Roger and trail cam

Roger and trail cam

David Sparks Ph.D.
David Sparks Ph.D.
Yesterday we did a story about the issue where Virginia resident Josh Hylander took up with a local game warden who had stolen his game camera. More thoughts coming. David Sparks Sportsman's Spotlight. You can only speculate why, but a local game warden in Virginia walked onto Josh Highlander's property and stole his game camera. Ostensibly, the thought was no game camera less chance for Josh to harvest a deer. I asked Fish and Game official Roger Phillips if that was normal. Speaker2: Boy, there's an interesting one… lot to unpack there. And this is getting into some sticky territory. But the first and basic one is we have very few rules forbidding the use of trail cameras. And so that one's pretty straightforward. None of our officers are going to come and take your trail camera if they think it was used in the commission of a criminal act or a wildlife violation, then that could be taken as evidence. But just the fact that there's a trail camera sitting there, I don't think anybody has anything to worry about there. Speaker1: All right. That's perfect. Perfect. That's all. Oh, man, you're off the hook. Wow. I was getting. Speaker2: Nervous on that one. David, I got I got to tell you, I was sweating that one. Speaker1: Well, you done good, bud. Appreciate you help. Okay. In this case, Roger wasn't worried so much about the truth of his answer. But like everything these days, worried about saying the wrong thing, which, by the way, he didn't.
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