Ohio Game Wardens Who Busted CJ Alexander Honored with Pope and Young Award
A pair of Ohio game wardens who cracked one of the biggest poaching cases in state history — the CJ Alexander buck — have been honored for their work by the Pope and Young Club. Isaiah Gifford and Matt Roberts, both wildlife officers with the state's Department of Natural Resources, received P&Y's Wildlife Law Enforcement Officer Award at the club's Arizona convention this month. P&Y gives out the award once every two years to an officer (or in this case, officers) for their outstanding work related to wildlife violations.
'We started [an award] back in 1995 to recognize wildlife biologists for their work, and I started thinking we need to something [similar] for conservation officers,' P&Y conservation chair and retired game warden Doug Clayton tells Outdoor Life. 'You look at all the work these officers do and it's [mostly] behind the scenes. So the general public doesn't see this, and even the hunting community, they know poaching goes on but they don't really know the extent of it.'
Gifford and Roberts are the first-ever co-recipients of the award as well as the first Ohioans, according to the agency. Giffords, 26, has worked for the DNR since 2023, while Roberts has more than 20 years with the agency. The two officers were selected for the award because of their roles investigating the now-notorious poaching case involving CJ Alexander.
After using a crossbow to poach what would have been Ohio's new No. 1 all-time typical whitetail, Alexander made up an elaborate story to cover up the fact that he committed more than a dozen related crimes, including repeated trespassing. He then shared that fabricated story to promote himself and the deer with multiple media outlets — which included interviews with Outdoor Life and selling his story to at least one other hunting outlet.
'This was an excellent case,' Clayton says. 'A lot of wildlife cases are cut and dry, but then you have these big ones that just spiderweb out — you find one thing that leads to something else, and sometimes you're dealing with multiple jurisdictions or the Feds. A lot of people just don't realize how involved some of these cases are, and what it takes to bring them to fruition.'
Gifford and Roberts conducted a careful investigation for a full year. Although Alexander repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and doubled down on his innocence, the two wardens eventually cracked the case wide open by securing his cell phone records. The texts, GPS location data, and other evidence therein revealed Alexander's long history with the buck he nicknamed 'Megatron', along with his true intentions for killing the deer.
In Alexander's own words, texted to his fiancé just a few weeks before he poached the 200-plus-inch buck: 'I'm gonna get offered stupid money for this deer head babe …. Like buying house type money … This deer is gonna make us money.'
Read Next: CJ Alexander to Serve Time, Pay $43K for Poaching Giant Ohio Buck and Trying to Cover It Up
In October 2024, Alexander pleaded guilty to 14 charges related to the poaching. He was sentenced in December to 90 days in jail, along with $43,000 in fines. Of that, $39,696.73 went directly to the Ohio Wildlife Fund to reimburse the state for the loss of such an incredible buck. (Like some states, Ohio calculates a special restitution fee based on total inches of antler of an illegally-taken deer.) Alexander's accomplices, his sister Kristina and his friends Corey and Zachary Haunert, also pleaded guilty and were charged separately.
The last recipient of P&Y's Wildlife Law Enforcement Officer Award was Lt. Stacey Lewton of the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission in 2023. Lewton and the NGPC were instrumental in the Hidden Hills Outfitters bust, which spanned multiple states and involved more than 30 other individuals, including the Bowmars.
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San Francisco Chronicle
a day ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Residents lined the streets of a New Jersey town to welcome home Israeli-American hostage
TENAFLY, NJ (AP) — Edan Alexander, an American-born Israeli soldier and believed to be the last living American hostage held in Gaza, has returned home to New Jersey. Hundreds of cheering supporters, many waving Israeli flags and holding 'Welcome Home Edan' signs, lined the streets of Tenafly on Thursday to greet his passing vehicle. A smiling Alexander held his arm out the passenger side window to wave and touch the hands of people in the crowd. The militant group Hamas released Alexander, 21, on May 12 after 584 days. Alexander has been in Israel since he was freed. Thursday marked his first trip home to Tenafly, the suburb of New York City where he grew up and where his family still lives. Alexander was 19 when militants stormed his base in Israel and dragged him into the Gaza Strip. He was among the 251 people taken hostage in Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023 attack. Alexander moved to Israel in 2022 after finishing high school and enlisted in the military. Since his capture, there's been a huge outpouring of support for Alexander in Tenafly, located in a county with a large Jewish and Israeli-American population. The community held regular walks to raise awareness about him and the other hostages. Many gathered in May to celebrate Alexander's release. 'Idan's return is the return of everybody's child, every organization, every family, every Israeli family, and non-Israeli, and non-Jews,' Orly Chen, a Tenafly resident, told CBS News New York on Thursday.


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
Edan Alexander gets tearful hometown welcome after 584 days in Hamas' clutches: ‘Their child is our child'
Thousands of cheering supporters lined the streets of Tenafly, New Jersey, to welcome hometown hero Edan Alexander, who at last returned safely to his family after enduring nearly 600 days of hell as a hostage of Hamas. Alexander, wearing dark sunglasses and smiling from ear to ear, told The Post he was feeling 'great' and said it was good to be back as the SUV he rode in rolled down the tree-lined main drag. People in the jubilant crowd held banners and signs reading 'Welcome home Edan,' and wrapped themselves in Israeli flags. Some jumped up and down and sang 'Am Yisrael Chai' — a Hebrew phrase translating to 'the people of Israel live.' Advertisement 6 Hundreds of friends, family and residents gathered downtown to watch the release of Edan Alexander, the last living U.S. citizen kidnapped by Hamas. Getty Images 6 Edan Alexander waving from a car window. LP Media The 21-year-old Israel Defense Forces staff sergeant was one of 251 Israelis taken captive by the terror group during the Oct. 7, 2023, terror attacks, and the last living American hostage to be released. Advertisement 'We didn't know if he was alive for a long time and that was very hard to think about,' Gaia Hamani, 25, of nearby Alpine, whose brother went to preschool and high school with Alexander, told The Post. 6 Crowds await the arrival of Edan Alexander in Tenafly, NJ on Thursday afternoon. LP Media 6 Crowd of people waving as the police motorcade carrying Edan Alexander passes by. LP Media 'He left everything. He left the comfort of his home in New Jersey. He didn't have to go to the army. He volunteered to do that. It takes a lot of courage and strength to do that.' Advertisement After learning of his disappearance, Hamani said she and her mother put photos of Alexander in their wallets as a constant memento. 'We prayed for him all the time. I always think of him in relation to my brother — to think what he went through, I can't imagine,' she said. 6 Edan Alexander, 19 (pictured). Family Handout Alexander was severely tortured and often locked in a cage during his captivity, and frequently shackled at the hands and feet, deep within the terrorists' underground tunnel network, according to the Kan public broadcaster. Advertisement Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Alexander's freedom was achieved last month through Israel's military pressure in Gaza, as well as political pressure by President Trump. 6 People celebrate on the day Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander, who was kidnapped during the October 7, 2023 attack, is released from captivity. REUTERS Hamani said she burst into tears when she was driving to the homecoming celebration and saw kids waving Israeli flags. Michal Fox, 51, of Englewood, a mother of four and a psychologist, said Alexander's safe return home was a bright, shining beacon of hope amid a long period of darkness for Jews both in Israel and the US. 'It's a great way for the community to come together. There are so many bad things that happened but we are going to celebrate him together,' she told The Post. 'It means to everyone that there is hope. There is resilience. He's the signature child, person for resilience and how we can get through things,' she added. 'I don't know them,' she said about Alexander's family, who were overjoyed at the news of his imminent release last month. 'I don't know anyone, but that's what the Jewish community does. We come together. Their child is our child.'

2 days ago
Freed American-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander gets joyful welcome home celebration in New Jersey
Joyful residents of Tenafly, New Jersey, lined the streets on Thursday to celebrate the homecoming of freed American-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander. The 21-year-old Tenafly native flew from Israel to the U.S., landing on Thursday, about one month after his May 12 release from captivity in Gaza. The crowd of children and adults -- waving Israeli flags, American flags and "welcome home" signs -- erupted in cheers when the motorcade arrived. A smiling Alexander waved and gave high-fives to the crowd as his car slowly drove by. "He looked really happy and we're really happy that he's back!" one girl told New York ABC station WABC. "The community came out!" a Tenafly resident told WABC. "This is so long overdue. Welcome home, Edan." "We're all really excited to have him back. It's a big deal," another resident added. "A part of our town's missing and now he's finally home." Alexander, who moved to Israel at the age of 18, was serving in the Israel Defense Forces when he was captured from his base during Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack. He was 19 when he was abducted and spent two birthdays in captivity. He was released following successful negotiations between the U.S. and Hamas. "We always believed that this moment will come, always," his father, Adi Alexander, told ABC News in an exclusive interview last month. "Hope is mandatory. It finally happened." Edan Alexander was the last living American hostage. Fifty-two hostages remain in Gaza, including 20 people believed to be alive.