ANTELOPE KILLING SPREE EARNS POACHERS JAIL TIME, BIG FINES
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Antelope doe shot and left in Northern
New Mexico
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RATON -- Calling the offenses "a serial act of terrorism
against the people of Colfax and Union counties" a judge
sentenced two Texas men who went on a 2006 antelope-killing spree
to 90 days in jail and ordered each to pay $10,750 in criminal
and civil penalties.
Colfax County District Judge John P. Paternoster sentenced Fort
Worth residents Kolby Knight, 21, and Jonathon Seamen, 22, on
Aug. 29 after plea agreements. Both men's rifles were surrendered
to the Department of Game and Fish and the judge ordered the men
to write apology letters to the citizens of Colfax and Union counties
to be published in local newspapers.
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Headless antelope discovered by Game
and Fish Officers
in Northern New Mexico
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Department of Game and Game and Fish officers received an anonymous
call Nov. 6, 2006, that Knight and Seamen were returning to Fort
Worth from a hunting trip in Idaho and that they planed to kill
pronghorn antelope as they traveled from Raton to Clayton.
An undercover officer quickly found the silver Cadillac Escalade
described by the informant. The officer watched and heard rifle
shots as the vehicle stopped near groups of antelope along the
highway. Department officers stopped the vehicle in Clayton and
found Knight and Seamen in possession of a deer head that was
illegally killed in Idaho . Officers later found five antelope
that had been killed by the pair and also found where Knight and
Seamen had tried to hide two antelope heads they were planning
to take to Texas . Officers also matched ballistic evidence found
along the 90-mile crime scene with the rifles carried by Knight
and Seamen.
At the sentencing hearing, Judge Paternoster said he was amazed
that no one was killed by the bullets shot along the highway that
day and that he will always remember the two poachers as he drives
the highway from Raton to Clayton and sees all the beautiful antelope.
If you have any information about wildlife crimes, please call
your local conservation officer or Operation Game Thief at 1-800-432-GAME
(4263) or file
a secure report now. Callers can remain anonymous and can
receive rewards for information leading to the arrest or charges
filed upon wildlife criminals.