The owner of a Wyoming ranch claims hunters caused damages that could add up to more than $7 million when they crossed from public land to public land at the corner of his ranch, without ever setting foot on private property.
An anonymous source showed WyoFile reporter Angus Thuermer Jr. the damage claim, which was signed on August 29th. It alleges the corner crossing caused damages between $3.1 million and $7.75 million. Land Tawney, president and CEO of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, called those numbers “the most egregious thing I've seen,” and said it was consistent with the ranch's pattern of bullying hunters on public land.
The ranch is owned by Fred Eshelman, a North Carolina phamaceutical executive with an estimated net worth of hundreds of millions of dollars. The hunters crossed from one parcel of public land to another at a corner of the checkerboard land pattern common across much of the West, using a ladder to ensure they never touched Eshelman's ranch.
A jury found the hunters not guilty of criminal trespass in April, but Eshelman continued his civil lawsuit, which has been moved to federal court. The case could have implications for access to more than 8 million acres of public land across the West that are “corner locked.”
The Wyoming Stock Growers Association filed an amicus brief in the case, saying the issue affects the right to control “reasonable airspace” over ranch land. Executive Vice President Jim Magagna told WyoFile that allowing public access at corner crossings could devalue ranches by establishing the fact that public land is “no longer closed property.”
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