How to end NR Wyoming wilderness ban?

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Oct 3, 2017
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Anchorage, AK
not true, many NR hunt DIY without a guide up here, NOK. Which is pretty generous. You know what’s BS? I can’t represent my family in court because of a BS law degree. That degree is welfare for attorneys!

is that a better anology for you?

Let’s end this dance and someone finish it with the *you’re reply 😂
Logic isn't for everybody. Keep trying, bud.
 

wyogoat

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Jul 28, 2014
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Really the question is: if you have $150, why wouldn't you just hunt the wilderness?
Is it worth having a game conviction on your record? Regardless of the low fine?
That makes us just like the people we flame then, right?
It’s cheaper to make a friend in Wyoming! I joke that’s one reason I’m single, to leave the door open to marry into a Dall Sheep opportunity that needs no guide…regardless of how ugly he is.
 

tdhanses

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Is it worth having a game conviction on your record? Regardless of the low fine?
That makes us just like the people we flame then, right?
It’s cheaper to make a friend in Wyoming! I joke that’s one reason I’m single, to leave the door open to marry into a Dall Sheep opportunity that needs no guide…regardless of how ugly he is.
Is it even a game conviction, you have a valid tag? Just missing the babysitter.
 
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Is it even a game conviction, you have a valid tag? Just missing the babysitter.
This is a great point. When I asked a game warden about this a few years ago, he didn't explain what the citation would be, and I never asked. Even though his area contains wilderness, I think he said he'd never ticketed anyone for violating this law.
 

tdhanses

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Not sure how the trespassing to harvest game thing would read…
How is it trespassing? Federal government allowes all citizens full access or no one access, they don’t stipulate residency to access the lands and last I checked states have no authority over the federal lands access, just the right to hunt and who gets a tag.

So if you leave your tag across the line it’s not trespassing but as soon as you have a valid license to kill it’s trespassing? Or is it trespassing only if your successful and put your tag on an animal?

Probably why it’s a slap on the wrist and you get to keep the animal.
 
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wyogoat

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I think the intent portion would dictate the charge. Trespass was just what seemed most likely but it may not be.
Regardless, it would be a hunting related crime and I’d like to think we are all better than that.
And how long ago was that $150 “slap on the wrist?” Many statutes have updated their fines in the past few years.
 

tdhanses

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I think the intent portion would dictate the charge. Trespass was just what seemed most likely but it may not be.
Regardless, it would be a hunting related crime and I’d like to think we are all better than that.
It sounds like it’s just similar to a speeding ticket, you just pay a fine but more then likely just get a warning, yet keep the animal.
 

wyogoat

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Give it a shot! I think it’s more than that though. Don’t we ostracize those who trespass onto private land they don’t have permission to hunt? Or do we only ostracize them because the people that come to mind were monetizing the sport we are all passionate about? I still think we are all better than that.
Seems like a similar scenario even though the charge may read differently and the fine may be different and you’re potentially allowed to keep the illegally harvest animal.
 
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Back on the reciprocity argument, maybe not in this case, but it does work. Many years ago there was a push in Kansas to discontinue selling deer tags to Oklahoma residents as we were killing all of their deer (much like we Okies think Texans are doing the same now). I don't remember all the particulars of the "case", but when the powers that be in Oklahoma heard of this, they said fine, but Kansans will no longer be allowed to fish in Oklahoma.... The KS ban never went into effect. Just for fact checking sake, this was a long time ago and I may not have my facts straight, but it's a good story...lol.
 

FAAFO

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Really the question is: if you have $150, why wouldn't you just hunt the wilderness?
Every day you have to decide whether to follow the law or not, it’s up to you to decide. Is the 150 worth it to look at that animal on the wall knowing you broke the law to get it?
 

FAAFO

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Logic isn't for everybody. Keep trying, bud.
Don’t be so hard on yourself. The snow will get those ptarmigan lower on mountain for ya. Good luck this winter. If you make it to BOG dm me and I’ll buy you a beer. Or water if that’s your thing.
 
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Is it worth having a game conviction on your record? Regardless of the low fine?
That makes us just like the people we flame then, right?
It’s cheaper to make a friend in Wyoming! I joke that’s one reason I’m single, to leave the door open to marry into a Dall Sheep opportunity that needs no guide…regardless of how ugly he is.

It's like a speeding ticket.
 
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I think the intent portion would dictate the charge. Trespass was just what seemed most likely but it may not be.
Regardless, it would be a hunting related crime and I’d like to think we are all better than that.
And how long ago was that $150 “slap on the wrist?” Many statutes have updated their fines in the past few years.

You should read the regulation and do some research yourself.
 

Rotnguns

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I get tge state owns the wildlife, that was not the point. Clearly the state regulates the hunting of wildlife. But the state is regulating hunting wildlife on federal lands, specifically denying nonresident hunting on federal wilderness. The state simple lacks authority to do this. They can legally regulate access to state lands all they want, within the law, considering it is public land, sovthey have some limitations there too.
I look at it like this: the state can regulate what you hunt and where you hunt, but it cannot prevent you from accessing federal land. Your hunting license and big-game tags come from the state (except for federal waterfowl stamps, a different matter). As far as I know, there is no federal guarantee for your right to hunt on NF or BLM land.
 

tdhanses

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Give it a shot! I think it’s more than that though. Don’t we ostracize those who trespass onto private land they don’t have permission to hunt? Or do we only ostracize them because the people that come to mind were monetizing the sport we are all passionate about? I still think we are all better than that.
Seems like a similar scenario even though the charge may read differently and the fine may be different and you’re potentially allowed to keep the illegally harvest animal.
How could we ostracize anyone with a valid tag hunting federal lands open to all? That’s the rub, the state only has control of the animals, not the land, there can be no trespassing or land violation unless the feds close down the area to hunting which would be for all. This law seems to try and bypass federal management of a public resource, the land. The tag no one has an issue with, it’s the states right to give them out.

It would be different if that same tag wasn’t good on any other federal or state land or had to be issued through an outfitter or was a tag only good for outfitted hunts, CO has tags that are good for private land only hunt, WY could have done that with wilderness but they elected to issue a valid tag that is valid on 90% of the public land but then try to limit access to 10% in the area it is valid for.

Their right is to limit the access to have a valid tag to an animal.
 

tdhanses

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Every day you have to decide whether to follow the law or not, it’s up to you to decide. Is the 150 worth it to look at that animal on the wall knowing you broke the law to get it?
So you never speed? Check your phone while driving?
 
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