News Desk
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
TSCRA
special rangers make arrests in theft cases
FORT WORTH,
Texas, Oct. 5, 2007—Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association
Special Ranger and District Supervisor Scott Williamson is quick to
credit help from citizens, members of law enforcement and game wardens
in the Oct. 4 arrest of three men suspected of cattle theft.
"There is no way we
could have accomplished in two or three weeks' time what we got done in
one day," Williamson, who is based in Seymour, says.
Earl Colbert Jr., Dale
Ritchie and Lethal Wiseman Jr. — all residents of Hardeman County—were
each arrested on two separate counts of third degree felonies of theft
of 10 or more head of livestock and will be tied to crimes of more than
60 head of cattle in all.
Williamson says for
the last year and a half or so, he has been receiving reports of missing
cattle from along the Pease River in Hardeman and Wilbarger counties.
While investigating these cases, he received a call from fellow TSCRA
Special Ranger Ben Eggleston, who was concerned with some information he
came across while routinely checking sale barn records. Some of that
information became evidence in one of the theft cases Williamson was
investigating.
On the evening of Oct.
3, Eggleston received information that the possible suspects were
unloading cattle again at a sale barn in Oklahoma. Williamson
immediately traveled to Elk City, Okla., where he and Eggleston worked
straight through until the arrests were made the night of Oct. 4.
In the process, the pair—with a lot of help from local law enforcement,
citizens and game wardens—recovered 10 head of cattle and 67 more have
been identified and accounted for.
TSCRA special rangers
are working on a separate but related case involving property and cattle
stolen in southern Oklahoma.
Williamson says the
special rangers had received reports of livestock and equipment theft
from Jackson, Harmon and Tillman counties. In the course of
investigating those cases, he was contacted by the Jackson County
Sheriff's Department following an arrest the department made the last
weekend in September in a drug-related burglary case.
He traveled to
Oklahoma and worked with the sheriff's departments from Jackson and
Harmon counties. While conducting interviews, he received information
that led to evidence that helped clear a case of equipment and livestock
theft that had been reported directly to him.
Williamson expects
this to blossom into another livestock theft investigation.
In the Oklahoma case,
Buck Stephens was arrested Sept. 28 and Nathan Bradley Roberson was
arrested Sept. 29, both on theft charges.
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association is a 130-year-old
trade organization whose 14,900 members manage approximately 5.4 million
cattle on 70.3 million acres of range and pasture land, primarily in
Texas and Oklahoma.
TSCRA–27–2007
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