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Posted

Poachers and trespassers,

I deal with them day in and day out. Post your property with at least purple paint. They usually tear the signs down. Reason being without it being posted, it is considered trespass 2nd degree which is an infraction. A crime that requires no culpable mental state. Trespass 1st degree is in regards to posted property a class A misdemeanor. Higher degree of charge and larger fine usually.

Posting property makes it easier for us law enforcement individuals to make a good case against the trespassers.

Make sure the paint is 5 feet off of the ground and 20 yards or less from tree to tree, so it can be easily viewed.

I had more than a couple of hair raising pursuits with poachers in my county. In the end, I usually seize all equipment used in the crime and petition the court for it to be used in outdoor education calsses. (hunter ed).

The criminals usually don't care about paying the fine, its losing their guns, binoculars, night vision, amongst other stuff that botthers them.

Try to be friendly with the offenders as much as you don't want to. By doing so, you can usually get their name. By doing that, the officers can just do a check through DOR and obtain address information to contact them. Take this action if you live in a place where law enforcement is far and few in between.

Posted

rangerman

The purple paint thing makes since but since most people I know dont have the slighest clue what that is. We have property in Jhonson county Mo and have had problems with poachers in the past purple paint doesnt stop bullets from the road. besides calling the law (which you said is covering a large area and the crime is done and gone by the time they get there) whats other steps a owner can do Legally to hold or delay the verman from leaveing till the law gets there?

Brian

Posted

SF,

The best thing I can tell you to do is gather as much information on the incident as you can. Descriptions of the suspect, vehicle plate numbers, vehicle descriptions absolutely anything you can. Purple paint is the universal color for No Trespassing. It does not matter if they know what it means or not.

it is best not to get involved in a major incident. Although its hard not to do. If the suspect is willing to stop and wait for the police that is great, as crazy as it seems it does happen. But you never know what kind of people you are dealing with. You can try to delay them, but don't hold them. I have seen instances where that can turn the victim into a suspect in another crime.

Talk to your county MDC agent, if the problem is bad enough inquire with them about the possibility of working a ROBO deer or turkey detail on your property. Alas, when law enforcement is able to catch someone make sure you go through with everything you possibly have to with prosecuting the case.

Posted
Excellent job by MDC busted some real knuckleheads with a whole truck full of paddlefish. I saw the story in the Barry Co. Advertiser. Not many details but there is one pic. I hope these jerks get the max allowed by law If any one has any more detals please post. Thanks.

Scum of the earth. I say send them to jail for quite a while, and get a huge fine, but I doubt that will happen.

I don't know, but I can't imagine anyone not knowing what purple paint means. But there are some real knuckleheads out there, so who knows.

Posted
Scum of the earth. I say send them to jail for quite a while, and get a huge fine, but I doubt that will happen.

I would bet this fella doesn't doubt it:

FEBRUARY 3, 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

FORMER SHELL KNOB MAN SENTENCED FOR ILLEGALLY

TAKING PADDLEFISH EGGS, SELLING CAVIAR

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. – John F. Wood, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced today that a former Shell Knob, Mo., man has been sentenced in federal court for his role in a conspiracy to harvest the eggs from paddlefish caught in illegal nets at Table Rock Lake, which were processed into caviar and sold to a Tennessee company.

Thomas Jerry Nix, Jr., 39, of Memphis, Tenn., formerly of Shell Knob, Mo., was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Ortrie D. Smith on Monday, Feb. 2, 2009, to one year and one day in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered Nix to pay $30,002 in restitution to the Missouri Department of Conservation. Nix will forfeit to the government a 20-foot Bumblebee 200 Pro boat and trailer, with 225 HP Mariner motor, a GPS unit, and miscellaneous equipment such as three gill nets with anchors and a digital scale, all of which were used to commit the offense.

On Sept. 4, 2008, Nix pleaded guilty to participating in a conspiracy to engage in illegal commercial fishing for American paddlefish on Table Rock Lake and to illegally take the roe (eggs) of paddlefish, process that roe into caviar, and transport and sell that caviar in interstate commerce from December 2007 to Feb. 17, 2008.

Beginning in December 2007, Nix set three gill nets on Table Rock Lake and used a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver to mark the location of the nets. Every one to three days thereafter, Nix and his co-conspirator returned to check the gill nets for paddlefish. When paddlefish were retrieved from the gill nets, Nix slit open each paddlefish suspected to contain roe, and extracted the roe from the paddlefish by hand. They sealed the roe in plastic bags and transported the roe to the his residence in Shell Knob, where the he processed the roe into caviar.

Between December 2007 and February 2008, Nix and his co-conspirator relocated the gill nets on Table Rock Lake as the paddlefish moved upstream to spawn. In order to conceal their illegal activities, after removing the roe from the paddlefish, they sank the carcasses of the paddlefish they killed by weighting them with rocks.

After processing the roe into caviar, Nix packaged the roe in plastic containers, weighed and labeled the containers with labels supplied by a Tennessee company, refrigerated the caviar and stored it in his residence. Periodically, Nix and his co-conspirator transported the paddlefish caviar from his residence in Shell Knob to three separate locations in Tennessee, where they sold it to a company engaged in the business of buying, processing and selling caviar. Between Jan. 11 and Feb. 11, 2008, Nix sold approximately 387 pounds of paddlefish caviar to the Tennessee firm for a total of $35,820.

On the night of Feb. 17, 2008 agents of the Missouri Department of Conservation and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service apprehended Nix as he returned from his illegal commercial fishing on Table Rock Lake. Nix, who was in possession of 78.3 pounds of unprocessed paddlefish roe, admitted to taking paddlefish illegally, and stated that he had caught approximately eight paddlefish that night, from which he had taken the roe. Nix gave the agents consent to search his residence in Shell Knob, where they found an additional 91.32 pounds of paddlefish roe that had been processed into caviar, packaged in containers labeled for sale to a Tennessee company in the business of buying and selling caviar in interstate commerce.

The following day, Feb. 18, 2008, Nix led agents to three gill nets that he had set in Table Rock Lake. The agents retrieved the nets, and released 17 live paddlefish which had been caught in them.

Nix and his co-conspirator violated numerous Missouri laws and regulations, including the prohibition on the use of gill nets for sport fishing, taking paddlefish out of season, engaging in commercial fishing without a commercial license and using gill nets where not permitted and leaving them unattended. Nix also violated federal regulations that prohibit commercial activities on Table Rock Lake without the permission of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, which the defendant did not have. Finally, paddlefish roe were subject to United States Food and Drug Administration regulations concerning Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) plans. Improperly processed paddlefish roe were subject to contamination by botulinum brucella and listeria monocyteogenes. Because Nix did not have a HACCP plan or permit to process paddlefish roe, all of the paddlefish caviar which the defendant introduced into interstate commerce was “adulterated” under the Food and Drug Administration Act.

This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven M. Mohlhenrich. It was investigated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Missouri Department of Conservation.

Chief Grey Bear

Living is dangerous to your health

Owner Ozark Fishing Expeditions

Co-Owner, Chief Executive Product Development Team Jerm Werm

Executive Pro Staff Team Agnew

Executive Pro Staff Paul Dallas Productions

Executive Pro Staff Team Heddon, River Division

Chief Primary Consultant Missouri Smallmouth Alliance

Executive Vice President Ronnie Moore Outdoors

Posted

I am glad the law caught them. I want to believe that most folks abide by the law. Every once in a while a bad guy gets what they deserve. In the meantime, it pays to help out law enforcement and report on violations. Unfortunately, greed will never be cured, just hunted. The bright spot is that there is no limit on catching the culprits.

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