“When the driver noticed the birds did not disperse—he drove off, realizing what he had just done,” the post reads.
The drive-by shooting took place west of Cherokee, and the hunters immediately called the authorities. ODWC’s District 8 Captain Ben Bickerstaff and Garfield County Game Warden Blake Cottrill investigated the incident.
When questioned by the game wardens, the occupants of the truck said they were just trying to “scare those cranes off the wheat.” However, as ODWC points out in the Facebook post, “it wasn’t even their crop of wheat to worry about” as they did not own the property where they fired the shots.
Bickerstaff seized their Ruger .204 rifle as evidence, and he cited the individual for shooting from a public right-of-way. The crime carries a fine of between $500 and $1,500 for a first conviction, and Bickerstaff says it could also carry a one- to 10-year revocation of hunting privileges. He says additional charges—including reckless discharge of a firearm—could be filed against the shooter at the discretion of the state’s assistant District Attorney, as a criminal case is now pending.
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“The charging authority is ultimately going to be the assistant D.A., and if she decides more charges are warranted, we’ll do whatever is necessary to make that happen,” says Bickerstaff. He adds that he didn’t push for additional charges in the citation he filed on Sunday because the shooter expressed their remorse and seemed to grasp the gravity of their mistake.
“By the time we talked to [him], the reality of what they could have done had really set in on [him],” Bickerstaff says. “There’s a difference between getting a ticket from the game warden and spending the rest of your life in prison for killing somebody. I made sure to impress that upon them.”
Stay Safe When Field Hunting
It’s common for waterfowlers to set large spreads of ultra-realistic decoys in fields. On occasion would-be poachers mistake these spreads for the real thing and shoot into them from roadways, usually with rifles. This is extremely dangerous since hunters typically hide within the spread, using the decoys to help conceal their layout blinds.
When field hunting, it’s wise to park trucks where would-be poachers can see them, but birds can’t. It’s also wise to keep an eye on roads when field hunting and note any trucks that slow down to eye the spread. And always report people who illegally shoot at birds from the road. It could save someone’s life.