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    Another TV hunter busted

    Alaska
    Published September 15, 2015
    Associated Press
    Facebook19 Twitter112 Email Print

    The host of the Sportsman Channel hunting show "The Syndicate" was charged Monday with two felonies related to poaching in northwest Alaska.
    Karen Loeffler, the U.S. attorney in Alaska, said at a news conference that grizzly bears, moose, caribou and Dall sheep were illegally killed in the Noatak National Preserve with the illegal kills ending up on the cable television show.
    "The charges show five years of documented, illegal take of wildlife involving over two dozen big game animals," Loeffler said.
    There were at least four hunts conducted for the show in Alaska over that time span, said Steven Skrocki, the lead prosecutor.
    "All of the Alaska hunts that appeared on his show were conducted illegally," he said, adding they "were edited to appear not illegal."
    Loeffler noted that various types of hunting, including commercial and subsistence hunting, is allowed in the preserve, north of the Arctic Circle.
    "This is an amazing state, and what we have here is very inviting to people from outside and should be," she said. "We just want people to do it legally."
    Prosecutors charged a host of the show, Clark W. Dixon, 41, of Hazlehurst, Mississippi, with two felony violations of the Lacey Act. The others who were charged, from Alaska, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana and Nevada, face misdemeanors or ticket offenses.
    A message left by The Associated Press at Dixon's home Monday evening was not immediately returned. Sportsman Channel spokesman Tom Caraccioli said the channel has no comment.
    Among those charged is Dixon's father, Charles W. Dixon, 70, of Brookhaven, Mississippi, and authorities are seeking forfeiture of his aircraft.
    Clark Dixon is charged with taking a grizzly bear for a fee in 2010 without being a licensed and registered big game hunting guide. He's also charged with conducting an illegal outfitting operation since 2009. Prosecutors say he also lied about Alaska residency to take advantage of hunting privileges for locals.
    Two production companies and another individual were cited for filming and airing video without a commercial permit.
    Several personalities associated with Alaska-based reality or outdoors television shows have had brushes with the law, including former rock star and gun rights advocate Ted Nugent.
    In 2012, Nugent paid a $10,000 fine and was placed on two years' probation for transporting a black bear he illegally killed. The kill occurred in 2009 during a bow hunt that had been filmed for Nugent's Outdoor channel television show "Spirit of the Wild."
    Former Miami Dolphins running back Larry Csonka was fined $5,000 in 2006 for filming his "North to Alaska" cable television outdoor show on National Forest Service land without obtaining a special use permit.
    More recently, Jim West, a hunting guide who appeared on Animal Planet's "Wild West Alaska," pleaded guilty last year to four misdemeanor hunting or guiding violations.
    And the family associated with the Discovery Channel's "Alaskan Bush People" face residency problems on two fronts. The state has cited the six family members for illegally applying for the yearly oil revenue check residents receive once they meet certain requirements, such as living in the state for a certain amount of time. The family members also face minor citations for not meeting residency requirements for resident hunting and fishing licenses.

    #2
    That show wasn't any good anyway. To think he had to resort to illegal activities to produce what he did is sad.

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      #3
      People like that put a black mark in people's minds about hunters.

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        #4
        With all that being alleged, why only two charges?

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          #5
          They weren't called "The Syndicate" for nothing.

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            #6
            I think they were wrongfully "Profiled" because of their Name, "Syndicated"......

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              #7
              Lol

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                #8
                There have been many cases like this. what's crazy is they think they can get away with it when they air it on TV.

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                  #9
                  Perhaps their was just some negligence and misinterpretation of the local laws and requirements?

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                    #10
                    wait... so the Alaskan Bush People aren't really from Alaska?

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                      #11
                      Greed

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                        #12
                        God ole Ted Nugent was caught too!

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                          #13
                          I doubt they would put their jobs and freedom in jeopardy for poaching.

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                            #14
                            Originally posted by Adgerc15 View Post
                            Perhaps their was just some negligence and misinterpretation of the local laws and requirements?
                            This ^

                            What did they actually do wrong? Was this one of those paperwork type issues or were they hunting places they shouldn't even be? Big difference in between the 2 and how my view of offenses are.

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                              #15
                              I don't know anything about this case but when we go on an outfitter's guided hunt we are pretty vulnerable to getting caught in violation if our outfitter does not either know the law himself or doesn't have integrity. It is pretty hard to check out someone from afar and if these guys have been doing it many years as it appears that they have, even good references might lead you astray.

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