He had been in prison since June 5, 2012 on weapons charges unrelated to the deer hunting case.
Jarema would allegedly rest the gun on her head as he shot deer from the truck or would lean over and discharge the rifle in front of her face, causing her ears to ring for days, the complaint states.
If the Deer meat comes from a deer farm It is legal. Deer that is taken by hunters must not be sold and is against the law.Wow. It is illegal to sell deer meat in NJ. Hope the restaurants get fined too. People are crazy!
Plenty of restaurants in NJ have venison on their menus. As dogg pointed out, it's usually farm raised. My question is how do game dinners at churches and clubs get around using meat from hunters and charging for it? Tickets are typically open to the public. Im not against these dinners in anyway and actually love attending them and getting a true taste of Americana at its finest. Just wondering what the protocol was far abiding the laws.Wow. It is illegal to sell deer meat in NJ. Hope the restaurants get fined too. People are crazy!
When a deerjacker goes out poaching, the first thing he does is to stop at one of the several gin mills on Route 206, which runs north and south through the western part of the pines. There he meets a contact man. Over beers, the two discuss current prices. Carcasses have been bringing about twenty-five dollars in recent years. Then the poacher leaves. It is night, and he moves into the woods in his automobile on the sand roads.
When a poacher has made his kill, or kills, he goes back to the gin mill and has another drink with the contact man. They go outside and exchange the meat for money. Then the poacher goes back inside, as often as not, and drinks up more of his profit.