HONOLULU — A Maui hunting ranch owner on Thursday pleaded guilty to a federal misdemeanor for taking an unlicensed hunter to shoot game animals in a case stemming from a broader investigation into the interisland smuggling of harmful invasive species
HONOLULU — A Maui hunting ranch owner on Thursday pleaded guilty to a federal misdemeanor for taking an unlicensed hunter to shoot game animals in a case stemming from a broader investigation into the interisland smuggling of harmful invasive species for hunting.
Jeffrey Grundhauser faces up to one year in prison and a fine of up to $100,000. Sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 1 at U.S District Court.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Song told a judge that Grundhauser took an undercover U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service agent hunting in June 2011 even though the agent said he didn’t have a Hawaii hunting license.
The agent, who was posing as a hunter from Oregon, killed two axis deer and one mouflon sheep. He paid $1,250 for Grundhauser’s guide services.
The ranch owner’s attorney, David Hayakawa, noted his client wasn’t charged for flying the animals between islands by helicopter, which is the aspect of the case that has gotten the most media attention.
“He took responsibility for what he did wrong: taking an unlicensed hunter on a guided hunt, which will never happen again,” Hayakawa said after the hearing.
Hayakawa said Grundhauser provided two female and one male deer to a Big Island individual, but he believed the animals would be kept in pens. Hayakawa said Grundhauser in exchange received 11 Big Island sheep for his Maui ranch, but he stressed the animals were kept in enclosed areas at all times and are all accounted for.
The case has grabbed the attention of state and federal officials because the deer and sheep have destroyed forests, crops and ranchland on Hawaii islands where they are established.
State fish and game officials introduced axis deer to Maui in the 1950s. Maui County estimates the animals caused $1 million in damage to the island’s farms, ranches and resorts over the past two years. The state never introduced axis deer to the Big Island, but sightings of the animals on that island have increased in the past few years, and invasive species officials believe people have been smuggling them to the island to expand hunting opportunities.
The sheep brought to Maui are a hybrid of two sheep types introduced to Hawaii in past years: feral sheep and mouflon sheep native to islands off the coast of Italy.
The animals have destroyed forest on the slopes of Mauna Kea on the Big Island but hadn’t been introduced to Maui.