandkids since they came back from that trip. Quote,
It's been unbelievably difficult. It's ripped our whole family apart.
Mark's other brother, Dean, claimed that before Mary Beth was arrested,
she regularly drove by his house and intimidated Dean's girlfriend.
The Ottawa Citizen reported that Mary Beth denied killing Mark for insurance money and she dismissed
the concerns of her in-laws about her relationship with Barry as lies and small-town talk.
Behind the scenes, Barry, of course, continued to live in Mary Beth's house, looking after her
children. But it would later emerge that while Mary Beth awaited trial, Barry started a relationship
with another woman. More on that later.
The trial was scheduled to begin at the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador
in September 2010, almost exactly four years after Mark's death. In the lead-up to the trial,
Mark's father, Lee, told reporters that the shooting was a negligent act and he hoped
justice would be served. Quote, It isn't an accident to mistake someone for something else
and kill him. Lee told reporters that he planned to attend court every day with his partner Carol,
as well as at least two of Mark's siblings and other relatives.
The trial was judge-only and if Mary Beth, now 45 years old, was convicted,
she was facing a minimum of four years in prison.
The prosecution argued that Mary Beth knew Mark was still in the woods at the time she shot
and that he likely would have emerged at some point wearing dark clothes. It was suggested that
she was at the end of her hunting trip and hadn't shot anything yet, so was over-anxious or overly
keen to shoot before the trip was over. The implication was that she wasn't as sure that
what she saw was a bear as she should have been. The crown argued that Mary Beth ignored the huge
risk she created when she fired after the sun had set. The court was shown video evidence of Mark
Harshbarga's body as police found it, face-up with a single bullet hole visible in the abdomen area
of his dark blue overalls. According to CTV News, Mary Beth clasped a hand over her eyes and sobbed.
She didn't look back up again as the rest of the four-minute video played.
As you'll remember, Mary Beth had arranged for Mark's body to be cremated before any of his family
had a chance to view it and Mark's brother Dean said outside court that the video hurt to watch.
Quote, it was just like somebody had stabbed straight through you. At the same time,
it was something we needed to see, all of us in the family. To see him lying on the ground was
really rough, but it's something we needed to do. The pathologist who performed the autopsy on
Mark Harshbarga testified that he died of one gunshot wound to the abdomen, but new information
came out at the trial. The doctor testified that the angle of the bullet's entry indicated that
Mark was at least partially hunched over when he was struck by the bullet. Now, Mark was six foot
two and weighed over 200 pounds and was described as being someone who normally walks straight and
tall. This testimony seemed to point at the fact that Mary Beth may have been justified in thinking
Mark was a bear since he was hunched over at the time he was shot. As you'll recall, Mary Beth
identified her target by looking through the scope of her rifle. Lambert Green, the guide who went
with them on the trip, testified that he preferred using binoculars to positively identify a target
because they're more high-powered than his rifle scope. He testified that he always took
time to clarify that this particular animal was the type and the sex that his hunting license
permitted. He said that once he identified it through the binoculars, he would wait for the
animal to position itself to allow for a clear shot. One of the RCMP officers who supervised
the first re-enactment testified that he believed the lighting conditions were not good enough to
fire. The officer said that even though the skies were clear, he couldn't pick out a definite shape
through the rifle scope except for a black mass. Quote, I don't know why anyone would fire given
the lighting conditions. He agreed that RCMP officers originally considered Mark's death to
be an accident, but said that the family were insisting the importance of making absolutely
sure it was. He was asked if he felt pressured to do something, and he replied, I felt that a man
had died and that should be pursued. As for the timing of the shooting, several witnesses testified
that it would have been too dark by 8pm for any hunter to have shot with confidence or known what
they were shooting at. The court was shown video footage of the lighting conditions taken during
the second re-enactment a year after the shooting. Unfortunately, there was concern about how
accurately the footage showed the actual lighting conditions. There were issues with the positioning
of the video camera, technical issues relating to the recording of times, and the video resolution
was poor quality. Various witnesses at the scene or during the recreations were asked
how the footage compared to the actual scene. Opinions ranged from slightly darker to much darker.
No one at the scene was able to adequately state the exact time of the shooting,
although a time frame of 7.30 to 8pm was given. At least one of the police officers testified
that at one of the re-enactments, he was able to identify the object walking out from the trees
as a person before 7.55pm. Now as you'll remember, legally hunters had to stop hunting 30 minutes
after the sun had set. The judge would note that the crown didn't call any witnesses to
identify the exact time of sunset in the area of the shooting on the day Mark died, so that piece
of the puzzle would remain a mystery. As you'll remember, Mark was shot as he ran along an uneven
logging path, hunched over zigzagging because of that uneven terrain through the long grass.
The court heard testimony that the height of the grass surrounding the area where Mark was shot
as he emerged from the trees appeared shorter in height than it actually was. This meant that objects
in that area also appeared shorter in height than they actually were, and as you know, Mark
was six foot two, but he was also hunched over. An expert in hunter education and safety testified.
Christopher Baldwin told the court that not only are hunters taught to be sure of their target
before taking the shot, but they also have to take care to ensure that the shot results in the
humane death of the animal. He also said that hunters should not use their scope on their gun
to identify targets, as Mary Beth had said she did. Because when pointing the scope, they're also
pointing the gun itself, which presents a safety issue. When asked about the 30 minute window after
sunset before legal hunting ends in Newfoundland, Baldwin said that regardless of that, hunters
are taught to only shoot where conditions permit a proper method of identification for both the
target and the surrounding area. And in his view, Mary Beth's report of seeing only a dark
object zigzagging while moving in taller grass was not enough of an appropriate identification
to warrant taking a shot. And when it came to hunting bears, he said hunters must go further
than just a shape. They must look for exact features such as the shape of the body and the head.
Under cross examination, though, he acknowledged that even when every precaution is taken prior
to taking a shot, accidents can and do occur. Mary Beth Harshbarga did not take the stand
in her defence. But Lambert Green, the guide, as well as the owner of the Moose Head Lodge,
Reg White, told the court that when they looked through Mary Beth's rifle scope during the first
reenactment, what they saw looked more like an animal than a human. Lambert said it was too dark to
tell what he was looking at. During cross examination, he told the court that several protocols
weren't adhered to during Mark and Mary Beth's hunting trip, for example, the wearing of orange
safety vests. Even though there's no legal requirement for hunters to wear these in Newfoundland,
it's still sound safety policy. Lambert testified that he's altered his procedure
and now insists on orange vests being worn. He also admitted that he had left Mary Beth
unattended in the pickup truck with her kids, something guides are not supposed to do.
Guides are also restricted to escorting two non-resident hunters, but Lambert had three,
Mark, Mary Beth and Barry. Lambert also said in his testimony that he saw no signs of a bear
on the day of the shooting, signs like overturned logs, bear tracks or their scat or excrement.
But under cross examination, he acknowledged that it was reasonable that Mary Beth may have
believed a bear was in the area. In closing arguments, the Crown stated that Mary Beth
had a responsibility to determine that she was shooting at a bear. Quote,
the duty here is that there has to be no doubt before you pull the trigger. The Crown has empathy
for Mrs. Harshbarga, but that doesn't change the standard of care we're going to hold her to.
The Crown stated that a hunter must properly identify a target before taking a shot. And
regardless of what Mary Beth thought she saw, the fact that she shot her husband and not a bear
was proof that she did not properly identify her target. And therefore, she was criminally negligent.
The defence argued that if anyone was negligent, it was Mark himself. Firstly, by wearing dark,
coloured clothing on the trip when a responsible hunter would likely wear the orange vest,
legal requirement or not. And secondly, the plan was to flush an animal out,
and Mark knew that Mary Beth had a gun and would shoot if a moose or bear emerged,
yet for some reason he didn't call out to her as he emerged from the trees.
What happened was not Mary Beth's fault, according to the defence. It was just a horrible accident.
It was a judge-only trial and Justice Richard LeBlanc came back at a later date with his decision.
He first referenced the defence's claim that Mark himself was negligent, saying he didn't agree.
The Justice argued that in cases of criminal negligence,
contributory negligence by a victim is not a defence, unless the injury was caused by that
victim and no one else. And Mark did not shoot himself. On this point, the judge stated that
the issues of Mark's dark clothing and the zigzag manner in which he exited the trees
were factors that contributed to Mary Beth's state of mind, and it was this that would determine
whether the elements of a criminal negligence charge were proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Having got this out of the way, the judge concluded that Mark was shot during legal
light. It was less than the full daylight conditions, but still within the 30 minutes
after sunset in which hunting is legal. Justice LeBlanc wasn't satisfied beyond a reasonable
doubt that at the time Mary Beth fired at Mark, it was too dark for her to be able to distinguish
between a human or an animal. He said that the zigzag movements Mark made as he traversed the
uneven logging road, as well as the height of the grass and his appearance hunched over,
all contributed to Mary Beth making a reasonable decision that it was a bear that she was looking at.
The judge also referenced the fact that two men went into the bushes, and Mary Beth would have
expected two men to also come out of the bushes, not just one. Justice LeBlanc referenced the
prosecution's assertion that a hunter must be absolutely accurate in identifying the target.
He said that to him, properly identifying a target wasn't a conclusion but a process,
and means taking all steps in the circumstances to identify the target which he considered Mary
Beth had done. He told the court that the law still makes allowances for accidental actions
in certain circumstances. The judge stated that Mary Beth's actions in firing the gun
did not display a reckless disregard for the lives or safety of others, including her husband.
He added that her actions were not heedless, ungoverned, undisciplined, or unrestrained,
and nor was it heedless of the consequences which it would need to be to be considered reckless.
He said there was no evidence to support that Mary Beth intentionally shot at or killed her
husband at the time in question. For those reasons, Justice LeBlanc found Mary Beth Harshbarga
not guilty of criminal negligence causing death. Mary Beth had been sobbing as the judge read
his decision. As they left the court, the media asked for comment. Mary Beth refused to say anything,
and all that her defence lawyer would say was, Mary Beth wants to go home to her children right now.
As the Canadian press put it, with a triumphant whoop and a blast of music,
Mary Beth Harshbarga and her defence lawyer peeled out of a court parking lot Friday
after she was cleared of criminal negligence in her husband's shooting death.
Mark's family though were bitterly disappointed. They still maintained that the shooting was
deliberate. Mark's father, 77-year-old Lee Harshbarga, told the media that he hoped the
crown would appeal the ruling and maybe find another judge who better understands hunting
safety and the outdoors. Quote, this kind of decision says that it's okay to shoot at a black mass.
If you don't positively identify it and if anyone goes out there on an ATV with their dark coat and
they go down one of those trails and somebody shoots them, that's saying it's okay.
Just weeks later, the crown announced that it would not appeal the verdict.
It said there weren't sufficient grounds to challenge the acquittal. The judge had to make
an actual error in applying the law, and the prosecution team had reviewed the file and
concluded that the judge was correct in the way he arrived at his decision. This upset
Mark's family again. Lee said to the media that he didn't think the whole thing was fair,
reiterating the cardinal rule of hunting which is confirming a target before shooting. Quote,
you shouldn't be able to shoot and kill somebody and just walk away and say,
I thought it was an animal. There should be consequences. It was wrong for death. Definitely
it was wrong for death. Lee believed that the trial put too much stress on his son's dark
clothing and not enough on basic hunter safety, but he acknowledged that no appeal means it's
time for his fractured family to try and move on. Quote, I guess that's about as far as we can go.
We tried. True to her word, Mary Beth returned straight home. As you'll remember,
Barry had stayed on at her house to look after the kids, but in that time he had started a
relationship with another woman who he would go on to marry. Not much is known about what happened
in the months after Mary Beth triumphantly returned home, but about a year after her acquittal,
Barry obtained a temporary protection from abuse order against Mary Beth, claiming that he was
in fear for his life. He alleged that she had threatened him by pointing a loaded rifle at him.
He called state police to report her at the time, telling them that she, quote,
showed up at our residence driving back and forth, stopping, yelling, screaming, radical behavior,
threatening our family, scaring our household. Barry appeared in court to demand that Mary
Beth return 130 guns she still had, which he claimed were his, and also to keep the temporary
protection order in place. But it wasn't just to protect his new wife and her family. Barry also
specified he wanted the protection order to include his father Lee, as well as his siblings
and their families. This suggested that the harsh bugger family once split over Barry's
allegiance to Mary Beth may have reconciled. When the matter was heard in court, the judge found
that Barry's claims were inaccurate exaggerations and insufficient to keep the protective order in
place. Nothing further has been reported on the case. The overwhelming majority of hunting
accidents involve falling from tree stands, like the lofts in the tree that Barry was hunting from
at the time Mark was shot. But statistics about accidental hunting deaths by firearm
are either hard to come by, dated, or not from Canada. And after that, statistics that separate
the number of hunters who accidentally shoot another party from hunters who accidentally shoot
themselves were even more challenging to find. What we do know is that out of all firearm
fatalities in the United States, hunting fatalities due to firearms account for around 12 to 15%.
And when it comes to accidental shootings of another person, while it's uncommon, it's not rare.
Most hunter safety education programs recommend wearing that high visibility orange vest when
hunting. A 2012 report from the Canada Safety Council cites research from North Carolina,
a state in the US which legally requires hunters to wear orange vests and orange hats.
The legislation is called the Hunter Orange Law, and it relies on studies that show that
the fluoro orange clothing increases visibility of the wearer because that color doesn't occur
naturally in the wild. And research suggests that after the law was passed in North Carolina,
less hunters were being mistaken for animals and being killed accidentally. In Canada,
hunters are required by law to wear orange in Ontario, New Brunswick, Saskatchewan,
Manitoba, Nova Scotia, and Quebec. In the other provinces and territories, including Newfoundland
and Labrador, wearing orange is not a legal requirement, although in some provinces it's
highly recommended. These hunting accidents are still happening. In Nova Scotia in 2018,
a 60-year-old man and his 41-year-old son were hunting when they became separated. The son shot
at what he thought was a deer and accidentally shot his father. Police and emergency health
services responded to the scene, but tragically, the man died from his injuries. Outside of Canada,
just last year, a nine-year-old boy in Orangeburg, South Carolina was accidentally killed by his
father while rabbit hunting. And in January of this year, also in South Carolina, a 30-year-old
father and his nine-year-old daughter were both killed when they were hunting with two friends
and were mistaken for deer. There's no information on whether any of these victims were wearing orange
vests. Today, there are two memorials for Mark Harshbarger. One was arranged by his family,
a carved stone memorial deep in the woods overlooking the Susquehanna River, which he was
known to adore. Carved into the stone is his trademark phrase, which he was known to say
at the end of a satisfying day of hunting, another fine day afield. And the other memorial,
a stone bench, was erected by Mary Beth, 20 kilometers away. No further information is
publicly available about where she is today. Thanks for listening and special thanks to
Gemma Harris for researching this case and also to Outdoor Canada Magazine. 10 years ago, they
published an award-winning long-form investigative piece on the case by Charles Wilkins, called
Another Fine Day Afield. Outdoor Canada were really gracious in sending me a copy of the article,
and they've now put it online for you guys to read. There's lots of pictures there too.
You can find a link to it in the show notes or on the page for this episode at CanadianTrueCrime.ca.
Other main sources for this episode include the written court decision,
as well as the reporting and journalism of the CBC's Fifth the State episode called
Inside the Harshbaga Family Case. If you're interested in more discussion about today's
intriguing episode, join me and special guest Jordan from Nighttime for this month's Chats
with Christy Aftershow. It's available on the exclusive feeds for supporters on Patreon and
Supercast. Visit CanadianTrueCrime.ca slash support to learn more. Today's podcast recommendation
is a show called True. Yep, just true. You might recognize the voice. It's the host of the podcast
formerly known as Beyond Bizarre True Crime. The show has been rebranded, so it's not just boxed
in to the crime genre. And the show is now releasing weekly episodes. Here's a trailer.
True features the often weird but always true stories of strange events and unforgettable moments.
Each episode explores unusual, obscure, sometimes funny, sometimes creepy stories.
Stories that are so bizarre that you won't believe that they're real. But they are. Because, yeah,
they're true. Listen and subscribe to True right now on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your favorite shows.
Canadian True Crime is a completely independent production funded through advertising and direct
donations. If you're looking for ad-free episodes, you can access an exclusive feed on Patreon and
Supercast. There is also a third exclusive feed available on Stitcher Premium along with many
other shows. And right now, through Stitcher Premium's True Crime week, you can get your
first month free with the offer code Canadian True Crime. So to learn more about Patreon,
Supercast, or Stitcher Premium and figure out which one is right for you, visit
CanadianTrueCrime.ca. A percentage of profits and all proceeds of merch sales are donated
regularly to Canadian charitable organizations related to helping victims and survivors of
injustice. To learn more about today's case and for full credits and resources, check the
show notes or see the page for this episode at CanadianTrueCrime.ca. Thanks to the host of True
for voicing the disclaimer and also to We Talk of Dreams who compose the theme song. I'll be back
soon with another Canadian True Crime story. See you then.