Duck Hunting Guide Fined $25,000

Jeffrey M. Anderson, Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Wisconsin, announced that Jeremy Schreiner, 33, Durand, Wis., was sentenced yesterday in U.S. District Court in Madison for violating the Lacey Act during guided duck hunts on the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife Refuge. According to an indictment filed on April 19, 2017, Schreiner operated a guided hunting business, which included autumn guided duck hunts on the Mississippi River in the National Wildlife Refuge.  Schreiner was one of three guides charged with allowing undercover U.S. Fish & Wildlife Special Agents (posing as clients) to exceed their daily bag limit of six ducks in one day, during the guided hunts.  Each guide then transported by boat the illegally taken waterfowl to boat landings in western Wisconsin, in violation of the Lacey Act.  The other two guides were Matt Raley and Tony Toye.  All three guides pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor Lacey Act violation. Raley was sentenced on August 17, 2017, and Toye was sentenced on September 29, 2017, both before U.S. Magistrate Judge Stephen Crocker.  Pursuant to the terms of their plea agreements, each of the three guides paid a $25,000 fine to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and received a two-year ban of all hunting and guiding on the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife Refuge, effective immediately upon sentencing. A DOJ press release on the case can be accessed here.

Mark Allenbaugh serves as President and Chief Research Officer of SentencingStats.com, Inc.. He is a former staff attorney for the U.S. Sentencing Commission, and a co-editor of "Sentencing, Sanctions, and Corrections: Federal and State Law, Policy, and Practice" (2nd ed., Foundation Press, 2002). Mark is widely regarded as a national expert in Federal sentencing guidelines, analysis and strategy.

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