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Hunters who trespassed on Fort Riley forced to pay thousands in restitution
Three men charged with violating federal hunting laws pleaded guilty recently to illegally hunting whitetail deer on Fort Riley where explosives are discharged during training exercises.
U.S. Attorney for Kansas Stephen McAllister says Gregory Frikken, James Nunley and Michael J. Smith each admitted to trespassing on federal property and illegally harvesting trophy whitetail deer in violation of the Lacey Act. McAllister says the three men knowingly entered a prohibited part of the Army base for unlawful and selfish reasons, calling the men foolish for potentially putting themselves in danger.
By TIM HRENCHIR | The Topeka Capital-Journal | Published: February 10, 2021 (Tribune News Service) Three men were recently sentenced to each serve three years of unsupervised probation and pay fines and restitution after they illegally harvested eight whitetail deer, three of them trophy class, on the grounds of Fort Riley. U.S. Attorney for Kansas Stephen McAllister said in a news release Tuesday that Gregory J. Frikken, James C. Nunley and Michael J. Smith were sentenced after pleading guilty to federal charges of illegally hunting whitetail deer on a part of Fort Riley where explosives are discharged during training exercises. The three admitted they trespassed on federal property and illegally harvested trophy whitetail deer from that property, all in violation of the federal Lacey Act, McAllister said.
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