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Say OT

nmhighdesert

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 17, 2007
Messages
474
Location
northeastern NM
Say OT,
whats the story on the fellows from up your way that made it to federal court in Billings for some hunting violations. A freind of mine in south TX told me a bit about it but was wondering if you had a link to something on it. I know some fellas from LA that hunted up there and was wondering if they were part of it?
 
I'm sure this is the one you're talking about... The investigation has been ongoing now for a couple years- and not sure who all was implicated altho I heard many of the clients and others involved pled out in plea bargains in which they cooperated with the authorities...

Saco ranch family members admit to hunting scheme
By CLAIR JOHNSON
Of The Gazette Staff

Three members of a Hi-Line family admitted Thursday that they ran an illegal hunting operation that brought in nonresident hunters who paid thousands of dollars to shoot big game on their ranch near Saco.

The scheme ran for five years, until investigators with the state Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks learned of it in 2003, federal prosecutors said. Investigators have since fined and seized mounts of poached animals from dozens of clients who participated in the illegal hunts.

In the fall of 2003, 10 whitetail and mule deer bucks were killed on the ranch by nonresident hunters who didn't have valid licenses.

Leo O. Bergtoll, 74, his wife, Anna Lou L. Bergtoll, 68, and their son, Darrel L. Bergtoll, 44, pleaded guilty to federal charges during their first appearance in U.S. District Court in Billings. A fourth defendant, Anthony J. Bazile, 60, of Braithwaite, La., was indicted separately, has pleaded not guilty and is set for trial April 6. Leo Bergtoll pleaded guilty to felony conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act, which regulates the sale, transportation and purchase of wildlife. Anna Lou Bergtoll and Darrel Bergtoll each pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of violating the Lacey Act.

Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Anderson of Missoula said in court documents that the Bergtolls worked with Bazile, a longtime associate, to run a hunting business on their cattle ranch, the Frenchman Valley Ranch.

Bazile recruited clients for weeklong hunting trips in which he charged $800 a person to apply for a Montana landowner-sponsored buck deer license. Bazile would forward the client's name and application fee of $300 to Anna Lou Bergtoll and pocket the rest. Anna Lou Bergtoll would submit the client's name for the license drawing. Darrel Bergtoll, who owns a separate parcel of land nearby, also would submit clients' names from Bazile for licenses on his property, even though the clients hunted on his parents' ranch.

If clients failed to draw a license, Bazile urged them to come to Montana anyway and assured them that they would get licenses, Anderson said. The clients each paid another $1,200 outfitting fee when they arrived at the ranch.

Meanwhile, the Bergtolls got resident hunting licenses and asked other family members and hired hands to do the same. Leo and Anna Lou Bergtoll would buy the resident licenses from their employees for $100 and resell them to the nonresident hunters, who used them to tag animals they shot.

Trophy parts of illegally killed animals were sent to a nearby taxidermist for mounting or were sometimes taken home by the clients.

The Frenchman Valley Ranch had about 20 permanent wooden hunting blinds, a bunkhouse for clients and vehicles for Bazile and clients. Bazile cooked for the clients and told them which blinds to use. As payment for his "client wrangling" services, he kept at least one $1,200 hunting fee each season, Anderson said.

Leo Bergtoll faces a maximum of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine on the conspiracy count, while his wife and son face a maximum of one year in prison and a $100,000 fine on the misdemeanor.

U.S. Magistrate Carolyn Ostby continued their release without bond.

http://billingsgazette.net/articles/2009/02/06/news/state/43-sacoranch.txt
 
A fellow at Mankota which is pretty much north of where OT is talking about got fine I think it was over $100,000 for illegal outfitting just today.

Outfitting isn't legal in southern Sask. They won't let us do it but it sure could be worth something to the rural economy if they fined a person that much.
 
Fine the crap out of those guys and let the natives run amuck-that big 186 inch whitetail Ty shot had an interesting fall-one of the guides for our local native outfitter told Ty they'd ran into him one night out in a hayfield and knocked him down but their American hunter didn't get his gun out the window fast enough to shoot him. Be nice if everybody had to follow the rules.
 
BMR did you ever know of a fella named Johnny Lockhart from over there? I actually hope they put the fine money the get from this hunting deal back directly into the county general funds. I know them small countys could use it.
Both of those ranch's have been bought down by the old FHA some years ago, so the money just be back in the taxpayers loop!
 
nmhighdesert said:
BMR did you ever know of a fella named Johnny Lockhart from over there? I actually hope they put the fine money the get from this hunting deal back directly into the county general funds. I know them small countys could use it.
Both of those ranch's have been bought down by the old FHA some years ago, so the money just be back in the taxpayers loop!

I knew Johnny and Eddy Lockhart,

The money would be a provincial fine so I doubt any of it would show up in that area. It would go into general revenue.
 
nmhighdesert-- Heres an update....

Federal Sentences Handed Down in Saco-Area Poaching Case
Wednesday, August 19th 2009

BILLINGS, Mont. – Three members of a Saco-area ranching family were sentenced in U.S. District Court here Wednesday for their roles in a longtime wildlife poaching scheme that spanned from Montana to the Gulf Coast.

Senior U.S. District Court Judge Jack Shanstrom ordered 74-year-old Leo O. Bergtoll to pay $15,000 in fines; complete 36 months of federal probation; allow his land to be used in the Wounded Warriors Project for injured service veterans for three years; and enroll his property in the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks' (FWP) Block Management public access program for a period of five years without receiving any financial compensation. Leo Bergtoll, owner of the Frenchman Valley Ranch north of Saco, also lost his hunting, fishing and trapping privileges for five years.

Bergtoll's wife, Anna Lou L. Bergtoll, 69, was ordered to pay an additional $15,000 in fines; complete 24 months of federal probation; and participate in the Wounded Warriors Project for three years. She also lost hunting, fishing and trapping privileges for five years.

The couple's son, 44-year-old Darrel L. Bergtoll, who ranches on property that is separate from his parents, was ordered to pay $15,000 in fines; complete 40 months of federal probation; allow his land to be used in the Wounded Warriors Project for three years; and enroll in FWP's Block Management Program for five years without payments.

The Bergtolls were accused of running a high-volume, big-game hunting operation based on the fraudulent use of FWP's landowner-sponsored licensing program.

The program is designed to make landowner-sponsored hunting licenses available so private property owners who are Montana residents can let a limited number of other hunters pursue and harvest big game animals on their private land. Quotas are placed on the number of licenses sold.

The Bergtolls and their Louisiana-based client broker, 61-year-old Anthony J. Bazile, devised a scheme to charge out-of-state hunters for applying for these licenses, as well trespass fees to enter the Bergtoll's ranch property in the Frenchman Creek area of Phillips and Valley counties and hunt illegally. The hunters, primarily from Louisiana, Texas and Alabama, were provided with room, board and baited hunting blinds as part of the deal.

Even if they couldn't obtain licenses, clients were still encouraged to come to the property to hunt. To cover their tracks and keep their clients hunting with an appearance of legality, the Bergtolls at times resorted to selling their own personal hunting licenses and those of their ranch employees.

Leo Bergtoll was charged with a felony count of conspiracy to violate the federal Lacey Act for a period covering 1998 to 2003. Anna Lou Bergtoll and Darrel Bergtoll each were charged with a misdemeanor count of violating the Lacey Act, which regulates the interstate transport, purchase and sale of wildlife.

In February the three Bergtolls pleaded guilty to the charges, which followed a long investigation dubbed "Operation Louisiana Purchase" by state and federal law enforcement officials. Bazile is to be sentenced Sept. 9 for a single felony violation of the Lacey Act. The cases were prosecuted by Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Anderson of Missoula.

Judge Shanstrom determined that the Bergtolls conducted 61 illegal hunts during the period, with each hunt valued at $1,700. Investigators say Bazile kept about $119,000 in profit from the approximately $183,000 he collected as the outfitting operation's far-flung booking agent.

In addition to Bazile and the Bergtolls, a total of 45 client-hunters were convicted on state charges, which resulted in more than $25,000 being collected. Three elk, 31 white-tailed deer and 10 mule deer were seized in the operation, which started after FWP wardens received tips from other hunters, landowners and others about the illegal activity.

"These criminal sentences mark the end of a long era of abuse by these defendants, as well as the prolonged theft of Montana's wildlife resources, which belongs to every citizen, not just a select few who want to profit from it," said FWP Region 6 Warden Captain Mike Herman, who also served as the lead state investigator in the case. "This was the largest illegal commercial operation involving the landowner-sponsor program in the history of Montana. Wildlife in this area will surely see a great benefit from shutting this illegal hunting down."
 

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