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Ranch hit with $120,000 fine for baiting waterfowl to hunt
Associated Press
DALLAS - Federal authorities levied a $120,000 fine against an East Texas ranch for hunting ducks over a baited area in violation of federal laws.
The Lockridge Ranch in Anderson County is owned by the family trust of Edwin L. Cox Sr., after whom the business school at Southern Methodist University is named and whose son, Edwin L. Cox Jr., was chairman of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission in the 1980s.![]()
In addition to the fine, the Cox family trust agreed that waterfowl hunting would be prohibited on the property through the end of 2007.
The U.S. Attorney's Office in Tyler agreed not to prosecute any Cox family members or ranch employees.
Federal law enforcement officers with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service raided the ranch in November after receiving information from a former employee. The baiting appears to have gone on for at least the past five years, authorities said.
Prosecutors said they had evidence the ranch bought 95,000 pounds of grain sorghum from 1999 though late 2004.
Baiting migratory waterfowl is prohibited to protect game birds from overharvesting.
Steve Hamilton, a Fort-Worth-based agent with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, called it one of the larger bait-related cases he has seen.
"The baiting activity encompassed multiple years and involved the placement of several thousand pounds of milo grain to attract waterfowl to the gun," Julie Scully, USFWS Assistant Special Agent in Charge for Law Enforcement in the Southwest Region, said in a statement concerning the case.
Through a lawyer, the Cox family declined comment.