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KDWPT Game Wardens Bring Four Wildlife Violators to Justice PRATT – Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism’s (KDWPT) Law Enforcement staff continue to make great strides in bringing wildlife poachers to justice, including four individuals who, combined, were responsible for illegally taking 68 Kansas deer. On Nov. 4, in Barber County court, John Blick, Jr., of Sharon, was sentenced to spend 14 months in prison related to the poaching of a combined 60 whitetail and mule deer. In addition to prison time, district judge Frank Meisenheimer sentenced Blick to pay $310,234.68 in restitution to KDWPT for the value of the deer to the state. ....
Share this article Photo credit: Dreamstime After several years of poaching deer on federal property, three men have pleaded guilty to trespassing and illegally hunting whitetail deer on a section of the Fort Riley Army base in Kansas. Gregory J. Frikken, James C. Nunley and Michael J. Smith killed eight whitetail deer – three that are considered trophy class – after entering the property under cover of night multiple times, according to a Department of Justice U.S. Attorney’s Office District of Kansas press release. All three are charged with violating the Lacey Act and were ordered to pay $11,000 in restitution to the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) and $10,000 in fines to the Lacey Act fund. They lost hunting privileges for three years and were required to forfeit all property seized during the investigation, which included deer mounts, antlers and equipment used to kill the deer. ....
By TIM HRENCHIR | The Topeka Capital-Journal | Published: February 10, 2021 (Tribune News Service) Three men were recently sentenced to each serve three years of unsupervised probation and pay fines and restitution after they illegally harvested eight whitetail deer, three of them trophy class, on the grounds of Fort Riley. U.S. Attorney for Kansas Stephen McAllister said in a news release Tuesday that Gregory J. Frikken, James C. Nunley and Michael J. Smith were sentenced after pleading guilty to federal charges of illegally hunting whitetail deer on a part of Fort Riley where explosives are discharged during training exercises. The three admitted they trespassed on federal property and illegally harvested trophy whitetail deer from that property, all in violation of the federal Lacey Act, McAllister said. ....