Wyoming rancher sentenced in prairie dog killings
By CLAIR
JOHNSON
Of The Gazette Staff
A Wyoming rancher who admitted illegally
poisoning thousands of prairie dogs
on federal land in Montana apologized in
court Tuesday as he was fined and
sentenced to probation.
"I
acknowledge this mistake,'' said Stanford M. Clinton Jr., 73, of
Recluse,
Wyo. Clinton owns the Three Bar Ranch in Wyoming and Montana. "This
was not
a malicious act. I'm genuinely sorry it happened.''
U.S.
Magistrate Richard Anderson ordered Clinton to spend one year on
supervised
probation, fined him $1,500, ordered restitution of $3,500 and
directed him
to perform 200 hours of community service work in Montana.
Clinton
pleaded guilty in February through his attorney to a misdemeanor
charge of
unauthorized range treatment on lands administered by the Bureau
of Land
Management.
Because of declining populations, prairie dogs are a
candidate species for
federal protection under the Endangered Species Act.
Prairie dogs are
considered a keystone grasslands species because so many
other species
depend on them for food and shelter. Ranchers, however, view
the rodents as
pests because of their burrowing and grass-clipping
habits.
Clinton's appearance in court Tuesday was his first in the
case. The judge
did not require him to appear in person when he was charged
or when he
pleaded guilty.
Clinton wasn't going to have to appear
for sentencing, either, but Anderson
changed his mind and ordered the
rancher to appear.
Using a large map, Clinton told the judge he was
"positive'' the sprayer he
had hired did not intend to treat BLM lands.
Clinton said he should have
conducted a survey to identify boundaries and
supervised the job. "It was
careless and negligent not to do so,'' he
said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Leif Johnson disagreed with
Clinton's
characterization of the events as an accident. "This was a willful
poisoning
of prairie dogs on federal lands,'' he said.
Anderson
said Clinton appeared to be denying any criminal conduct in the
case by
"calling this whole thing a bad mistake'' and gave him the option
of
withdrawing his plea and going to trial. Clinton stuck to his guilty
plea.
Johnson said Clinton asked the BLM's Miles City field office
in June 2000
for permission to poison prairie dogs on BLM lands. The agency
denied the
request and warned Clinton that unauthorized control would
violate BLM
rules.
In the summer of 2000, Clinton hired a
spraying service. Johnson said
Clinton took the sprayer to the prairie dog
towns, which straddled the
boundary between his ranch and BLM property, and
directed him to poison the
entire complex of towns.
About 58
acres were BLM lands, the government said. BLM investigators found
evidence
of poisoning more than a half-mile within the BLM boundary. Johnson
said
thousands of prairie dogs died. The prairie dogs have since repopulated
the
area, he said.
The case did not affect Clinton's grazing leases,
said BLM Special Agent
Brian Cornell.
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