Decatur man sentenced in illegal hunting case

A southwestern Michigan man faces prison time and can no longer hunt in the state after pleading guilty to charges stemming from illegal deer poaching, authorities said.

Justin Ernst, 33, pleaded guilty last week in Van Buren County to one count each of possession of a firearm and obtaining a hunting license when ineligible and three counts of illegal taking/possessing whitetail deer, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources said.

The Decatur man was charged last year after DNR officials seized nine trophy whitetail bucks from a barn and traced the items to Ernst.

Officers who searched Ernst’s vehicle found two shotguns, a crossbow, a bloody crossbow bolt and a handheld spotlight, which was stashed under the driver’s seat.

The DNR says that Ernst is suspected of driving his truck through fields to illegally shoot the deer, ruining property and crops in the process.

He was given a lifetime hunting revocation, ordered to pay $25,000 in reimbursement and forfeited seized items. He is slated to serve between 18 months and five years in a Michigan Department of Corrections facility, state officials said.

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