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Texas Game Wardens Bust Illegal Deer Operations Across the State

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    Texas Game Wardens Bust Illegal Deer Operations Across the State




    AUSTIN – A recent investigation by Texas Game Wardens resulted in approximately 1,200 pending charges and 22 suspects from across the state involved in the deer breeding industry and black-market wildlife trade.

    The suspects and charges are associated with three deer breeding facilities, ten release sites, one deer management pen and three illegal facilities not registered in the Texas Wildlife Information Management Services (TWIMS) database, meaning they were operating or receiving deer in violation of registration requirements and disease monitoring protocols.

    "The hard work and commitment of our Texas Game Wardens to uncover these violations cannot be overstated," said TPWD Executive Director David Yoskowitz. "Their pivotal role in conservation law enforcement helps ensure the health of all deer populations in the state. These violations don’t just break the law—they undermine the very foundation of responsible wildlife management in Texas."

    Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) has referred the cases to prosecutors’ offices in 11 Texas counties.

    The cases stem from a prior investigation involving the illegal smuggling of captive white-tailed deer, ultimately leading wardens to uncover this much larger network of alleged offenders after the arrest and conviction of two individuals that occurred in Montgomery County.

    The investigation uncovered approximately 500 Class C charges, 700 Class B charges, 22 Class A charges and multiple state jail felony charges. Due to the ongoing nature of this case, the final number of charges filed may vary.

    "I am incredibly proud of the dedication and diligence Texas Game Wardens devoted to this case," said Col. Ronald VanderRoest, TPWD law enforcement director. "An operation of this size and scope did not develop overnight and the widespread violations may have continued unchecked, posing an even greater threat to Texas’ deer populations and the integrity of the deer breeding industry, if not for their hard work.ā€

    TPWD has established science-based regulations and procedures to both manage deer breeding in Texas and prevent major disease outbreak, all with the goal of ensuring the long-term sustainability of native and captive deer in Texas.

    Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a fatal neurological disease and can devastate deer populations by silently spreading through direct animal contact and contaminated environments. Without close monitoring, illegal movement of captive deer increases the risk of introducing CWD to areas it is not known to exist, potentially leading to widespread outbreaks which will impact more than just the health of Texas deer.

    Yoskowitz also noted that with many rural Texans depending on hunting as their full or supplemental income, a large-scale outbreak of CWD could pose a significant threat to white-tailed deer hunting, which has a $9.6 billion annual economic contribution and could irreversibly alter Texas’ rich outdoor heritage.

    By circumventing requirements, disregarding regulations and falsifying official records, the suspects in this case intentionally placed the state’s entire deer population at risk, explained VanderRoest.

    "These individuals and ranches operated with impunity, repeatedly violating established laws designed to protect Texas’ natural resources and safeguard the state’s wildlife against disease transmission," VanderRoest said. "Systematic abuse of the regulatory framework governing the deer breeding industry will not be tolerated as we focus on our mission of conservation law enforcement."

    Class C pending charges include transferring deer without valid antemortem CWD tests, lack of identifying tattoos or valid transfer permits, failure to report mortality within the required seven-day period following detection and failure to submit CWD samples within seven days of collection. Additional pending charges include illegally selling and purchasing wild white-tailed deer and hunting deer in a closed season to falsify and circumvent CWD testing requirements by submitting samples from free-ranging wild white-tailed deer in place of breeder deer.

    Class B pending charges include possession of wild deer in breeder facilities to replace dead breeder deer, multiple Trap, Transport and Transplant (TTT) permit violations and criminal mischief for the destruction of county and state property.

    TTT charges stem from the illegal trapping, transporting and transplanting of free-ranging white-tailed deer for release for hunting, trapping previously released wild deer and reselling them, illegal operation of unregistered facilities participating in the same TTT activities and the undocumented and unauthorized transportation and release of unidentified fawns.

    Suspects face Class A charges for taking white-tailed deer without landowner consent and for hunting exotic animals from a public roadway or right of way.

    Pending state jail felony charges include tampering with government records falsifying information in TWIMS reports, which were certified as accurate. These incidents include falsifying tests through the submission of tissue samples from poached wild deer for CWD testing in place of the samples of breeder deer, tag swapping between breeder deer, and swapping tags between breeder deer and replacement deer captured in the wild.

    TPWD remains committed to enforcing these laws and will hold violators accountable. Texas Game Wardens will continue to pursue those who disregard regulations and illegally exploit Texas’ natural resources, putting both captive and native populations at risk.
    ​

    #2
    Great explanation for how CWD keeps popping up in random places

    Comment


      #3
      I'd love to see the list of names and ranches.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Hockley View Post
        I'd love to see the list of names and ranches.
        Federal Agents Raided the Canton Grand Safari Adventure on 2/19/2025. They would not speak on why they were there, but i'd venture to guess this may be it.

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          #5
          This is good to see, the GWs are doing their jobs ! As someone else posted a few days ago, I see a lot of disrespect for GWs on here, when all they are doing in most cases is what we pay them to do. I’m glad they caught the suspects above, now let’s hope they get the punishment they deserve.

          Comment


            #6
            Now to give them more than just a slap on the wrist.

            Comment


              #7
              Like I said last week ā€œstayed tuned, there is more to comeā€ā€¦

              Good work by all involved!!
              Greed is a very bad trait in a human.
              Last edited by PondPopper; 02-27-2025, 05:13 PM.

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                #8
                This is exactly why ALL trapping of a deer/exotic should be shut down. That crap leads to this kind of crap. It’s all about the $$$.

                These are not the only guys trapping and transferring wild wt deer in the state. You can bank on that. The others just haven’t been caught yet.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by crc View Post
                  Great explanation for how CWD keeps popping up in random places
                  Not so fast. I would venture to guess the deer being moved under the radar are released on ranches for stocking purposes where they can be made to disappear and never subjected to a cwd test.
                  Most CWD detections are being made in breed pens through routine testing.

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by Sika View Post

                    Not so fast. I would venture to guess the deer being moved under the radar are released on ranches for stocking purposes where they can be made to disappear and never subjected to a cwd test.
                    Most CWD detections are being made in breed pens through routine testing.
                    Yep, and many wild deer were being trapped off of low fenced, leased property (leased for hunting) and then transported to HF operations for the sole purpose of hunting.
                    Talk about the ultimate poacher.. These thieves need some serious jail time.

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                      #11
                      I’m glad to see our wardens are able to do what they are supposed to do instead of being sent off to police the border. We need them working our counties like they are supposed to be doing. Game wardens are game patrol officers not border patrol police.

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                        #12
                        Still hoping deer breeding will cease to be a thing at some point.

                        Sorry, not sorry.

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                          #13
                          Good to see Green Jeans doin something. We have 1400 acres, low fenced with neighbors who have 3 stands on 4 acres, 2 stands on 1 acre and 4 stands on 7 acres, all of which are illegal in Jim Hogg County. Green Jeans haven't been able to "catch them in the act".
                          Thank gosh they solved this case. I thought they'd done nothing the past 10years....

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Good work. As long as people will pay stupid money to hunt this will be an issue.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Snapperhead94 View Post
                              Good to see Green Jeans doin something. We have 1400 acres, low fenced with neighbors who have 3 stands on 4 acres, 2 stands on 1 acre and 4 stands on 7 acres, all of which are illegal in Jim Hogg County. Green Jeans haven't been able to "catch them in the act".
                              Thank gosh they solved this case. I thought they'd done nothing the past 10years....
                              Where is the law that says that is illegal in Jim Hogg County. There is no state law that says how many hunters you can have per acre. If it is I city limits thing wardens can not enforce it anyway

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