Photo Courtesy of harrycollinsphotography_envato
After an eight-year investigation, Wyoming Game and Fish Department officials recently charged ten people with faking Wyoming residency to skip the nonresident waiting line, and save a ton of money in drawing resident hunting tags.
The Facts
The investigation began in 2018 with reports of illegal hunting tied to an outfitter operation in Sweetwater County. Over several years, game wardens in Wyoming worked with officials in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Utah to gather evidence. Search warrants were executed in multiple states, and dozens of wildlife violations were uncovered.
At the center of the case was a man named Sean Thomas of Farson. Authorities say Thomas and others made false statements to obtain Wyoming resident licenses. Under those false licenses, they harvested elk, deer, pronghorn, black bears, and other game animals in southwest Wyoming.
For his role, Thomas was fined a total of about $9,000, ordered to pay $6,000 in restitution, sentenced to jail time (with most of it suspended), and lost his hunting, fishing, and trapping privileges for twenty years. Others connected to the case faced similar charges and penalties.