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Meth, Mazdas outfit the new cattle rustler

Farmers, cows stalked as beef prices rise; Calif. loses $1 million in cattle

Image: Calves belonging to dairy owner Pete Wiersma
A pair of calves peek out from pens belonging to dairy owner Pete Wiersma on Feb. 12, in Buhl, Idaho, where thieves stole three of Wiersma's yearling heifers several weeks earlier.
Elaine Thompson / ASSOCIATED PRESS
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updated 2:31 p.m. ET March 7, 2008

BUHL, Idaho - Two guys and a four-door sedan.

That's all it took for cattle rustlers to relieve dairy owner Pete Wiersma of three valuable calves.

Once the province of outlaws and the bane of hardscrabble ranchers who grazed their cattle on the open range, cattle rustling has never gone away. Like the livestock industry, it has only become more efficient.

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In general, cattle rustling tends to increase whenever beef prices are high, said Larry Hayhurst, head of the Idaho State Patrol Division of brands. Because the price of cattle feed has been relatively high this year — making the cattle more expensive to raise and lowering the potential profit — the theft reports should be on a downswing. But in rural dairy regions — where milk cows can nearly always fetch a high price and methamphetamine use is becoming as much a part of the landscape as grain silos and milking barns — the rustling reports seem to stay fairly constant.

The Idaho State Police gets between 300 and 500 reports of lost or missing cattle a year, Hayhurst said. The numbers have been consistent for about a decade.

"Most of the rustlers are stealing for the money, the profit — whether it be to put food on the table or to trade for drugs," said Idaho State Police brand inspector Sean McCarthy. "The dealers tell dairy workers, 'You go out and you steal me five, 10, or 15 head of calves, we'll supply you with meth so you can either deal or use.'"

The cows are then resold at "something like last week's top sales yard price of $2,600 a head. It adds up pretty quick," he said.

Investigators believe many stolen cattle go unreported, sometimes because livestock owners do not discover the thefts right away or because they decide to just chalk the losses up to a tax write-off.

"In the last three months we've had 16 calves reported stolen off of four dairies, but there's probably more than that that have been stolen that the owners aren't aware of," said Sgt. Daron Brown, charged with investigating rural crime in the dairy-laden southern Idaho county of Twin Falls. "What's easier to steal? They don't come with serial numbers."

Not everyone brands
Most states west of the Mississippi River, which largely bisects the U.S., rely on brands — marks seared into the hide of livestock animals — to show ownership of animals. But not all livestock owners brand their animals. Dairy owners, in particular, tend not to brand their cattle for at least the first year or so, said Hayhurst.

"A brand on an animal is the only return address on that animal. Every one of those dairymen is probably missing calves, and they may not even know it," Hayhurst said.

Anywhere between 300 to 500 head of cattle and around 25 horses are reported lost or missing a year in Idaho alone, he said. In California, 1,275 were reported stolen or missing in 2007, at an estimated loss of nearly $1 million. Other western states have similar numbers.

"Rustling is alive and well everywhere in the West," said Jim Connelley, Director of the Division of Livestock Investigation for Nevada's Department of Agriculture. "The gooseneck trailer and diesel pickup are probably the best piece of equipment to come to a rancher in many years and also the most useful equipment for a rustler."

A gooseneck trailer allows a pickup to haul a heavier load.


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