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Tree thefts: An uncommon crime on the rise in Iowa

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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People stealing trees from public and private land in Iowa is an infrequent but growing occurrence, according to state conservation officers.



The crimes range considerably in their scope and sophistication, and the value of the heists can be lucrative. Some of the culprits might haul their looted timber with ramshackle trailers. Others might have full-on logging rigs.


Some of the thefts happen out in the open, such as when a company is contracted to harvest timber from a certain area but oversteps its bounds to cut down a valuable-looking tree on an adjacent property. A prime black walnut trunk can fetch upwards of $10,000.



Other thefts are conducted in the dead of night. In one recent instance, a thief was cutting trees in an area near a highway and would only operate his chain saw when the sound of passing traffic would cover its noise.


“Timber theft was something we never used to see, and now it’s become a bigger thing,” said Craig Cutts, chief of the Iowa Department of Natural Resource’s Law Enforcement Bureau.


He said perhaps the most egregious recent offense happened in Pocahontas County last year, when someone allegedly cut more than 100 trees from a state wildlife management area. One of the trees was a bur oak with a trunk about six feet in diameter.


“That tree was a sapling when Iowa was made a state,” Cutts said. “It’s incredible somebody would cut that down.”


The DNR does not keep a reliable list of timber theft reports, but Capt. Brian Smith, who oversees the bureau’s region of southwest Iowa, estimates that the department has investigated about a dozen in the past two years.


“All across Iowa, timber theft has either been on the increase or at least it’s being recognized on a larger scale than it used to,” he said. “I believe it’s the former of the two — that it has increased — and it has been increasing for a number of years.”


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The cause of that uptick is unclear. Smith speculates that a growing number of absentee landowners — those who own land but seldom step foot on it — gives potential thieves more opportunities and decreases the public surveillance of wider rural areas.


And while thieves have incentive to steal high-dollar trees worth thousands of dollars, they’re also taking low-dollar softwoods that can be made into pallets.


“They’re much, much less valuable,” Smith said, “but if you can steal it, and it’s free to begin with, a few bucks is better than nothing.”


In the case of the giant bur oak theft in northwest Iowa, the alleged culprit said he planned to build a house out of logs, according to court records.


Timber investigation leads to drug, gun charges​


In October 2022, two DNR officers responded to a report that someone was illegally cutting trees from the Stoddard Wildlife Management Area near Rolfe.


While the officers were on-site, they noticed a vehicle pulling a trailer that turned off the nearby roadway, onto a trail that led to the state property, according to court records.


The officers followed and found Jason Levant Ferguson, 41, who lives nearby. They noted the area was blanketed with vehicle trails, cut trees, branches, tree stumps and limbs. It’s illegal in Iowa to harvest trees from state land without DNR approval.


Ferguson allegedly admitted to the officers that he had been cutting down trees in the wildlife management area “that looked like they were dying.”


“Jason told (the officers) about a large tree that he had cut down, and it was so large that it took him weeks to get it out of the timber, having multiple issues including tires going flat under the extreme weight,” according to documents associated with a search warrant.


The officers asked if they could go to Ferguson’s acreage to see the large log, and he obliged, court records show. There they saw hundreds of logs piled on the property, and Ferguson allegedly admitted that most of them came from the state-owned area.


Ferguson could not be reached to comment for this article.


Another officer obtained a search warrant for the property to collect further evidence, and they seized a significant amount of logging equipment: two trailers, a chain hoist, numerous chain saws, a winch and others.


But they also saw what they believed to be marijuana and a small-caliber rifle. Ferguson is a felon who cannot possess firearms, court records show.


That discovery led to another search warrant for drugs, and officers later found evidence that someone was manufacturing methamphetamine and growing marijuana on the property for sale. They found an unspecified “large amount” of both drugs, according to a criminal complaint, along with smaller amounts of LSD, cocaine and hallucinogenic mushrooms.


Ferguson was charged with numerous felonies for drugs and weapons, the most serious of which is punishable by up to 25 years in prison.


He was also charged with felony theft for taking trees from the wildlife management area, along with 50 counts each for timber buyer violations and prohibited destructive acts.


But the prosecution of many of those charges unraveled last month when a district court judge decided that the search warrants were improperly approved.


Magistrate Ben Meyer, who signed the warrants, was also certified by the Iowa Law Enforcement Academy to be a legal instructor for reserve officers of the Pocahontas Police Department and was identified by the academy as an employee of that department at the time he endorsed the warrants, according to court records.


That violated a constitutional separation of powers requirement because Meyer was a representative of both the judicial and executive branches of state government, District Court Judge Derek Johnson recently decided.


“It is this court’s finding that the search warrants in question are not valid because they were not endorsed and signed by a neutral and detached magistrate,” Johnson wrote in an Oct. 18 order.


The drug and gun charges have been dismissed, court records show, and prosecutors can’t use the evidence obtained for the tree thefts from the searches. Still, the DNR obtained evidence in its investigation that led to the search warrants — including Ferguson’s alleged admission he took the trees — and the tree-related charges are set for trial this week.


Pocahontas County Attorney Dan Feistner confirmed that his prosecution of the timber thefts will continue but declined to comment further about the case.


Difficult investigations​


A review of court documents associated with timber violations shows at least one other prosecutorial misstep: a criminal charge against a Bloomfield man in 2018 was dismissed because of how it was filed in court.


The man was accused of buying timber without posting a bond with the state, which is a serious misdemeanor and punishable by up to a year in jail. But the charging officer filed it with a citation form that is most often used for traffic violations and didn’t include specific details of the alleged crime.


Citing that lack of detail, a judge dismissed the charge.


Timber buyers who agree to pay people to harvest their trees are required to set aside up to $15,000 to cover those sales if they don’t actually pay. Small-time loggers who aren’t stealing trees are occasionally cited for violating that law, DNR records show.


The state maintains a database of bonded timber buyers to help protect against improper sales and tree thefts, which can be difficult to uncover and investigate.


“In some circumstances, it’s tough,” said Smith, who oversees DNR law enforcement in southwest Iowa. “We’ve had completely legitimate bonded timber buyers logging one property, and they get across the property line not realizing it. Others might cross that line because they see that big $10,000 black walnut tree, and they think, ‘Well, what the heck? If I sneak over there and grab it, nobody will notice.’”


The DNR often relies on its staff to detect potential timber thefts from public property during routine walk-throughs. Thefts from private property are often aided by landowners and their neighbors.


In 2020, two men stole seven walnut trees from an acreage near Central City in eastern Iowa, according to court records. They were identified with the help of surveillance video recordings from a neighboring property.


Last year, a man who had claimed he was cutting down walnut trees in rural Persia in western Iowa on behalf of the Iowa Department of Transportation was identified with the help of a suspicious neighbor who photographed the man’s truck. The man had stolen 17 trees worth about $1,000, court records show.


This article first appeared in the Iowa Capital Dispatch.
 
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And I remember stories about cactus being stolen in the Southwest. One was identified in a magazine article photo in something like Better Homes and Gardens.
 
Mostly landscapers stealing them and then charging customers for the tree and the instal. Neighbor had a japanese maple dug up from her front yard. There are also rings of thieving p.o.s. stealing unattended tools from landscapers and contractors. Which other contractors then buy at discounted prices and complain when theirs get stolen.
 
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Has anyone ever sold black walnut trees? I’ve got 6 I’d like to sell, and am just curious of the process.
I don't want to burst your bubble, but not all black walnuts command a high price. If the tree is high quality enough that it can shaved into veneer, then yes, you may have a tree(s) worth several thousand dollars. But...in order for it to be veneer quality it has to be pretty dang straight, normally free of lower limbs, even if they have been removed, etc.

Most often these are found growing "low" in a valley, that is what causes the tree to "reach" for available sunlight and grow straight, etc. A random walnut tree that has crooks, branches, odd angles, defects of any kind, etc, is going to be worth a fraction of a veneer quality tree. Often people have a big ol' walnut, or two, in their yard and have an opinion that the tree is "worth something".

It can be, but often isn't. Some lumber buyers don't even want to mess with "yard trees" because they are more likely to have metal embedded in them from days gone by. The process...contact a legit forester and have them assessed.

If you go straight to the timber buyer, not recommended IMO...there are plenty of them that will shade, shade, get it? :) :), things to suit them and you could potentially leave hundreds or thousand of dollars on the table.
 
I don't want to burst your bubble, but not all black walnuts command a high price. If the tree is high quality enough that it can shaved into veneer, then yes, you may have a tree(s) worth several thousand dollars. But...in order for it to be veneer quality it has to be pretty dang straight, normally free of lower limbs, even if they have been removed, etc.

Most often these are found growing "low" in a valley, that is what causes the tree to "reach" for available sunlight and grow straight, etc. A random walnut tree that has crooks, branches, odd angles, defects of any kind, etc, is going to be worth a fraction of a veneer quality tree. Often people have a big ol' walnut, or two, in their yard and have an opinion that the tree is "worth something".

It can be, but often isn't. Some lumber buyers don't even want to mess with "yard trees" because they are more likely to have metal embedded in them from days gone by. The process...contact a legit forester and have them assessed.

If you go straight to the timber buyer, not recommended IMO...there are plenty of them that will shade, shade, get it? :) :), things to suit them and you could potentially leave hundreds or thousand of dollars on the table.
Thanks for the response. I just contacted a timber company, someone will be by today to check them out.
 
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Thanks for the response. I just contacted a timber company, someone will be by today to check them out.
You want a qualified forester who has nothing to gain with the valuation of the trees. Someone that may well be cutting them could be motivated to declare them as lower value.

Just saying...I know of people personally that in essence forfeited an easy 5 figures by going with the "cutter's" valuation.
 
People stealing trees from public and private land in Iowa is an infrequent but growing occurrence, according to state conservation officers.



The crimes range considerably in their scope and sophistication, and the value of the heists can be lucrative. Some of the culprits might haul their looted timber with ramshackle trailers. Others might have full-on logging rigs.


Some of the thefts happen out in the open, such as when a company is contracted to harvest timber from a certain area but oversteps its bounds to cut down a valuable-looking tree on an adjacent property. A prime black walnut trunk can fetch upwards of $10,000.



Other thefts are conducted in the dead of night. In one recent instance, a thief was cutting trees in an area near a highway and would only operate his chain saw when the sound of passing traffic would cover its noise.


“Timber theft was something we never used to see, and now it’s become a bigger thing,” said Craig Cutts, chief of the Iowa Department of Natural Resource’s Law Enforcement Bureau.


He said perhaps the most egregious recent offense happened in Pocahontas County last year, when someone allegedly cut more than 100 trees from a state wildlife management area. One of the trees was a bur oak with a trunk about six feet in diameter.


“That tree was a sapling when Iowa was made a state,” Cutts said. “It’s incredible somebody would cut that down.”


The DNR does not keep a reliable list of timber theft reports, but Capt. Brian Smith, who oversees the bureau’s region of southwest Iowa, estimates that the department has investigated about a dozen in the past two years.


“All across Iowa, timber theft has either been on the increase or at least it’s being recognized on a larger scale than it used to,” he said. “I believe it’s the former of the two — that it has increased — and it has been increasing for a number of years.”


Crime and Courts Newsletter Signup​


Newsletter Signup
checkmark-yellow.png
Delivered to your inbox






The cause of that uptick is unclear. Smith speculates that a growing number of absentee landowners — those who own land but seldom step foot on it — gives potential thieves more opportunities and decreases the public surveillance of wider rural areas.


And while thieves have incentive to steal high-dollar trees worth thousands of dollars, they’re also taking low-dollar softwoods that can be made into pallets.


“They’re much, much less valuable,” Smith said, “but if you can steal it, and it’s free to begin with, a few bucks is better than nothing.”


In the case of the giant bur oak theft in northwest Iowa, the alleged culprit said he planned to build a house out of logs, according to court records.


Timber investigation leads to drug, gun charges​


In October 2022, two DNR officers responded to a report that someone was illegally cutting trees from the Stoddard Wildlife Management Area near Rolfe.


While the officers were on-site, they noticed a vehicle pulling a trailer that turned off the nearby roadway, onto a trail that led to the state property, according to court records.


The officers followed and found Jason Levant Ferguson, 41, who lives nearby. They noted the area was blanketed with vehicle trails, cut trees, branches, tree stumps and limbs. It’s illegal in Iowa to harvest trees from state land without DNR approval.


Ferguson allegedly admitted to the officers that he had been cutting down trees in the wildlife management area “that looked like they were dying.”


“Jason told (the officers) about a large tree that he had cut down, and it was so large that it took him weeks to get it out of the timber, having multiple issues including tires going flat under the extreme weight,” according to documents associated with a search warrant.


The officers asked if they could go to Ferguson’s acreage to see the large log, and he obliged, court records show. There they saw hundreds of logs piled on the property, and Ferguson allegedly admitted that most of them came from the state-owned area.


Ferguson could not be reached to comment for this article.


Another officer obtained a search warrant for the property to collect further evidence, and they seized a significant amount of logging equipment: two trailers, a chain hoist, numerous chain saws, a winch and others.


But they also saw what they believed to be marijuana and a small-caliber rifle. Ferguson is a felon who cannot possess firearms, court records show.


That discovery led to another search warrant for drugs, and officers later found evidence that someone was manufacturing methamphetamine and growing marijuana on the property for sale. They found an unspecified “large amount” of both drugs, according to a criminal complaint, along with smaller amounts of LSD, cocaine and hallucinogenic mushrooms.


Ferguson was charged with numerous felonies for drugs and weapons, the most serious of which is punishable by up to 25 years in prison.


He was also charged with felony theft for taking trees from the wildlife management area, along with 50 counts each for timber buyer violations and prohibited destructive acts.


But the prosecution of many of those charges unraveled last month when a district court judge decided that the search warrants were improperly approved.


Magistrate Ben Meyer, who signed the warrants, was also certified by the Iowa Law Enforcement Academy to be a legal instructor for reserve officers of the Pocahontas Police Department and was identified by the academy as an employee of that department at the time he endorsed the warrants, according to court records.


That violated a constitutional separation of powers requirement because Meyer was a representative of both the judicial and executive branches of state government, District Court Judge Derek Johnson recently decided.


“It is this court’s finding that the search warrants in question are not valid because they were not endorsed and signed by a neutral and detached magistrate,” Johnson wrote in an Oct. 18 order.


The drug and gun charges have been dismissed, court records show, and prosecutors can’t use the evidence obtained for the tree thefts from the searches. Still, the DNR obtained evidence in its investigation that led to the search warrants — including Ferguson’s alleged admission he took the trees — and the tree-related charges are set for trial this week.


Pocahontas County Attorney Dan Feistner confirmed that his prosecution of the timber thefts will continue but declined to comment further about the case.


Difficult investigations​


A review of court documents associated with timber violations shows at least one other prosecutorial misstep: a criminal charge against a Bloomfield man in 2018 was dismissed because of how it was filed in court.


The man was accused of buying timber without posting a bond with the state, which is a serious misdemeanor and punishable by up to a year in jail. But the charging officer filed it with a citation form that is most often used for traffic violations and didn’t include specific details of the alleged crime.


Citing that lack of detail, a judge dismissed the charge.


Timber buyers who agree to pay people to harvest their trees are required to set aside up to $15,000 to cover those sales if they don’t actually pay. Small-time loggers who aren’t stealing trees are occasionally cited for violating that law, DNR records show.


The state maintains a database of bonded timber buyers to help protect against improper sales and tree thefts, which can be difficult to uncover and investigate.


“In some circumstances, it’s tough,” said Smith, who oversees DNR law enforcement in southwest Iowa. “We’ve had completely legitimate bonded timber buyers logging one property, and they get across the property line not realizing it. Others might cross that line because they see that big $10,000 black walnut tree, and they think, ‘Well, what the heck? If I sneak over there and grab it, nobody will notice.’”


The DNR often relies on its staff to detect potential timber thefts from public property during routine walk-throughs. Thefts from private property are often aided by landowners and their neighbors.


In 2020, two men stole seven walnut trees from an acreage near Central City in eastern Iowa, according to court records. They were identified with the help of surveillance video recordings from a neighboring property.


Last year, a man who had claimed he was cutting down walnut trees in rural Persia in western Iowa on behalf of the Iowa Department of Transportation was identified with the help of a suspicious neighbor who photographed the man’s truck. The man had stolen 17 trees worth about $1,000, court records show.


This article first appeared in the Iowa Capital Dispatch.
My dad used to tell me about black walnut rustlers in pa 40 years ago.
 
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You want a qualified forester who has nothing to gain with the valuation of the trees. Someone that may well be cutting them could be motivated to declare them as lower value.

Just saying...I know of people personally that in essence forfeited an easy 5 figures by going with the "cutter's" valuation.
And ask the forester if there’s loggers he would avoid. For instance if the trees are in an area where a lazy or unscrupulous logger might tear the whole place up to get at what he wants. Some guys can leave you with a pretty big mess.
 
I don't want to burst your bubble, but not all black walnuts command a high price. If the tree is high quality enough that it can shaved into veneer, then yes, you may have a tree(s) worth several thousand dollars. But...in order for it to be veneer quality it has to be pretty dang straight, normally free of lower limbs, even if they have been removed, etc.

Most often these are found growing "low" in a valley, that is what causes the tree to "reach" for available sunlight and grow straight, etc. A random walnut tree that has crooks, branches, odd angles, defects of any kind, etc, is going to be worth a fraction of a veneer quality tree. Often people have a big ol' walnut, or two, in their yard and have an opinion that the tree is "worth something".

It can be, but often isn't. Some lumber buyers don't even want to mess with "yard trees" because they are more likely to have metal embedded in them from days gone by. The process...contact a legit forester and have them assessed.

If you go straight to the timber buyer, not recommended IMO...there are plenty of them that will shade, shade, get it? :) :), things to suit them and you could potentially leave hundreds or thousand of dollars on the table.

The collective knowledge of random things on HORT is so amusing.
 
You want a qualified forester who has nothing to gain with the valuation of the trees. Someone that may well be cutting them could be motivated to declare them as lower value.

Just saying...I know of people personally that in essence forfeited an easy 5 figures by going with the "cutter's" valuation.
Well he just left and was very helpful and knowledgeable. Unfortunately there were none of value, most of them are dying, which I didn’t realize. The others were way too knotty. I learned quite a bit though so it wasn’t a complete waste.
 
Well he just left and was very helpful and knowledgeable. Unfortunately there were none of value, most of them are dying, which I didn’t realize. The others were way too knotty. I learned quite a bit though so it wasn’t a complete waste.
Although apparently you don't have high quality walnuts to mill, someone will still be interested in them IMO. Maybe put a Facebook Marketplace ad up and offer them to whomever will come and take them down. There are people that have legit sawmills on wheels that they operate for fun and/or a few extra bucks.

I have a pretty nice mill myself, I just don't have a lot of time, pre-retirement that is, where I can go and get all of the logs that people offer me. Good luck, sorry to hear that they weren't great logs.
 
Although apparently you don't have high quality walnuts to mill, someone will still be interested in them IMO. Maybe put a Facebook Marketplace ad up and offer them to whomever will come and take them down. There are people that have legit sawmills on wheels that they operate for fun and/or a few extra bucks.

I have a pretty nice mill myself, I just don't have a lot of time, pre-retirement that is, where I can go and get all of the logs that people offer me. Good luck, sorry to hear that they weren't great logs.
That’s pretty much what he told me. They aren’t veneer quality but someone who enjoys woodworking would definitely be interested in them. Thanks for the advice!
 
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As the partial owner of 40 acres of timber this concerns me. Lightly traveled gravel road to get to our farm, and once off the road you can disappear into the timber, or behind some tall grass and there is only a slight chance the renters of the land would bump into you. 30 years ago my mom and her siblings were each paid $8000 for trees being taken out of the timber, and they didn't dent what's down there on the river.
 
As the partial owner of 40 acres of timber this concerns me. Lightly traveled gravel road to get to our farm, and once off the road you can disappear into the timber, or behind some tall grass and there is only a slight chance the renters of the land would bump into you. 30 years ago my mom and her siblings were each paid $8000 for trees being taken out of the timber, and they didn't dent what's down there on the river.
For a meer 69.00/month I'll check on it when I go to Muscatine to play pickleball. Venmo me the cash and text me the GPS coordinates...
 




A 41-year-old rural Rolfe man is guilty of felony theft and 50 timber violations for taking dozens of trees from public property, a jury recently decided.




Jason Levant Ferguson, 41, of Rolfe (Booking photo courtesy of Pocahontas County jail)

Jason Levant Ferguson’s criminal tree-theft case went to trial last week in Pocahontas County. He had been accused of taking about 150 trees from a wildlife management area northeast of Rolfe last year, purportedly to build himself a house, according to court records.

Timber thefts are an uncommon but growing crime in Iowa, according to the state’s Department of Natural Resources. Ferguson’s thefts stood out for the number of trees taken and for one of the trees he was accused of felling: a bur oak that was about six feet in diameter at its base.

“That tree was a sapling when Iowa was made a state,” said Craig Cutts, chief of the DNR’s Law Enforcement Bureau. Iowa gained statehood nearly 180 years ago.

People are also reading…​




Ferguson’s prosecution hit a snag last month when a district court judge decided that search warrants for his rural acreage were improperly approved and the evidence obtained by the subsequent searches couldn’t be used to prosecute him.


Those searches allegedly found evidence that someone had been growing marijuana and manufacturing methamphetamine on Ferguson’s property, and he faced numerous felony drug and weapons charges. Those charges were dismissed, but the tree theft case continued with the evidence DNR officers had obtained before the searches.





Jason Ferguson allegedly admitted to taking a massive bur oak from state property. (Courtesy of Iowa Courts Online)
Clerk of Court
That evidence included an admission by Ferguson that he had taken the trees from the Stoddard Wildlife Management Area and photographic evidence of tree trunks on his property, court records show.
The trial last week spanned four days and ended with a 12-person jury finding him guilty of every criminal charge he faced, court records show. The jury deliberated for about two hours, Pocahontas County Attorney Dan Feistner said.

Ferguson’s sentencing hearing is set for Jan. 26. He faces up to five years in prison for the felony theft charge and one year imprisonment each for the 50 counts of timber buyer violations, which were for cutting down trees he had not purchased and “had no legal right to do so,” according to court records.
 
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