NEWS RELEASE TEXAS AND SOUTHWESTERN CATTLE RAISERS ASSOCIATI

Caustic Burno

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 26, 2004
Messages
29,762
City & State/Province
Big Thicket East Texas
NEWS RELEASE

TEXAS AND SOUTHWESTERN CATTLE RAISERS ASSOCIATION

Protecting the stewards of land and livestock in the Southwest

1301 W. Seventh St., Fort Worth, Texas 76102-2665

(800) 242-7820 / (817) 332-7064 / Fax 332-5446 / http://www.texascattleraisers.org

TSCRA news releases can be found online at http://www.texascattleraisers.org under News Desk



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Larry Gray,TSCRA

Director of Law Enforcement



Investigators collar suspect in multiple thefts of cattle, worth $250,000



FORT WORTH, Texas, June 21, 2006―A Brazoria County rancher has confessed to a series of South Texas cattle thefts that spanned nine months, eight counties, 13 victims and 289 cattle valued at more that $250,000.

Tommy Johnson and Brent Mast, special rangers with Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, have been investigating the thefts since receiving a call from Nolan Ryans foreman last September.

Seventeen cows and 14 calves were missing from Ryans China Grove Ranch at Rosharon, Texas. Another 16 calves were stolen from the Hall of Fame pitcher two weeks later.

It was the beginning of case that eventually involved 14 thefts from 13 victims and an unusual lack of information that puzzled investigators.

Weve had several thousand dollars of reward money out here for seven or eight months and nobodys talked, said Special Ranger Mast.

The break finally came on June 13 when 10 calves, including one with unusual scars, were stolen from the Navasota sale barn.

The calf had a bunch of scars all over him from an accident where he was hung up underneath a feed trough, explained Johnson. An order-buyer recognized the calf when it was taken to a sale in Groesbeck and knew it had been stolen.

The astute owner had alerted local order-buyers when his calves turned up missing. When the calf came up for sale, the order-buyer called the owner, who immediately contacted Johnson.

We were able to trace the calf back to the Navasota barn, and the license plate on the drive-in ticket at the sale barn came back to our suspect, he explained.

The investigators finally had a name that could be checked against the database at TSCRA headquarters in Fort Worth.

TSCRA employs 80 market inspectors who inspect every head of cattle sold at the 119 auction markets in Texas, recording descriptions of the cattle and information on the buyer and seller. During 2005 TSCRA market inspectors identified a total of 4,766,235 head.

The market inspectors send their reports to TSCRAs Fort Worth headquarters, where the information is processed for computer retrieval and distributed to more than 700 law enforcement agencies nationwide. That database is usually the first stop in any investigation conducted by TSCRAs commissioned law enforcement officers.

Johnson and Mast are two of the 29 officers TSCRA has stationed strategically throughout Texas and Oklahoma. All are thoroughly trained in law enforcement, have in-depth knowledge of the cattle industry and are commissioned as special rangers by the Texas Department of Public Safety and/or the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation. In 2005 TSCRA special rangers recovered or accounted for stolen livestock and ranch equipment valued at more than $6.2 million.

A search of the database turned up a stack of forms detailing the specifics of cattle sold by the suspect on certain dates that matched the descriptions of the stolen cattle.

I had a big stack of those forms when we were interviewing him for the first time, said Mast. He thought right then that we knew everything that hed done.

The suspects family hired an attorney who met with the investigators two days later. He told them the suspect wanted to cooperate. He would confess, show them whereabouts of 80 to 90 head of stolen cattle and give them back to their owners.

The interview with the suspect explained the puzzling lack of information about the thefts.

He told me in an interview with him and his attorney that he did this all by himself, said Mast. He knew if he had a partner, his partner might talk and hed get caught.

The suspects method of operation explained even more.

He took the stolen cattle to a pasture that he had leased and mixed them with his own cattle, said Johnson. He sold the calves periodically over a month or two at several different sale barns.

He didnt sell any of the branded cattle. He kept those on a leased pasture. He was just going to let the cows calve out and sell the calves.

He told us he targeted people that didnt have a TSCRA blue sign posted, Johnson continued. He said that when he saw those signs, he knew that the Cattle Raisers Association had special rangers who would continue the investigation until they found out who did it.

The majority of the individuals that we worked for werent TSCRA members when this thing started, he added. But thats not a question we ask.

The investigators returned 83 of the stolen cattle to their owners on June 19 and hope to round up another 10 head today if they can get into the rain-sodden pasture.

Mast said their next steps will be to get the remaining cattle penned, get the suspects confession on video tape and have him arrested in Brazoria County, and file formal criminal charges in eight different counties―Austin, Brazoria, Fort Bend, Galveston Grimes, Harris, Houston and Walker.

Now were in the paperwork stage―the lengthy recording of all the material that we need to make our criminal cases plain. All of those cases involve more than 10 head of livestock, which makes each one a Third Degree Felony punishable by two to 10 years in the Texas prison system.

The special rangers praised the cooperation among all the investigators, particularly Brazoria County Sheriffs Office Investigator Jack Langdon. Other investigating agencies included the Texas Rangers office in Texas City; the sheriffs offices in Fort Bend, Houston, Grimes and Walker counties; and police departments in Houston, Pearland, Manvel, Alvin and League City.

We knew that if we kept turning over enough rocks, wed find out who was doing it, said Johnson. Nobody ever quit. We all kept working until we got the right break.



Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association is a 129-year-old trade organization whose 13,700 members manage approximately 4.9 million cattle on 66.6 million acres of range and pasture land, primarily in Texas and Oklahoma.
 
Ditto Rustler's comments.

There is a banker who owns property across the river from me. He has a "hired hand" to look over his cattle. He needs to get a new employee and new fencing too. Those cows have been on this side of the river for two weeks now. Over the last year the river has been really down and they cross regularly. They've been up and down the river bottom busting fences and several of the neighbors are getting fed up with it. Most of us bale hay on the flood plain in lieu of grazing it. Luckily my fences keep them off of my field. Those cattle are taking a toll on some of my neighbors's hay crops.

It is a wonder someone doesn't load them up and hauled them off. They are not branded.
 
A little more info, from the local newspaper:

The sorry SOB that "allegedly" did the rustling was a 27 year old Angleton, Texas man named Jerome Novak. He apparently stole 10 head or more from each of his victims (from ranchers located in 8 different counties) and therefore the charges against him will be third degree felonys punishable by 2 to 10 years in the pen. He ranged pretty far, apparently selling some calves in Groesbeck, Tx., which is about 200 miles from Angleton. He supposedly was very cooperative with the authorities after being caught, no doubt trying to curry favor with judges & prosecutors. The initial charges were filed in Brazoria county, with charges expected to be filed soon in the other 7 counties. I sure hope he wasn't able to cut a consolidated deal that keeps him from doing any hard time.

The fella down the road from me in Needville, Tx. that had 14 cows, 14 calves and 2 bulls rustled in February has just this past week recovered the 14 cows and 2 bulls from Novak's pastures. Calves had been unbranded and therefore were sold by Novak. I hope all the ranchers are able to get cash out of Novak to compensate for their calves that were sold.

He had a heck of a streak going until he just got plain ole stupidly greedy and stole calves from an auction barn (might have been from remote holding pens, article didn't say).
 
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change.
Caustic Burno":3l4oe9df said:
Old Brazoria family grandpa is a good man, raises some of the finest Brammer cattle you ever saw. I bet the old man is in tears over this boy.

That's good to know. I feel for the grandaddy. Hopefully he doesn't blame himself. He'd prolly like to horsewhip that boy hisself. Got to be hard to see your good name thrown around in the papers. We've seen the likes of this before.
 
TBL, I think a bit of skepticism and even cynicism concerning many things is probably warranted these days. :( However in this case, from what I gather via newspaper accounts, Nolan Ryan's was in fact the first theft of the series and also the first theft reported, so I don't think the TSCRA and county law enforcement merely waited until a noteworthy victim presented himself before jumping into action. Also, the TSCRA normally has many enforecment agents working on theft cases throughout the year and all over Texas (and Oklahoma too, I think) though perhaps garnering less publicity than in this particular case..

Seems a bit ironic, but all the "heat" put out by the TSCRA and county law enforcement agencies for Brazoria and surrounding counties (including several full nights of searching & monitoring with DPS and Harris County owned helicopters and frequent stopping-checking of night time cattle haulers) apparently prompted Novak to move his thieving activity to the more distant locations of almost 200 miles away from his home base.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top