Rocker Ted Nugent pleads

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Rock star Ted Nugent, a 1970s guitar hero for hits including "Cat Scratch Fever," has recently created a successful second career as an advocate for hunting and outdoor ethics.

His television show, "Spirit of the Wild," is a four-time "Golden Moose" award winner on the Outdoor Channel. He has used his celebrity status to help promote better pay and working conditions for California game wardens, and consistently rails against poachers and other wildlife criminals.

So it was with a double take of disbelief that two California game wardens sat down in February to watch the show, and witnessed Nugent allegedly violate several California hunting laws.

The Feb. 9 episode showed Nugent killing a young male deer with bow and arrow near the El Dorado County town of Somerset.

The wardens were alarmed because the footage appeared to show Nugent killing a "spike" buck, or one whose antlers have not yet grown long enough to fork. Killing such a young deer is illegal in California.

It also appeared to show the deer feeding on a powdery material spread on the ground before it was shot.

The Department of Fish and Game launched an investigation, spokesman Patrick Foy said, which later revealed this material to be a commercial deer bait. It is illegal in California to hunt with bait.

"We looked at it and we just shook our heads, saying 'I can't believe he actually aired this episode,' " Foy said. "We were all really disappointed to see this happen with a guy who is a representative of hunters."

Nugent was later charged with 11 misdemeanors related to events that unfolded on his own television show, Foy said.

On Friday, following a plea deal with the Yuba County district attorney, Nugent pleaded no contest to two misdemeanors in Yuba Superior Court: illegally baiting a deer, and failing to have a deer tag signed by a government official after a kill.

Nugent did not appear in court. He was represented by Yuba City attorney Jack Kopp, who did not respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. The 61-year-old rocker, who lives in China Springs, Texas, was penalized with a $1,750 fine.

Attempts to reach Nugent and his business representatives Tuesday were unsuccessful.

The hunt occurred in September 2009 but was not broadcast until February. The charges were filed in Yuba County because Nugent was accompanied by a guide and cameraman on the hunt, and that is where they live.

The guide, Ross Albert Patterson, pleaded no contest to taking an animal illegally and was fined $1,225.

Foy said the investigation revealed that Nugent killed three deer on different occasions in El Dorado County using bait.

Nugent, long an outspoken defender of hunting and gun rights, has been a board member of the National Rifle Association for 15 years. Ironically, he wrote an opinion article on one of the association's websites in 2008 arguing that hunters send the wrong message when they constantly tout their ethics.

He said this "does nothing but cast a dark cloud over the entire hunting community as if 'ethical' is a rarity and must be emphasized. ? Ethical behavior is still expected where I live, work and play. There is no need to claim it."

Nugent's violations have caused an uproar in the hunting community. Baiting is a controversial practice, even in states where it is allowed under certain conditions.

As early as October, some observant hunters on an Internet forum suspected there was a problem when they noted a description of the hunt in question that appeared online. It included a commercial bait in the list of gear Nugent used.

"I've heard from a couple of our members about it, and they are, quite frankly, shocked," said Jim Lidberg, a board member of the California Deer Association, a hunting and conservation group. "I'm very disappointed in him. He's been a very strong advocate for hunters' rights and really looked up to by a lot of people."
 
Regardless if Mr. Nugent was using the services of an
outfitter/guide, it is his responsibility to be familiar
with the game laws governing the state he is hunting in.
There is no excuse for him not to know that baiting and
killing a spike are illegal in CA and for his guide to
have allowed him to do so is equally reprehensible.
I hope Mr. Nugent will use this incident as a learning
moment and redouble his effort on behalf of hunters and
wildlife.
Sometimes being a passionate and vocal advocate can be a
"#####", especially when you have been caught on the wrong
side of your advocacy.

ELDORADO
 

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