elkduds
Well-known member

Colorado Springs man sentenced to 6 months in jail for poaching charges
A Colorado Springs man has pleaded guilty to misdemeanor poaching charges in three different counties.

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- In 1996 after the high-profile poaching of a well-known bull elk the previous year, Colorado became the first state to levy fines and penalties specifically for the poaching of “trophy species” or “trophy animals” with the passage of “Samson’s Law.” Numerous states have followed in Colorado’s stead with the institution of their own fines and penalties for the poaching of trophy animals and species.
- Under the current provisions of Colorado’s “Samson Law,” the fines for the poaching of animals designated as “trophy animals” are as follows:
- $4,000 of any trophy pronghorn antelope;
- $10,000 for the poaching of a trophy bull elk, mule deer, or white-tailed deer;
- $10,000 for the poaching of any bull moose or mountain goat billy (all bull moose and mountain goat billies are designated as trophy animals);
- $25,000 for the poaching of any ram bighorn sheep.
$307 per poached animal.
In 1996 after the high-profile poaching of a well-known bull elk the previous year, Colorado became the first state to levy fines and penalties specifically for the poaching of “trophy species” or “trophy animals” with the passage of “Samson’s Law.” Numerous states have followed in Colorado’s stead with the institution of their own fines and penalties for the poaching of trophy animals and species.Under the current provisions of Colorado’s “Samson Law,” the fines for the poaching of animals designated as “trophy animals” are as follows:Illegally killing any animal will result in the associated fines:$4,000$10,000 for anytrophypronghorn antelope;$10,000$20,000 for the poaching of anytrophyelk, mule deer, or white-tailed deer;$10,000$25,000 for the poaching of anybullmoose or mountain goatbilly(all bull moose and mountain goat billies are designated as trophy animals);- $25,000 for the poaching of any ram bighorn sheep.
I understand why they do it, but that doesn’t make me like either. It basically says that some poaching is more OK than other poaching…i hate how wildlife charges get classified as poaching a trophy animal or not, with a dramatically higher dollar penalty associated with it if it's trophy.
bad optics for non hunters, that poaching is only a big effin deal if it's huuuuuuuuge
I don't know. If non-hunters dislike "trophy hunters" more than regular hunters, I think it stands to reason that they would support more severe punishments for trophy poachers.i hate how wildlife charges get classified as poaching a trophy animal or not, with a dramatically higher dollar penalty associated with it if it's trophy.
bad optics for non hunters, that poaching is only a big effin deal if it's huuuuuuuuge