An air chase is not a fair chase
Idaho Department of Fish and Game | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 4 months AGO
Man and his technology have come a long way since Idaho became a state. Hunting today isn't about survival, it's about pursuing a form of recreation, a sport. But like all sports, hunting has its rules.
In mid-October, Idaho Department of Fish and Game conservation officers came across three individuals who were attempting to use a combination of modern technologies to gain an unfair advantage in their pursuit of wild game.
Their actions not only violated the concept of fair chase, but a number of actual hunting regulations.
On Oct. 18, senior conservation officers Tim Klucken and Josh Leal responded to reports of a powered parachute flying low over the Mud Lake Wildlife Management Area.
On the way to the management area, officers could hear someone giving location instructions about some deer over a radio.
The officers were able to make contact with Jake Tanner and Neil Wood who were carrying shotguns and who admitted that they had been communicating with the person in the powered parachute about locating deer, according to Fish and Game. It also turned out that Tanner lacked a tag to hunt deer at all.
Upon further investigation, officers were able to determine that the individual in the powered parachute, Braxton Tomlinson, was trying to locate deer hiding in the reeds of the management area marsh and then communicate their location by radio to Tanner and Woods, on the ground.
Use of aircraft to locate wildlife and communicating this information to someone on the ground is against Idaho code and specifically mentioned on page 97 of this year's Big Game Regulations.
In Jefferson County court, all three pleaded guilty and were fined $500 with $400 suspended, plus court costs, and sentenced to 10 days in jail, which was also suspended. The judge also sentenced them to one year unsupervised probation and banned them from hunting for one year.
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