Three arrested in major deer poaching case

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This 36-point non-typical deer scoring 261 5/8 and valued at $35,000 was poached in Grundy County, in north-central Illinois

  

Yellow Pages

By Anonymous
Posted Nov 03, 2011 @ 09:47 AM
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Charges have been filed against three men after an 11-month investigation by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources Office of Law Enforcement in a deer poaching case.

The three men — one each from Illinois, New York and Ontario — were cited for numerous Wildlife Code violations, including the illegal take of a potential state-record whitetail deer, and they now face charges through the Grundy County State's Attorney's Office.

The investigation focused on the unlawful harvest of a 36-point non-typical deer scoring 261 5/8 and valued at $35,000. Charges were filed after a thorough investigation with assistance from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Alberta Sustainable Resources Department, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, Missouri Department of Conservation and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

The following individuals were cited on charges related to unlawfully taking a total of 24 deer in Illinois and Canada over a 10-year period. Specific charges were filed as follows:

  • Christopher Kiernan, 45, of Minooka, Ill.: 11 counts of hunting without permission of landowner and being an accessory to the charge; 19 counts of unlawful possession of illegally taken deer; five counts of hunting with invalidated permit; five counts of unlawfully taking of deer; two counts of falsifying harvest records; and one count each of failure to report harvest on the same day as killed, and failure to tag deer as required.
  • Garret Armstrong, 31, of Avon, N.Y.: nine counts of hunting without permission of landowner and being an accessory to the charge; eight counts of hunting with an invalidated permit; four counts of unlawful possession of illegally taken deer; two counts of unlawfully taking of deer; and one count each of failure to tag deer as required, failure to report harvest as required and falsifying harvest record
  • Larry Smith, 49, of Williamsburg, Ontario, Canada: one count each of the following: hunting without permission of landowner, hunting with invalidated permit, failure to tag deer as required, unlawful possession of illegally taken deer, unlawfully taking of deer, failure to report harvest as required and falsifying harvest record.

"Our Conservation Police Officers are tasked with the mission of protecting the public and our natural resources and they do it effectively and vigilantly," said IDNR Director Marc Miller. "I am proud of the hard work of the IDNR law enforcement staff and have a warning to those who choose to hunt illegally: We are watching."

"The IDNR Office of Law Enforcement has zero tolerance when it comes to poaching matters," said IDNR Conservation Police Chief Rafael Gutierrez. "Our conservation police will continue to protect our natural resources so that legal sportsmen get every opportunity they deserve."

 

Charges have been filed against three men after an 11-month investigation by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources Office of Law Enforcement in a deer poaching case.

The three men — one each from Illinois, New York and Ontario — were cited for numerous Wildlife Code violations, including the illegal take of a potential state-record whitetail deer, and they now face charges through the Grundy County State's Attorney's Office.

The investigation focused on the unlawful harvest of a 36-point non-typical deer scoring 261 5/8 and valued at $35,000. Charges were filed after a thorough investigation with assistance from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Alberta Sustainable Resources Department, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, Missouri Department of Conservation and Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

The following individuals were cited on charges related to unlawfully taking a total of 24 deer in Illinois and Canada over a 10-year period. Specific charges were filed as follows:

  • Christopher Kiernan, 45, of Minooka, Ill.: 11 counts of hunting without permission of landowner and being an accessory to the charge; 19 counts of unlawful possession of illegally taken deer; five counts of hunting with invalidated permit; five counts of unlawfully taking of deer; two counts of falsifying harvest records; and one count each of failure to report harvest on the same day as killed, and failure to tag deer as required.
  • Garret Armstrong, 31, of Avon, N.Y.: nine counts of hunting without permission of landowner and being an accessory to the charge; eight counts of hunting with an invalidated permit; four counts of unlawful possession of illegally taken deer; two counts of unlawfully taking of deer; and one count each of failure to tag deer as required, failure to report harvest as required and falsifying harvest record
  • Larry Smith, 49, of Williamsburg, Ontario, Canada: one count each of the following: hunting without permission of landowner, hunting with invalidated permit, failure to tag deer as required, unlawful possession of illegally taken deer, unlawfully taking of deer, failure to report harvest as required and falsifying harvest record.

"Our Conservation Police Officers are tasked with the mission of protecting the public and our natural resources and they do it effectively and vigilantly," said IDNR Director Marc Miller. "I am proud of the hard work of the IDNR law enforcement staff and have a warning to those who choose to hunt illegally: We are watching."

"The IDNR Office of Law Enforcement has zero tolerance when it comes to poaching matters," said IDNR Conservation Police Chief Rafael Gutierrez. "Our conservation police will continue to protect our natural resources so that legal sportsmen get every opportunity they deserve."

 

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