
The Long Road To Justice
It started with an anonymous tip about a hunter who’s residency was kind of fishy. In the tight-knit hunting community of Lincoln County, Wyoming, rumors spread that an out-of-stater was gaming the system. Sure enough, the Afton Game Warden at the time, James Hobbs took notice and launched an investigation that year. What followed was a six-year rigamarole of detective work across three counties and two states, ending in 2025 with a poacher facing the music in court. The wheels of justice turned slowly, but they did turn. For Wyoming’s wildlife, it was worth the wait.
Faking Residency
The culprit, an Idaho man posing as a Wyoming resident, had spent years cheating the licensing system to take trophy big game. By the time wardens served a search warrant on his Idaho Falls home in 2022, they uncovered a cache of illegal trophies: four large mule deer bucks, two bull elk, and one pronghorn antelope that were all taken without valid tags.
To put it in perspective, those mule deer were giants, scoring between 180 and 220 inches on the Boone & Crockett scale. These are once-in-a-lifetime caliber animals that most law-abiding hunters only dream of harvesting legitimately. For one man to steal four of them through poaching isn’t just illegal, it’s downright infuriating to everyone who puts in the work to do it right.
Justice Served
Wildlife prosecutors didn’t take it lightly either. By 2023, the poacher was hit with 22 wildlife charges spanning multiple counties. Rather than risk a trial, he eventually took a plea deal in 2024, admitting to falsifying residency and illegally killing multiple deer and elk. The judge’s sentence hammered the point home: he got jail time (21 days behind bars out of a longer suspended term), over $27,000 in combined fines and restitution, and an 18-year ban from hunting across nearly all states.
In other words, he won’t be legally hunting until he’s an old man – and all those seized trophy racks will never adorn his wall. He even tried to appeal the punishment, but in June 2025 a Wyoming judge upheld every bit of it. Justice, at long last, was served.
Protecting Our Hunting Legacy
For those of us who love hunting, stories like this are personal. Each of those trophy mule deer stolen was a deer that a legitimate hunter might have fairly taken or at least enjoyed seeing on the winter range. Poaching isn’t just a crime against wildlife regulations – it’s a betrayal of our community’s trust and ethics. Poaching is stealing from the honest hunter who spends years waiting on a hard-to-draw tag, from the volunteers and biologists working to conserve these animals, and from future generations who deserve a chance at experiencing healthy wildlife populations. The fact of the matter is that a poacher isn’t a hunter at all.
This Wyoming case highlights something every ethical hunter knows in their gut: we must hold each other accountable. It was the courage of informants, fellow sportsmen or neighbors who didn’t stay silent, that brought the scheme to light. If those tips hadn’t been reported back in 2019, this guy might still be out there filling his truck with illegal antlers (it was a dang good year for big bucks in Western Wyoming after all).
Sure, it took years of investigations, warrants, and court proceedings to finally nail him, but without that first phone call, justice would never have had its chance.
Patience Is Key
If you report a wildlife crime, you might not see flashing lights and handcuffs the next day. It could even drag on for seasons, testing your faith in the system. But as this case proves, eventually the hammer will fall. And when it does, it reinforces why doing the right thing matters.
It’s also a sobering reminder of how much goes on undetected. A recent study from Boone & Crockett suggests that only about 4% of poaching incidents ever come to the attention of authorities. Think about that – the vast majority of wildlife crimes remain in the shadows, unless someone who witnesses them speaks up. Each of us, as hunters, can be the difference.
Whether it’s some dude boasting about an extra deer he shouldn’t have shot, or something fishy you see while glassing a far ridge, report it. Wyoming Game and Fish’s toll-free tip line (1-877-WGFD-TIP) exists for a reason. Your identity can remain anonymous, and your tip could save countless animals over the long run. Even if the legal process feels slow or frustrating, sticking to our guns (no-pun intended) is important. We owe it to the wildlife and to our own reputation to not turn a blind eye.
At the end of the day, hunting is a privilege built on respect: respect for the law, respect for the animals, and respect for each other. We celebrate when one of our own tags a once-in-a-lifetime mule deer buck after doing things the right way. And conversely, we all share the outrage when someone short-circuits that process through greed and deceit. The Lincoln County case may be closed, but the conversation it sparks is one we need to keep having.
How can we as a community do even better to uphold our standards and protect what we love?
Feel free to share your thoughts – after all, staying honest and engaged is just as important as a well-placed shot.
Hunting is not just about taking an animal for the wall and freezer; it’s about honoring a heritage that’s been passed down from people doing right by the critters we chase. Let’s keep that heritage alive by speaking up for what’s right, no matter how long it takes for justice to arrive.
Eastmans' Official Blog | Mule Deer, Antelope, Elk Hunting and Bowhunting Magazine | Eastmans' Hunting Journals
I hunted with a guy that shot his deer then asked me if he saw another and shot it would I tag it as mine. I told him I didn’t roll that way, needles to say I never hunted with him again.
That’s a pretty serious string of crimes. I’m glad the punishments are starting to get where they need to be. Need to see some incarcerations, bigger fines, and longer hunting bans.
You chose to not name the poacher. Why?
Second that.
Unfortunately wolves poach wildlife 24/7 and they are rewarded. Sounds like another one of those 2 tier justice systems destroying the eco. There are almost more wolves than elk in Washington state, yet the wdfw still can’t understand why the herds aren’t recovering. Moose and the caribou are all gone with elk being the next on the menu. It is only a couple years away from the end of all hunting in this state. Heed my words! I have an idiot democrat as a neighbor. He hates wildlife. He built another 4 strand barb wire fence 2 feet from my smooth wire fence line. He has killed close to 50 deer alone because they can’t clear both fences. The does get tangled up and rip holes in themselves and ultimately die from infection and the fawns die of starvation. He by far is worse than any poacher. His fence kills 24/7/365. Why hasn’t wdfw or rmef ended his killer fence and hate for wildlife. Sad thing is he thinks he is important in the area so he is allowed to do whatever he wants. I made a mistake and worked a summer for him in the wheat fields. He was leasing land from wdfw and was required to keep weed free. He was lazy and never did it so he told me to go chop it down before wdfw seen he wasn’t fulfilling his duties. The field was full of mule deer fawns. I told him and he said chop them up if they don’t get out of the way. I tired chasing them from the field but they wouldn’t leave, so in fear of losing my job I chopped up 7 fawns that day. I quit the next day because it was wrong on all counts. Yet he hasn’t been charged for all the wildlife he kills daily. Just because they aren’t trophies doesn’t relieve him of the crimes he makes his workers commit or his killing fence line commits. Poachers come in various shapes and forms, fences to tractors to wolves and yes the idiot with no ethical hunting skills. The fight for wildlife is real
Wow. 21 whole days of jail. I guess I should be happy that any jail time was imposed. But considering the magnitude of these crimes, he got off pretty light.
As I’ve posted many times before on this site, license suspension for serious poachers is meaningless. The fines are pretty much meaningless too. Nothing is rarely done if fines aren’t paid. They send it to a collection agency and then forget about it. In many cases, they are never paid.
This guy should have received actual prison time, measured in years, not days. I’ll bet he gets work release too so serves his measly 21 days on weekends at his convenience.
We need to advocate for mandatory jail/prison sentences for egregious cases like this one. Nothing else will deter these kind of criminals.
We know that they won’t be doing any poaching while they are incarcerated.
AGREED!!!
At least a YEAR in jail.
YES!
21 days in jail and $27,000 in fines? That’s not “hammered”, that’s lenient. 5-10 years would be more like it.
The Prosecutors and Judges need to get serious about charging and sentencing these poachers. His fines are a fraction of what guided hunts for trophy animals of the caliber that this creep stole from us. The justice system doesn’t work fairly concerning wildlife crimes. It’s always been this way, unfortunately.
I love the $27,000 dollar fine and the 18 year ban
He won’t pay it and he’ll hunt anyway. A ban doesn’t work on someone who thinks the rules don’t apply to them.