In early October 2024, a cardboard box containing freshly processed deer parts was found by a local rancher off a backcountry road in Idaho county. Since the deer season didn't open until a few days later, the rancher reported the suspicious box to a local Fish and Game officer.
Upon arriving at the box’s location, the officer discover that the box was covered in blood and contained a recently skinned deer hide, legs and hooves. He also noticed that there was a local address printed on a shipping label on the outside of the box.
The officer collected the box with the various deer parts and traveled to the nearby address. Upon arrival, the officer met with the property owner, Carl Van Loon. Van Loon initially denied that the deer parts and box belonged to him until he was shown the shipping label with his own address on it. Van Loon then admitted that the box belonged to his address, but someone must have retrieved the box out of the Cottonwood dumpster (over 22 miles from the incident location), placed the deer parts in the box and dumped it.
The officer stated it seemed strange that someone happened to kill a deer, find a box with Van Loon’s address, place deer parts in it and purposely dump it on a road that led to the back of his property. VanLoon continued to deny the accusation until the officer said that he believed that if he looked in VanLoon’s coolers, he would find deer meat from the same deer as the deer parts in the box.
VanLoon paused, then admitted to killing the deer twelve days before the season opened without a valid Idaho license or tags. The officer seized the deer meat and antlers. Van Loon was issued a citation for littering and unlawful possession of a deer killed during a closed season.
