3 Idaho big game guides indicted for illegal mountain lion hunting in Idaho and Wyoming

POCATELLO, Idaho — Three people were indicted Wednesday on nearly a dozen counts related to the illegal big game outfitting and guiding of mountain lions.

44-year-old Chad Michael Kulow, of Kuna, 44-year-old Andrea May Major, of Kuna, and 47-year-old LaVoy Linton Eborn, of Paris, Idaho, face charges of conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act, as well as other Lacey Act violations, according to U.S. Attorney in the District of Idaho, Josh Hurwit.

According to the indictment, Kulow, Major and Eborn were licensed guides in Idaho in late 2021, employed by a licensed outfitter when the trio began to book mountain lion hunting clients. They took money from the clients and guided hunts in southeast Idaho and Wyoming, where it’s not legal to hunt regardless of being licensed or a federally permitted outfitting service. These areas included the Caribou-Targhee National Forest in southeast Idaho and the Bridger-Teton National Forest in western Wyoming.

The indictment claimed 11 mountain lions were illegally killed in Idaho, and another mountain lion was killed in western Wyoming. The U.S. Attorney’s Office said several Big Game Mortality Reports were falsely sent to Idaho Fish and Game (IDGF) with false outfitter business information. At least three of the dead cougars were sent to Texas without such reports to IDGF. The other mountain lions’ bodies were shipped to or from Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Montana, Alaska, Texas and North Carolina. These shipments violated the federal Lacey Act and several Idaho state laws.

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