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Utah Launches Massive Poaching Patrol Effort

Friday, December 23rd, 2011 at 6:51 PM

If you’re a poacher, you should think twice before pulling the trigger on a mule deer in Utah.

Utah DWR officer Josh Carver

Utah DWR officer Josh Carver shows what wildlife officers and volunteers are trying to stop this winter: The illegal killing of mule deer in Utah. This 6x5 buck was shot in Iron County in November.

Utah Division of Natural Resources

Utah Division of Natural Resources

Utah --(Ammoland.com)-  This winter, Division of Wildlife Resources conservation officers and members of sportsman’s groups are carrying out the largest winter range patrols ever conducted in the state.

“As Utahns celebrate the holidays and usher in a new year, our officers will be busy protecting the state’s mule deer herds from poachers—thieves who steal wildlife from present and future generations of ethical sportsmen,” says Mike Fowlks, chief of the DWR’s Law Enforcement Section.

“We won’t tolerate deer poaching in Utah,” Fowlks says. “We’re pulling out all the stops and using all the means we have to protect Utah’s deer herds.”

The following are among the things the DWR is doing:

  • Patrolling winter ranges at night. Officers are conducting these patrols on land and from the air.
  • Conducting saturation patrols that put several DWR officers on the same piece of winter range at the same time.
  • Enlisting volunteers from sportsman groups to serve as additional ‘eyes and ears.’

The volunteers patrol the winter ranges. They have the means needed to report what they see and hear directly to the nearest DWR officer.

Patrols are underway across Utah. The patrols will continue through the winter.

Fowlks says most of the on-the-ground and aerial patrolling is focused on areas where deer are most at risk.

“But those aren’t the only areas our officers and volunteers are watching,” Fowlks says. “Far from it. We’re watching winter ranges across the state.”

Fowlks says five areas in Utah are receiving special attention:

  • The desert areas on the western side of Utah
  • The southwestern corner of the state
  • The Paunsaugunt deer unit in southern Utah
  • The Henry Mountains unit in southeastern Utah
  • The Book Cliffs unit in eastern Utah

Turn-In-a-Poacher hotline
As you travel through Utah’s backcountry this winter, Fowlks encourages you to keep your eyes and ears open. “You don’t have to be part of this patrol effort to make a difference,” Fowlks says. “If you see something suspicious, let us know as soon as possible.”

Utah’s Turn-in-a-Poacher hotline is the most efficient way to contact a DWR officer. The UTiP number is 1-800-662-3337. The hotline is staffed 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Winter a critical time
Much of the deer poaching that happens in Utah happens in the winter. And for good reason—winter is the time of year when mule deer are concentrated on their lower elevation winter ranges. The bucks are also less wary because the breeding season is underway or it just finished.

Fowlks says poachers usually target the biggest bucks they can find. In addition to stealing opportunity from legal hunters, taking the bucks can also result in too many deer being taken during hunts that upcoming fall.

Fowlks says DWR biologists count the number of bucks per 100 does in December.

“In December, the deer are bunched together on lower elevation areas where it’s easier to get an accurate count,” he says. “But if poachers kill bucks after the biologists have counted them, the data that’s used to set permit numbers in the spring won’t be correct—it will show more bucks than there actually are. And that can lead to too many hunting permits being issued.”

Poachers take a big toll
So far in 2011, wildlife officers have investigated the illegal killing of 189 mule deer in Utah.

Most of the deer were bucks. The antlers on 22 of the bucks were big enough to place the deer in a trophy category.

“Hunters would haven been thrilled to take any of these bucks,” Fowlks says.

The monetary value of the animals to Utah’s citizens is $242,800.

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Silencerco Named One Of Top Three Growing Companies In Salt Lake City Area

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011 at 3:15 PM

Silencerco Named One Of Top Three Growing Companies In Salt Lake City Area And Will Be Featured On KSL TV Tonight

Silencerco

Silencerco

Salt Lake City, UT --(Ammoland.com)- SilencerCo, the leader in firearm suppressors manufacturing has been named one of the Top Three Growing Companies in the greater Salt Lake City area by KSL, Salt Lake City’s top television station, newspaper and website. SilencerCo will be featured as part of a segment on the top Salt Lake City companies airing LIVE on KSL TV tonight, December 20, 2011.

Silencerco was formed in 2008 by Joshua Waldron and Jonathon Shults. Waldron and Shults learned that the military released a solicitation stating it wanted all firearms deployed to be silenced.

The most common Veterans Administration medical claim is hearing damage/loss due to gun fire. The second most common VA medical claim was PTSD. Tinnitus, which is a ringing in ones ears due to noise induced hearing damage, is a constant reminder of the event which caused the PTSD. If you can stop the ringing, you can more easily rehabilitate the soldier. Silencers protect the hearing of soldiers, which helps them get back into civilian life sooner or be a more effective soldier while deployed. Besides the benefits to soldiers, Waldron and Shults learned of the many benefits of civilian ownership of silencers.

In 2008 Silencerco opened a small shop of 2,700 square feet. It secured institutional lending to purchase a manufacturing machine; and, after several months of learning how to machine, designing prototypes and learning the science of fluid dynamics, it released its first product to the market in January of 2009.

While Shults stayed in the shop learning the intricacies of manufacturing and producing their first product, Waldron drove from state to state personally visiting dealers to show them why Silencerco’s product was superior to anything else on the market. In 2009, Silencerco opened 87 dealerships nation-wide and sold nearly 800 units of the Company’s first product.

In January of 2010, Silencerco released its next product which became an instant success. Business grew so fast that it had no way of producing enough supply for the demand. While trying to expand its production, the Company was turned down by over 15 lending institutions. The Company was able to get small loans and purchased two additional manufacturing machines. Even with its limited capabilities, Silencerco’s revenue grew by over 400% during 2010.

After months of disappointment from lending institutions, Silencerco finally secured a round of funding from Zion’s Bank to expand its manufacturing capabilities. In 2011, it increased its revenue by 300% from 2010’s revenue numbers. Its products have changed the industry and consumers could not get them fast enough. In August 2011, it acquired one of its main competitors. A loan from Zion’s Bank was used to fund the acquisition; and, with the added cash flow from the acquisition, Silencerco was able to get more machinery for manufacturing.

Based on 2011 operations, Silencerco is now the largest silencer manufacturer in the country for civilians and they are continuing to make progress in acquiring military deals. Silencerco has created 25 jobs and have done so in the hardest economic times our country has seen for a long time.

About the Founders
Joshua Waldron has defied odds many times in his life. Not only has Waldron made a thriving business in the worst of economies, but he learned how to walk again when every doctor said he couldn’t. When Joshua was 15, he was in a horrible car accident that severed his spinal cord. After 3 years of physical therapy, he was able to leave his wheelchair behind and has walked ever since. Waldron has never collected disability and has been self-employed his entire life. After college at the University of Utah, he was an editorial photographer and was published in hundreds of magazines.

Jonathon Shults is becoming widely known as one of the most brilliant minds in the firearms industry. Without any formal training or experience, he is now a master machinist, engineer, inventor, computer programmer and manufacturing engineer of the leading silencer manufacturer in the country. Shults has developed some of the most advanced manufacturing techniques and inventory management software in the manufacturing world and has accomplished this without a day of higher education. Before starting Silencerco with Waldron, Jonathon was a sound engineer and owned a recording studio. He has recorded for several big clients with world-wide sales.

Some of Silencerco’s Other Accomplishments.

  • Expanded the silencer market dramatically with their “yes, silencers are legal” education campaign.
  • Obtained patents with more pending.
  • Recognized as an industry leader in only 3 years of operations.
  • Had its products featured in a favorable light on Discovery Channel’s “Mythbusters.”
  • Invited to be keynote speakers at the NRA, the largest lobbyist firm in the world.

See also the following links:

  • www.silencerco.com
  • www.silencersarelegal.com
  • www.swrmfg.com (this company was acquired by Silencerco)
  • www.youtube.com/silencerco
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