Nevada Poaching Ring Busted

hm1996

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Whaaaat? An illegal alien breaking our laws? Surely they must be mistaken.

Quote:Facebook pics put Nevada poaching ring in game warden's crosshairs


Published November 14, 2014
·FoxNews.com

A Nevada poaching ring put itself in the crosshairs of game officials when one member posted a photo on Facebook of a mule deer killed out of season.

It was a tip in June, 2013, that alerted authorities to the photo of a man posing with the animal slung over his shoulder near Hiko, Nev., and it launched a 16-month state and federal probe that ended in the arrests of four men on a raft of charges, including poaching, weapons and illegal immigration offenses. Nevada Department of Wildlife spokesman Edwin Lyngar said it only happened because officials could tell by the background that the mule deer carried by a man they identified as Jose Manuel Ortega-Torres was not taken during the fall hunting season.

“Things didn’t look right,” Lyngar said. “We got a search warrant [for Ortega-Torres' home], and from there, it was a long and complicated investigation.”

Meat from illegally poached game was found in a suspect's refrigerator, according to authorities (Nevada Department of Wildlife)

The search of Ortega-Torres’ home led to evidence of illegally killed deer and migratory birds as well as butchering tools and weapons, authorities said. It also turned up evidence that led them to Las Vegas, where they identified Adrian Acevedo-Hernandez, 36, Jose Luis Montufar-Canales, 31, and J. Nemias Reyes Marin, 31, as part of an alleged ring involved in a wide range of wildlife crimes.

In addition to the illegally killed deer in Hiko, authorities found evidence of illegal deer killing in Elko County, Nev., and fraudulently obtained hunting licenses and tags. Perhaps most disturbing, Lyngar said, is that it is not possible to know how long the ring operated or how many animals it killed.

"When you do something like this, you’re 100 percent criminal."
- Rob Wallin, Nevada Outfitters

“We had a systematic killing, illegal killing, of wildlife,” he said. “We will never know the total amount that they killed.”

Evidence that the men allegedly poached protected migratory birds and broke federal gun laws prompted the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Department of Homeland Security to join the investigation, authorities said.

Nevada sportsmen praised the state investigators.

“We’ve very proud that the Nevada Department of Wildlife caught them after a long investigation,” said Rob Wallin of Nevada Outfitters, a Fallon-based group that hunts elk, deer, mountain lion and sheep. "When you do something like this, you’re 100 percent criminal. We just don’t know why they do it.”

Lyngar said that although meat was recovered during one search, the motive is likely sinister.

"They were taking some of the meat, but that doesn’t seem to be the motivating factor," he said. "People do not poach to feed their families. In the vast majority of cases, the meat is left behind. We call these thrill killings, where people do it for their ego.”

According to authorities, Acevedo-Hernandez, Montufar-Canales and Marin are suspected to be in the United States illegally. It is a felony for people in the U.S. illegally to possess firearms. The three men are currently in federal custody.

The men face more charges, but the Nevada Department of Wildlife said they have already been convicted of several:

• Montufar-Canales was convicted in Churchill County, Nev., of using false information to obtain a hunting license

• Acevedo-Hernandez was convicted in Lincoln County, Nev., of unlawful possession of two mule deer and ordered to pay $5,000 in fines and civil penalties and to forfeit six firearms

• Acevedo-Hernandez also was convicted in Elko County for another incident of illegal possession of a deer and ordered to forfeit a rifle and his truck

Tony Reviglio of the Mason Valley Hunt Club in Yerington, was glad to see the poachers bagged.

"It’s very sad that people do this," Reviglio said. "There's never a good reason for anyone to poach. And it takes away from the rest of the hunters."

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/11/14/fac...den-crosshairs/

Regards,
hm
 
Obola is on this one... His executive order on immigration will include having their weapons and trucks returned and award them lifetime hunting licenses...it will also deem these acts as ^^^^^ only 50% illegal in the first place...
 
Well, I would say the worst they face is being deported, and they'll be back before the rent comes due on their apartment. But Obama has made it illegal to deport them, so they'll probably be released, given a ride home in the cop car, and an apology for harrassing them. Along with getting their vehicles and guns back, they'll probably have to give them a case a shells as compensation for their time.
 
The reference to being 100% criminal likely refers to the violations being "criminal offences," not petty offences. Unfortunately, many wildlife violations are classified as petty offences which is not much of a deterrent. The other problem is that big city judges who do not hunt/fish may consider poaching in parody with receiving a parking ticket.

The motivation for taking wildlife unlawfully by illegal immigrants is usually not for trophies. Their motivation to poach is to provide meat for illegal immigrants held in safe houses. Families here helping illegal immigrants will kill everything including bucks, does, and fawns all year around to help feed people entering this country illegally. This is another problem with having unsecured borders. Not only is wildlife poached, but water catchments for wildlife and livestock are vandalized, fences get cut, public lands are trashed, and vehicles are stolen to help transport them.

Kudu's to the wildlife officers for catching these guys.

Shame on the court system and immigration policies if these guys are released with very little consequences.

 
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