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State urged not to end game pacts

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It will be easier for big-time poachers to avoid arrest if South Dakota ends its cooperative law-enforcement agreements with federal wildlife agents, a former state Game, Fish & Parks Department law-enforcement coordinator said Tuesday.
Dave McCrea of Pierre, a 25-year GF&P employee who retired last year as staff coordinator of the agency's law enforcement, said he hopes the governor's office will drop its threat to end agreements with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. Without federal assistance, resources and authority, it will be harder for state wildlife officers to break up poaching rings and catch unscrupulous hunting guides that often operate across state lines, McCrea said.
"Our wildlife resource, sportsmen and sportswomen and the citizens of the state are going to suffer if we don't continue to work with the feds," McCrea said. "I don't know how we'll bring these bad guys to justice, because so many of them operate across state lines."
Rob Skjonsberg, chief of staff for Gov. Mike Rounds, is terminating the memorandums of agreement (MOAs) between GF&P and the FWS for cooperative law enforcement. Skjonsberg is fulfilling a threat he issued earlier this year if FWS officials did not transfer or fire controversial federal game warden Bob Prieksat of Pierre.
Skjonsberg met in March at the South Dakota Capitol with Benito Perez, acting chief of FWS law enforcement in Washington, D.C. Skjonsberg later said that Perez told him he would respond to the state's demand in 60 days.
That period was up Friday. And Skjonsberg said then that the deal was done. He reaffirmed that Tuesday, adding that FWS officials should have acted if they believed the loss of the cooperative agreements would be so damaging.
"As of 5:15 p.m. today - four days after their own self-imposed timeline - I still haven't heard from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service," Skjonsberg said Tuesday. "Apparently, they're not too worried about widespread poaching."
FWS regional law-enforcement supervisor Gary Mowad of Lakewood, Colo., said Tuesday that the MOAs benefit both the state and the federal government by pooling resources and making wildlife law enforcement more effective.
"It's not a one-way relationship. The MOAs benefit both parties," he said. "I think the state will lose a great deal by terminating these agreements."
Of the eight states in this FWS region, only North Dakota does not have MOAs with the FWS, Mowad said. A 30-day written notice is required to end the MOAs, and Mowad said he hadn't received that notice Tuesday. Skjonsberg acknowledged that, adding that the notice would go out this week to begin the countdown.
Asked if the FWS was considering firing or reassigning Prieksat, Mowad said: "We can't answer that for you. When it comes down to what is occurring with Bob, all I can really say is that there is a process in place, and we're following the process."
A FWS professional accountability team has been investigating the complaints against Prieksat, which include allegations that he fabricated violations against hunters and landowners, was verbally abusive and used profanity.
Mowad has called Prieksat one of his best wildlife agents. McCrea, who has known Prieksat since college, said the federal agent could improve his people skills. But allegations that paint Prieksat as an abusive tyrant are not credible, McCrea said.
"I've worked in the field with Bob. And he does not spit in people's faces. He does not use profanity. He doesn't kick over decoys. He doesn't ever lose control," McCrea said. "Whether a person likes Bob Prieksat or not, he is an outstanding wildlife law enforcement officer, one of the best criminal investigators I've ever worked with in my life. He provides an invaluable service to the citizens of our state."
Skjonsberg said he has ample evidence to the contrary, and intends to continue his campaign to get Prieksat replaced. Skjonsberg said Perez told him in a telephone conversation recently that the agency might not be able to respond by the May 25 deadline.
"I simply told him that, from our end, we needed to pursue the original deal," he said. "Just because you tell the banker you're going to miss a payment, doesn't mean they won't repossess your truck."
Contact Kevin Woster at 394-8413 or kevin.woster@rapidcityjournal.com

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