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Missouri's Department of Conservation mounted a successful taxidermy sting.
Missouri’s Department of Conservation mounted a successful taxidermy sting.
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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — The sign on the storefront read “Craig’s Taxidermy,” and the hunters who brought in their prized deer, turkey and fish got them back stuffed and mounted.

But they also got secretly recorded. And ultimately, many of them were busted for allegedly breaking Missouri wildlife laws.

The Department of Conservation announced Monday that it had discovered 425 wildlife violations committed by 68 people who brought animals into Craig’s Taxidermy in the rural southern Missouri town of Birch Tree.

It turns out “Craig” was an undercover agent. The state Conservation Department set up the undercover taxidermy shop in 2008 after receiving numerous complaints about illegal hunting in the area, said Gary Cravens, the department’s regional supervisor for law enforcement operations. The state agency closed Craig’s Taxidermy early this year — but only after its hidden video and audio recorders captured plenty of evidence.

As customers came into the shop, “we were listening to them,” Cravens said. “They were bragging about how they shot out of so-and-so’s yard or off the road, or claiming it as archery even though it had a bullet hole.”

As it turned out, 62 percent of the wildlife brought in for mounting at the undercover taxidermy shop had been killed illegally in some manner, Cravens said.

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