Keep it classy Hollywood

guywhofishes

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[h=1]Hunting show host charged with poaching in Alaska[/h]

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The host of the Sportsman Channel hunting show The Syndicate was charged Monday with poaching in northwest Alaska.

U.S. Attorney Karen Loeffler said grizzly bears, moose, caribou and Dall sheep were illegally killed in the Noatak National Preserve, and some of the illegal kills ended up on the cable television show.
Prosecutors charged a host of the show, Clark W. Dixon, 41, of Hazelhurst, Miss., with two felony violations of the Lacey Act.
Dixon is charged with taking a grizzly bear for a fee in 2010 without being a licensed and registered big game hunting guide. He's also charged with conducting an illegal outfitting operation since 2009.
Two production companies and another individual were cited for filming and airing video without a commercial permit.
Sportsman Channel spokesman Tom Caraccioli says the channel has no comment.
Several personalities associated with Alaska-based reality or outdoors television shows have had brushes with the law, including former rock star and gun rights advocate Ted Nugent.
In 2012, Nugent paid a $10,000 fine and was placed on two years' probation for transporting a black bear he illegally killed. The kill occurred in 2009 during a bow hunt that had been filmed for Nugent's Outdoor channel television show Spirit of the Wild.
Another star, former Miami Dolphins running back Larry Csonka, was fined $5,000 in 2006 for filming his North to Alaska cable television outdoor show on National Forest Service land without obtaining a special use permit.
More recently, Jim West, a hunting guide who appeared on Animal Planet's Wild West Alaska, pleaded guilty last year to four misdemeanor hunting or guiding violations.
And the family associated with the Discovery Channel's Alaskan Bush People face residency problems on two fronts. The state has cited the six family members for illegally applying for the yearly oil check residents receive once they meet certain requirements, such as living in the state for a certain amount of time each year. The family members also face minor citations for not meeting residency requirements for resident hunting and fishing licenses.
 


Pinecone

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That bush people show is efffed up in so many ways. Way to many swingin sticks, to be livin together
 

deleted_account

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That bush people show is efffed up in so many ways. Way to many swingin sticks, to be livin together

I'll watch for a few minutes when I flip by it, but man do I feel bad for those kids. they are all cookoo for cocoa puffs. the one dude that climbs trees and punches fish makes lol tho
 

Pinecone

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Agreed, or when they don't tie up there boat/ lose crab pots #thewolfpack

- - - Updated - - -

#juanrshouldjointhewolfpack
 


DirtyMike

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I watched a couple episodes. Seems to me the old man gets sick or hurt every time they're doing manual labor. They're accent is the worst.
 

Captain Ahab

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I'll watch for a few minutes when I flip by it, but man do I feel bad for those kids. they are all cookoo for cocoa puffs. the one dude that climbs trees and punches fish makes lol tho

A lot of the stuff is somewhat of an act. If you research that family they are actually pretty well off with many having book deals and other sources of income. They play the game for the coin is how I see it.
 

johnr

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Agreed, or when they don't tie up there boat/ lose crab pots #thewolfpack

- - - Updated - - -

#juanrshouldjointhewolfpack

I might be interested in this wolf pack, does it get me even more chicks than my Yeti? Would I have to like easterners, or southerners? Can I be a Vikings fan still? Would my wife be able to still cook and clean for me?
So many questions, and really I have no idea of what you guys are talking about.

Seems I might be in over my head, which is usually the case.:;:huh
 

Pinecone

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stick with the yeti, although if a guy was stuck in the woods for 8-9 months, #motherofthewolfpack
 


svnmag

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At least they don't make race cars out of their own poop.
 

NodakBuckeye

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No but they will probably chink their cabin walls with it, "The dukey's a hazzard" I can only watch that one for a few minutes at a time. Alaska the Last Frontier, more of a guilt trip most of the time. Oh I really love being out here on my own, over and over and everytime something dies for food, just about every freaking person goes into a soul searching speech of how bad it feels to kill my food, but it is something I just endure.... puke, grow a set or go live in town. Some cool stuff on the show but quit apologizing for living the way you want!
 

Enslow

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Things we see on tv arent real. Momma said
 

Bed Wetter

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Things we see on tv arent real. Momma said

Precisely.

I'm disappointed in you all. The takeaway from the "journalism" Guy cited should not be that all TV personalities are closet 'Sconies (even though they are). You're missing the forest for the trees. Quite literally, if you dig a hole, catch a fish, skin a deer, start a fire, or turn on a camera in the middle of Bumfucknowhere, AK, a bureaucrat will show up out of nowhere to tell you you're doing it wrong.

The question you should be asking is, "If I take a shit in the woods, how many felonies will I be committing?" There was a time I believed in the system and wanted to be a game warden. Bullet = dodged.
 

JayKay

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Precisely.

I'm disappointed in you all. The takeaway from the "journalism" Guy cited should not be that all TV personalities are closet 'Sconies (even though they are). You're missing the forest for the trees. Quite literally, if you dig a hole, catch a fish, skin a deer, start a fire, or turn on a camera in the middle of Bumfucknowhere, AK, a bureaucrat will show up out of nowhere to tell you you're doing it wrong.

The question you should be asking is, "If I take a shit in the woods, how many felonies will I be committing?" There was a time I believed in the system and wanted to be a game warden. Bullet = dodged.

I agree Slim, and I'll add to your speech.

The law is the law (although, certainly there are more laws than there used to be, but that's fodder for another discussion). One of the big differences is our connectivity. People used to kill each other. Planes used to fall out of the sky. Floods and tornadoes and volcanoes and tsunamis used to happen. The difference is that now it all happens in our living room - live, breaking coverage.

We talk about how the world is going to hell in a handbag. I don't disagree somewhat, but there isn't really anything new under the sun. I mean, 200 years ago Fukushima wouldn't have happened, but the huge volcanic eruption in Iceland a five years ago was a natural event. People used to go to war, crimes used to happen, etc.

As far as the Alaskan Bush family is concerned, I can't help myself. I have to watch. I wonder what that burly kid puts on his leather jacket, to make it waterproof.

And yes, Dad seems to come up with some malady about once a week.

That is all.
 


Account Deleted

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[h=3]TV host sentenced for hunting violations in Crazy Mountains[/h] By MTN NewsConnect


[h=6][/h]
Alwine is seen with one of the illegally taken deer.
[h=6][/h]
Pictured with evidence from left to right: FWP Region 3 Investigator Chad Murphy, FWP Warden Drew Scott, and Washington Department of Fish & Game Warden David Spurbeck.
[h=6][/h]
Evidence in Alwine case.

BOZEMAN - A host of the cable TV hunting show “Trophy State of Mind,” was convicted and sentenced Wednesday for hunting violations that occurred on private property in the Crazy Mountains east of Clyde Park.
Matthew Alwine pled guilty in Park County Justice Court to five counts of failing to obtain landowner permission while hunting game animals, one count of unlawful possession of a trophy white-tailed deer, and one count of unlawful possession of a bull elk. The offenses took place 2010 to 2014.
The judge imposed $11,180 in fines, restitution and court costs, and revoked Alwine’s hunting privileges for four years. Alwine also had to forfeit all the animal parts that were seized during the investigation which included five elk and three deer.
An anonymous tip kicked off the year-long investigation. It was discovered that Alwine, of Chewelah, WA, had been hunting for years on private property in the Crazy Mountains without landowners’ permission. Some of the illegal hunts were featured on “Trophy State of Mind” and other videos Alwine produced.
As part of the investigation, in March of 2015 Regional Investigator Chad Murphy and Livingston area Game Warden Drew Scott traveled to Spokane and worked with the Washington Department of Fish & Game. They interviewed Alwine and collected evidence of the wildlife crimes including antlers, mounts and capes.
“Warden Scott did an excellent job in the investigation in identifying animals Alwine and his associates had killed over the years," Murphy said. "He worked with his local landowners and ranch managers to locate the kill sites.”
Other suspects charged in the investigation include Dalton Harum and Zach Samek (both from Washington). Harum was fined $170 for failing to obtain landowner permission and forfeited a set of elk antlers from an elk he killed in 2014. Samek was fined $185 for criminal trespassing.
Matthew Alwine also pled guilty on Sept. 2 in Missoula County Justice Court to unlawfully obtaining Montana resident hunting licenses in 2014. He was fined $1,035.
“Greed and ego are generally the driving forces behind those that commit multiple wildlife violations," Murphy said. "That was especially evident in this case with Alwine boasting about his kills within the same day on his social media sites.”
 

guywhofishes

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I hate seeing landowners be victimized by people with greed and ego. :D

disclaimer: I am a landowner and would want them prosecuted if they were bagging animals on my property.
 
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Enslow

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Bragging about fish and game catches and kills on social media is terrible.
 

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