![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjPYM_Nohr9kF4FF5JukY2yGFv5fqYfvgMOtVZXjwI47cSt0L2SHpOlC-P9Vkrg1pvxDXDaLdxmMTVpf0Xo4ZWJaERtAvamMjKHesd7aIX9NsYWVnwc2ky3l8uHYNS0Lv4OGxHTnM09LD4/s200/black%2520bear.jpg)
The boy was at his home near Driggs, just west of the Idaho-Wyoming border, with his younger sisters last Wednesday when the bear showed up. He says he couldn't shoo the animal away, so he went and got a gun and shot it.
Doug Petersen, a conservation officer with the Idaho Department of Fish and Game, says the boy and his family probably won't be in any trouble, because the agency had received multiple complaints about a black bear in the area. The bear had been hanging around a transfer station and getting into garbage cans and bird feeders.
Petersen says Fish and Game doesn't usually issue citations in situations where the bear had been a problem around humans. The agency has issued the family a permit to keep the bear's carcass.
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