Federal authorities are bringing charges against a North Carolina man in connection with the shooting of one of Great Smoky Mountains National Park's bull elk, an animal that was one of the largest bulls in the herd.
Park officials say rangers discovered the carcass of bull No. 21 on Friday lying along the edge of a pasture in the Cataloochee area of the park. The animal was believed to have been shot and was taken to the University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine for a necropsy. The necropsy report has not yet been received.
An investigation involving park rangers as well as agents from the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission produced a vehicle description that lead them to a suspect from Granville County, North Carolina. On Saturday a Park Service special agent met with the suspect, who reportedly confessed, a park release said Monday.
The park is working with the U.S. Attorney’s Office to develop the case. The suspect’s name is not being released pending the filing of charges. Those convicted of poaching in a national park face up to six months in jail and/or a fine of up to $5,000. Offenders can also be forced to forfeit the weapon and the vehicle used in the crime.
“The suspect was quickly identified and a strong case developed because of the willingness of members of the community to come forward and talk to rangers and state wildlife officers. The many visitors and volunteers who come to Cataloochee expressly to watch the elk constitute a very effective surveillance network which has undoubtedly prevented elk poaching from occurring earlier," said Acting Chief Ranger Steve Kloster.
“While the loss of one bull elk may not jeopardize the success of the park’s Elk Program, we do see this as a very serious theft of the public’s enjoyment of their national park," he added. “Thousands of visitors come to see these elk each year, and many of them know each animal by sight. Number 21 was one of the largest and most majestic breeding bulls in the herd, so he will certainly be missed.”
Comments
This breaks my heart and makes me mad as fire at the same time. Rednecks like him give all hunters a bad name. You cannot replace an animal like that. How senseless and selfish...
B. Grant, kinda offended by your comment, i consider myself a "redneck" and have never poached any animal and respect our parks and wildlife.don't put all in the same boat,an elk is an animal i have alot of respect for and has fed me many times. keep your perspective my friend.
My son is a ranger at OVC in NC very upset about this act of senseless killing. I hope the park takes his weapon, vehicle and fines him the max plus time in jail!
It's bad enough he took this animals life in the park, then he just leaves it there and wasted the meat? He should be tried twice, once for the act and once for stupidity.
azborn2001 - what exactly is a "redneck" in your own definition? There's good rednecks and bad rednecks...will concur. But, trying to look like a menacing redneck with all the bad emblems that match to kill, gives one the huge impression of a violent rogue. As for the slaughter of this beautiful beast...definitely is the work of a very ignorant rogue with a size of a pea brain. I've met a few bad rednecks in my day and I definitely would not allow them to have gun in there hands, house or vehicle. No offense azborn...I've seen carnage in the aftermath of there illegal activities.
my definition is just a good guy who likes to hunt and fish, maybe drive a pickup. i have seen the effect of people poaching, just to kill something. i have been hunting my whole life,53yrs. as of sunday. i always obey the law and have never done something as stupid as this. i hope they take his truck,gun and whatever they can wring out of his worthless rearend. all of us "rednecks" aren't bad guys.
You make a good point, azborn2001. Calling anyone and everyone who enjoys traditional rural southern outdoor pursuits a redneck is just plain wrong. You need to allow for that interesting breed that southerners call the "good ol' boy." Like a redneck, a good ol' boy drives a pickup and loves to hunt and fish and drink beer with others of similar persuasion. But unlike the true redneck -- an ignorant, racist, xenophobic creature who occupies the lowest rung of the socio-economic ladder and deeply resents being shut out of most things that matter -- the archetypal good ol' boy has a good education, holds down a good job, lives in a nice neighborhood, travels a good bit, and is pretty comfortable with the technological and social facets of mass culture. When you call a man a good ol' boy, you pay him a compliment. When you call a good ol' boy a redneck, you do him a terrible disservice.
Hi Bob, i don't think i agree with everthing you say,words mean different things than they used to. i have the education,job,live in a nice place and have traveled a fair bit. pretty good with the techno/social thing too. people that see fit to flaunt the law and do what this man did are not friends of mine. the state of wildlife in our parks is needing some direction. thanks for the answer, i love this site.