Here's the truth behind the bear. And the bear picture posted is a actual photo... it's that big.
Fact Finder: Monster Bear Killed by U.P. Combine?
http://www.upnorthlive.com/news/story.aspx?id=408399A monster sized bear was killed by combine in a field in southern Chippewa County. At least that's what it says in an email that viewers have sent me. It sure sounds real. It has a ton of facts, names, dates, even colorful quotes, but does it have any truth to it? That's the subject of this Fact Finder.
There is an email that's making the rounds. It claims that on November 2nd, a Chippewa County Farmer by the name of Neil Schlough was harvesting corn on his farm on South Maple Road about 5 miles north of Kinross when all of sudden his combine harvester hit and killed a massive 700 pound black bear that was hibernating in the field. According to the email, a conservation warden, Jim Clevin or Jesse Carstens came out confirmed the kill. After doing that, the officer sold Schlough a harvest tag for 75 dollars allowing the farmer to keep the dead bear. The email even goes on to say that Shlough took it to nearby TP Taxidermy to have a full mount and it appears this could be the largest bear ever killed in the state of Michigan. The email reads like a great story with tons of facts, names, locations, even a picture or two on some of the emails, but is it true? Viewers wanted to know, so I got to work.
My first call was to the Michigan DNR-E to ask them about it. Mary Dettloff responded "no one by the name of "Jim Cleven" or "Jesse Carstens" works for the Michigan DNR."
Which doesn't necessarily mean the story is a hoax, but it certainly forced me to start looking elsewhere. I contacted Tom Persons who owns TP Taxidermy. His shop is located in central Wisconsin and it turns out he knows all about this email and this bear. Tom told me that yes in deed; he had the bear in his possession for awhile. He went on to say that it was brought in by a farmer in Wisconsin whose real name is Neil Schlough. Tom says he was told the animal was killed by Schlough's combine one night in November of 2008.
I needed to confirm all of this. Now that I had the right state, I contacted the Wisconsin DNR. They said the names, and story in the email were pretty accurate. The locations in Michigan then were completely false.
So according to the DNR and the taxidermist, a farmer did discover this bear after he hit with combine. The bear was huge, and could be a new state record. All of that is true! But the story doesn't end there!
As it turns out when the DNR and the Taxidermist looked closer, they say they found bullet holes in the bear's neck.
The WI DNR told me the bear "was found to be shot illegally while it was hibernating by North Dakota resident deer hunting in an unharvested corn field. A day later the farmer started harvesting the corn and rolled it over with his combine, he initially thought he killed it, but an investigation by WI DNR Wardens found it was already dead when he hit it. It was initially tagged by the Warden so the farmer could have it. When information came out that it was poached the bear hide and skull was seized as evidence. (David A. Hausman Warden Supervisor.)
That North Dakota hunter admitted the shooting, paid a fine and went home. Now the question is who owns the potential state record bear's carcass? The Wisconsin DNR told me since it was illegally harvested it's theirs for at now. The Schlough's have publicly argued that they essentially already bought the bear from the DNR for 75 dollars, and still claim that the animal was alive, albeit shot, when the fatal blow came from the combine.