Instead of State Record Kansas Man Faces Charges After Entering Monster Buck Contest

   02.12.12

Instead of State Record Kansas Man Faces Charges After Entering Monster Buck Contest

If you are going to poach a deer its probably best not to announce it to the public.

David V. Kent took down a monster 14 point buck.  According to reports by the Wichita Eagle, the deer measured 198 7/8 inches on the Boon and Crocket system; that would have gotten him a state record in Kansas.

Kent brought in the animal’s antlers to the Monster Buck Classic in Topeka Kansas, claiming they were from a deer killed in the northeast part of the state.

He was taken into custody by the Kansas police and the antlers where confiscated after officials compared the antlers to those of deer photographed alive by an Osage County trail camera in the fall.

This is third time a buck with antlers large enough to qualify for the state record hasn’t been recognized by Kansas officials.  Officially the record has stood for 35 years.

Original press release issued by the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism on February 10, 2012:

On Jan. 27-29, Mossy Oak Properties of the Heartland presented the inaugural Monster Buck Classic (We are Kansas) event at the Kansas ExpoCentre in Topeka. The event was designed to promote deer hunting and outdoor recreation in Kansas and to provide Kansas hunters with the latest information and equipment related to deer hunting.

In addition, the event featured a Monster Buck Contest, open to all Kansas residents, in which hunters could enter officially-scored bucks, with prizes offered to the largest deer in typical and non-typical categories for both white-tailed and mule deer. Fortunately for all law-abiding hunters, the contest helped expose the suspected illegal shooting of a big buck.

One entry, which would have potentially been a new Kansas state record, drew suspicion of Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) law enforcement officials, and after investigation, David V. Kent was charged with poaching the deer.

On Feb. 1, eight charges were filed against Kent by Osage County Attorney Brandon Jones in the District Court of Osage County, Fourth Judicial District, including criminal discharge of a firearm, criminal hunting, illegally hunting with an artificial light, hunting outside of legal hours, illegal hunting during a closed season, using an illegal caliber for taking big game, illegal hunting from a vehicle, and hunting without a valid deer permit.

Kent has been summoned to appear in Osage County District Court in Lyndon, Kan., on March 1, 2012, at 9 a.m.

“As a developer of the Mossy Oak Properties brand in Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, and Iowa, I strongly condemn this type of behavior,” said Brian D. Smith, CEO of Mossy Oak Properties of the Heartland and founder of the Kansas Big Buck Classic. “In fact, we believe in the stiffest penalties possible for poaching, and we played a strategic part in exposing this case. We cooperated 100 percent.”

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