Below is a news release from the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. For 2024-2025, Fiocchi partnered with the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation to increase the visibility of poaching incidents in an effort to reduce poaching.
On September 30, Idaho Fish and Game Senior Conservation Officer Kolby White received a call from an archery hunter who discovered four quarters of a harvested elk alongside a road near Geneva in Bear Lake County.
Officer White investigated the report and confirmed that the quarters had been dumped on US Forest Service Road 148 at the Dry Creek Motorized Trailhead near Dip Creek.
“Someone went through a lot of work to get the meat all the way to the road just to let it rot. Some of the quarters were still in game bags,” said White. “It’s possible that the person made a mistake with meat care, especially with this unseasonably warm weather, and they simply dumped the meat after they realized it had spoiled.”
Regardless of why the meat was discarded on the side of the road, it is considered waste of game which is illegal. The responsibility of a hunter is to remove the required portions of meat from a game animal and then properly care for that meat to prevent spoilage.
White said that if a hunter accidentally wastes meat through improper care, he or she should contact Idaho Fish and Game to report it. “It is never acceptable to just dump spoiled meat or a carcass on the side of the road,” said White.
If anyone has any information regarding this case or any wildlife violation, please contact Officer Kolby White in Montpelier at 208-204-3921 or the Citizens Against Poaching hotline at 1-800-632-5999. Callers may remain anonymous and those with information leading to an arrest are eligible for rewards.
(Photo credit: Idaho Department of Fish and Game)