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Author Topic: Huge illegal trappin case  (Read 1386 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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 Northern Minnesota man pleads guilty in one of state’s largest illegal trapping cases .



 Forum News Service
June 27, 2017

 :doah: ......
One of two Chisholm men admitted Monday to his role in what authorities said was one of the state’s largest trapping cases on record.

 :popcorn: ..
Douglas Anthony Marana, 70, pleaded guilty to four criminal charges at a hearing in St. Louis County District Court in Duluth.

 :police: ..
Minnesota Department of Natural Resources officials said in March that they seized 638 snares illegally set by Marana and 68-year-old Roderick Robert Kottom during a two-year investigation.

 :coffee: ..
Marana entered the pleas to a gross misdemeanor charge of illegally taking or possessing pine marten, otter, fisher or wolverine; misdemeanor counts of failure to check snares daily and using snares larger than permitted; and a petty misdemeanor charge of using untagged traps or snares.

Senior Judge Peter Albrecht sentenced Marana to 120 days in jail, but stayed the term for two years of unsupervised probation. :moon: He was fined $1,260, ordered to contribute to joint restitution of $1,240 and must avoid any same or similar offenses.

Marana did not have any prior criminal record, according to a check of court records. :violin:

According to a criminal complaint, the investigation began in December 2014 when Duluth conservation officer Kipp Duncan received a tip about a wolf possibly caught in a trap north of Duluth. Duncan found a wolf in a snare at the location. :doah:

 :popcorn: ...
In the same area where that snare was found, according to the complaint, Duncan found numerous other snares matching the snare type and bait used to take the wolf.

That eventually led to a lengthy investigation of Marana and Kottom that grew to include a large area of St. Louis County and parts of Itasca, Koochiching and Lake counties. Officers seized 17 foxes, two fishers, five snowshoe hares and one deer illegally trapped on the trap lines, according to the complaint. :doah:
« Last Edit: June 06/28/17, 06:57:43 AM by Lee Borgersen »
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That doesn't sound like a very big fine for all of the illegal activity..