ARKADELPHIA
- Arkansas Game and Fish Commission wildlife officers see some of the
worst poaching violations and hear some of the worst excuses for
breaking the laws that protect our natural resources. But some poachers
can even surprise veteran wildlife officers that think they’ve seen it
all. Sgt. Robert Barger ran across just this sort of case on Nov. 12
during the modern gun deer hunt.
Responding to a trespassing complaint, Barger met with a hunter who had
caught three men with deer he believed had been taken on his lease in
Clark County. His lease bordered the Big Timber Leased Lands Wildlife
Management Area, where the other hunters claimed they were hunting.
Barger immediately noticed the three hunters had four deer in their
possession - a nine-point, two eight-points and a spike - none of which
had been tagged.
When the suspects began to lie about where they were hunting and refused
to cooperate, Barger called for assistance from Cpl. Tod Johnson and his
K-9 officer Carly, an enforcement dog specially trained for tracking and
game location. While waiting for the K-9 unit to arrive, Barger began an
intensive search of the surrounding area to gather evidence. During his
search he found two more illegally harvested deer - a five-point and
another spike.
Once Cpl. Johnson and Carly arrived, they conducted another search to
find all the points where the animals had been shot and the stand
locations of all three suspects. During this search, they found a dead
doe that had been hidden and left to spoil, bringing the total for the
morning to seven deer. The hunter’s stand locations were also revealed,
with one stand being placed on the WMA boundary line.
“Cpl. Johnson and Carly proved how valuable the K-9 unit is to wildlife
law enforcement,” said Barger. “The search for all this evidence could
have taken days instead of hours.”
All seven deer were killed within plain view of one stand location,
while the other two hunters had no view of any of the deer from their
stand sites. Nine bullet casings were also found underneath this stand
that matched one suspect’s rifle.
The suspect with the matching rifle was charged with four counts of
being over the limit, two counts of antler-restriction violations, one
count of wasting game, one count of hunting on lands without permission
and three counts of failure to tag game. The other two suspects were
charged with aiding and abetting a wildlife violation.
“Had it not been for all of the shooting, the suspect may have gone
unnoticed by the hunter on the private lease,” said Barger. “After
hearing nine shots go off within a couple of hours, the hunter had to go
see what all the commotion was about.”
Upon returning to the scene for additional evidence the next day, Barger
discovered yet another deer in the same area, this one a six-point buck.
The suspect will face charges for this deer as well, bringing his
possible fines to more than $6,000 when he goes to court in
mid-December. |