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Poachers discover Kansas’ deer; game wardens try to turn the tables

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Problems with poaching aren’t unique to Kansas.

In neighboring Missouri, law-enforcement officials have been battling the illegal element for years.

The Department of Conservation fights the problem with everything from airplane patrols to undercover operations to stem the tide. And those efforts often produce eye-opening results.

Larry Yamnitz, chief of law enforcement for the Department of Conservation, often refers to an undercover operation dubbed “Operation Wallhanger” as proof.

“We heard of some illegal activity going on in the Ozarks, so we set up a taxidermy shop in Shannon County,” Yamnitz said.

“We took in mostly deer and it turns out 62 percent of them were taken illegally and resulted in arrests.”

The biggest problem Missouri conservation agents see during deer season is tagging violations — for example, someone shooting a deer and using someone else’s tag to check it in, allowing them to still use their tag.

But violations such as trespassing and illegally taking a deer, road hunting and spotlighting also are major concerns.

In the past, country judges in Kansas would sometimes greet poaching incidents with a wink and a “boys will be boys” attitude — and little penalty.

But that is changing. As law-enforcement officials hammer home how serious the problem has become, there has been a movement to toughen the consequences of poaching, especially if it is a trophy animal.

For the past year, Donges, has led an effort to stiffen penalties in Kansas, as states such as Ohio have.

The Kansas Legislature earlier this year established a statute that will call for greater punishment for poachers taking trophy game. For example, those who illegally take a whitetail buck with antlers that have an inside spread of at least 16 inches will be subject to a fine of not less than $5,000. On top of that, they will have to pay the state restitution for the trophy animal, based on a formula for determining the value of the animal.

Hunters who get busted with an illegal whitetail deer that flirts with 200 inches of antler could be fined $20,000, The Wichita Eagle reported.

“We’re hoping these stiffer penalties will give serious poachers some pause,” Jones said.

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