Free: Contests & Raffles.
The circumstances are that the animal was essentially a well known neighborhood pet, the animal was shot while trespassing on private land, the animal is considered a trophy, and the men bragged about their kill to others including to a WDFW enforcement officer. If this was simply a mere lapse in judgment, they need a judgment readjustment.They made several decisions along the way, any of which would most likely have mitigated the outcome. They chose to trespass. They chose to kill an animal without a valid license and tag. They chose to not report it. They chose to brag about it. We all make mistakes, and when we do there are often consequences. Two days in jail seems reasonable considering the facts.
Wow, thats a garbage response. A trail cam seems like the least they could do.
The mandatory wildlife poaching fine in this state for illegal take of a trophy (4 point or better) deer is I believe $4000 and cannot be reduced by a judge. For a trophy bull elk, a bighorn sheep, mountain goat or a moose is $6000. These fines were put in place a few years ago, the WDFW sought these criminal assessments because the courts were very quick to reduce or remove the fines on poaching cases.
Quote from: winshooter88 on May 20, 2013, 01:13:48 AMThe mandatory wildlife poaching fine in this state for illegal take of a trophy (4 point or better) deer is I believe $4000 and cannot be reduced by a judge. For a trophy bull elk, a bighorn sheep, mountain goat or a moose is $6000. These fines were put in place a few years ago, the WDFW sought these criminal assessments because the courts were very quick to reduce or remove the fines on poaching cases.That sounds correct to me. Like I said, these guys got hit with more than it said in the news story. Stuff that CANT be reduced by a touchy-feely judge...
Quote from: elk247 on May 19, 2013, 08:47:40 PMWow, thats a garbage response. A trail cam seems like the least they could do.Then what if they get a dude or two on a trail cam? If animals are boned out they won't be holding the head of other parts to prov 100% what animal they had.The poaching case posted is very obvious. Unfortunately if a hunter makes an honest mistake they will face the same punishments and we know as hunters how tricky laws can get. This side of the tree season is closed and to the right season started with any buck, behind it is 4 point with 1 more day of the season after today, and to the left is any deer today on private property with a hunt with written permission sign. These laws are so messed up the law does not even know whats going on. One time I knew the area but someone made a false report on me and the sheriff showed up. After a little chat schooling him he still took all my info and kicked me off to do his "investigation" of public hunting that was register to hunt. Wasn't worried about getting in trouble but still very upset about it to this day
Quote from: Pathfinder101 on May 24, 2013, 01:54:09 PMQuote from: winshooter88 on May 20, 2013, 01:13:48 AMThe mandatory wildlife poaching fine in this state for illegal take of a trophy (4 point or better) deer is I believe $4000 and cannot be reduced by a judge. For a trophy bull elk, a bighorn sheep, mountain goat or a moose is $6000. These fines were put in place a few years ago, the WDFW sought these criminal assessments because the courts were very quick to reduce or remove the fines on poaching cases.That sounds correct to me. Like I said, these guys got hit with more than it said in the news story. Stuff that CANT be reduced by a touchy-feely judge...The officer said jail and community service. Does the law state 4000 per person or 4000 per deer? Sounds like the fine could of been split between the 2 poachers and paid off by jail time and community service? It comes down to what the prosecutor wants to charge and what the judge enforces. That's why we vote for these people or for the people who put them in. I'm sure the news would of loved to have reported the $4000 or $8000 in total fines.