From:   "Tim Jeffreys", [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I found this quite funny in this week's Time magazine:
Tim.
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Steve Lopez's America

Michigan

Bambi's Got a Little Secret
Poachers may find this venison tough to swallow
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WE CRAB AND CROUCH in the brush, low to the ground in the woods of Michigan.
Deep, deep in the woods.
 Patient, silent, dressed as trees, we stalk our prey.  Not the mighty bear
or the trophy buck but an animal far more
dangerous, and dumber than a bucket of rocks.  The poacher.
A white pickup slides to a Halt the driver spotting a white-tailed doe and a
buck in the brush off Sucker Creek Road
in Alcona County.  The deer are on private property, so if this hacker grabs
his rifle and takes a shot, he's under
arrest.  Bob Mills, my partner, radios to our backups, Sergeant Pete Malette
and Officer Warren MacNeill, who are
hiding in a nearby grove.  'We've got a looker," Mills tells them.
The driver is backing up slowly, so as not to scare the deer away before he
can get a clear shot.  What he doesn't
know, the poor sap, is that the deer are not real.  They're robodeer.  Yes.
Robotic deer.  Who can compete with
American ingenuity?  Malette just had a funeral for a buck that took so many
bullets in the line of duty - more than
100 in seven years - they called him Sluggo.
All across the country, conservation officers use mechanical Bambis, most of
them made by a Wisconsin
taxidermist, to nab poachers.  The deer don't gallop through the woods or
eat prize rhododendrons.  Only their
heads and tails move.  But that's all it takes.  "You can't believe the look
on a guy's face," Malette says, when a
brawny hunter discovers he has just blown holes in a stuffed animal with AA
batteries in its head.
 Mills gives me a cue to flick the two joysticks that make my deer's head
swivel and her tail twitch from 45 m away.
This would be easier if not for the camouflage hat the officers gave me.
With a curtain of dangling burlap strips, it
looks like Bob Marley has joined a militia.  My doe's head may be spinning
around like something out of The
Exorcist for all I know. 1 can't see through the dreadlocks.  The driver may
not know whether to lock and load or call
a priest.  But he's still watching.
Go ahead, tough guy. Show some courage. Some poachers have argued
entrapment, but Malette knows of no one
who's got off on that defense, because the typical charge is trespassing,
carrying a loaded weapon or shooting out
of season, which can cost up to $500 in fines and 90 days in the brig. And
he's come across some real All Stars.
The Hemingway wannabe who wet his pants when he got caught. The jughead who
was nabbed twice in one day.
Malette uses a wild-turkey de- coy too, and had one cowboy go after it with
a.357 Magnum. We're talking National
Rifle Association Dream Team. But the all-time champ was the Lions Club
president who asked Malette to bring a
decoy to their fleeting. 'They were laughing, and the president said, 'Who�s
going to take a shot at this thing?"'
Three days later Malette had the decoy on a stakeout. Guy drives up, gets
out with his rifle and blasts away.
The Lions Club president.
 And that was back in the '80s, when the decoys had no moving parts. Brian
Wolslegel, the Mosinee, Wis.,
taxidermist, with a former partner began experimenting with moving parts
several years ago.  He sells 200 to 300
robots a year at about $800 a pop.  In the past six years, conservation
officers from 45 states and Canada have
bought Wolslegel's robotic elk, turkey, deer and bear. Wolslegel glues real
animal hides to polyurethane molds,
cuts off the heads and installs batteries and robotics, then slides the
heads back on. (The very process, oddly
enough, that's used to make presidential candidates.) "I'm backed up about
50 orders right now," says Wolslegel.
He sells almost half the robots to hunters, who use them as decoys.
 And I'm backed up deep, deep in the woods of northern Michigan, stalking
the ultimate game. I flick my doe's tail
and turn her head so she's staring down the      guy in the white pickup. A
rookie mistake, maybe. So many poachers
have been bagged, they�re taking a closer look now, and this guy just got
wise to us. He hits the gas and disappears.
No problem.  We're on Sucker Creek Road after all.  I crouch. 1 adjust my
dreadlocks.  Next guy down the road is mine.
TIME, NOVEMBER 13 2000


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