Hunting
Accident File > Violations
ID: Anti wolf activist accused of poaching
October 13, 2010
Anti-wolf activist accused of poaching
SaveElk.com founder charged with felony in killing of trophy elk
Tony Mayer, founder of the SaveElk.com website, is accused of killing a
trophy buck elk out of season last year in the Alturas Lake area of northern
Blaine County. Shown here in the Ketchum area is a young buck elk, not yet
trophy size.Photo by Mountain Express
The founder of a Twin Falls-based, anti-wolf Internet site has been
charged with a felony for allegedly killing a trophy bull elk out of season
last year in the Alturas Lake area of northern Blaine County.
Anthony J. Mayer, 59, is charged in a criminal complaint filed in Blaine
County 5th District Court in September with "flagrant unlawful killing and
possession of a trophy bull elk." He is also charged with the misdemeanor
crimes of hunting without an elk tag, hunting without an archery permit and
unlawful possession of protected wildlife.
Mayer was scheduled for an initial court appearance today, Oct. 6, before
Blaine County Magistrate Court Judge R. Ted Israel. He was not arrested, but
was issued a felony summons instead.
Jerome attorney John Lothspeich, who is representing Mayer, has filed a
written plea of not guilty and a demand for a jury trial.
"We're prepared to bring every possible legal defense on behalf of our
client," Lothspeich said. "He is a lifelong dedicated hunter and fisherman
and we deny any wrongdoing on the part of our client."
Mayer, who more commonly goes by the name of Tony Mayer, is the founder
of SaveElk.com, a website protesting the reintroduction of wolves into
Idaho, Montana and Wyoming in the mid-1990s.
The website urges regulation to "effectively deal with the Idaho Canadian
gray wolf population as necessary to protect citizens and children, to
reduce the growing public safety and health risk associated with wolf borne
disease and to reduce and control unacceptable livestock and ungulate
depredation." Ungulates include elk, deer and moose and other hoofed
big-game animals.
The criminal complaint against Mayer was filed following an investigation
by the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.
A probable-cause affidavit filed by Fish and Game Conservation Officer
Merritt Horsmon accuses Mayer of illegally killing a "6X6 bull elk" in the
Alturas Lake Creek drainage area several days after the bow hunting season
was closed in Unit 36 on Sept. 30, 2009. Horsmon alleges that the animal, of
trophy status, was killed instead by Mayer on Oct. 3 and that Mayer did not
have an elk tag at the time or a valid archery permit.
Horsmon wrote that he started the investigation after being told by other
Fish and Game employees that Mayer had posted a story with photographs about
the killing of the animal on the "Bowsite" website on Oct. 5, 2009. Details
of the story, Horsmon wrote, indicated that the animal had been killed when
the season was closed.
Horsmon wrote that Mayer posted the same story on the "Sportsman's
Warehouse Bragg'n Board" on Oct. 7, 2009. He further wrote that Mayer
entered the animal's antlers in the Twin Falls Sportsman's Warehouse 2009
Bucks and Bulls contest.
Evidence was also gathered after a search warrant was served on Mayer's
home in Twin Falls on Nov. 11, 2009.
Horsmon wrote that Mayer told him in an interview on Oct. 8, 2009, that
"he had first shot and wounded the elk using archery equipment on Sept. 30,
2009, and again shot and killed the elk using archery equipment on Oct. 1,
2009."
Horsmon alleged that Mayer didn't purchase an elk tag until Oct. 4, 2009,
and that when he reported the elk harvest he claimed to have killed the
animal on that day.
Speaking through his attorney, Mayer declined to comment on the charges
to the Idaho Mountain Express.
The felony crime of unlawful killing or possession of a trophy bull elk
is punishable under Idaho code by up to five years in prison and a $50,000
fine. The misdemeanor crimes Mayer is charged with are punishable by fines
of up to $1,000 and six months in jail. Fish and Game violations in Idaho
can also result in loss of hunting and fishing privileges..
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