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On patrol with Conservation Police

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We saw one car in the parking lot, an SUV with a temporary Tennessee tag in the rear window. It was obvious the cardboard tag had been altered with White-Out and a magic marker. That is a felony.

We saw the fisherman on the bank and approached him.

He pulled out identification and a license but spoke no English. He was an illegal alien but amazingly had purchased an state resident fishing license.

I must admit that I jumped a bit when the man thrust his hands into the pocket of his hoodie. Who knows what he had in there? Would the threat of deportation make a man desperate enough to attack a uniformed officer and an overweight gray-haired guy wearing a sweatshirt?

Thankfully nothing happened. My imagination had just run wild. Riedel called the Carpentersville Police for the assistance of a Spanish-speaking officer.

The officer arrived, the man was questioned, and all was good. He was not the owner of the SUV. The Carpentersville officer called for backup and we all waited for the owner to show up.

I’ll tell you what happened after that the next time out. Believe me, it will be worth the wait.

I will also give you my take on what being an IDNR Conservation Police officer is all about and what their jobs really are like.

• Northwest Herald outdoors columnist Steve Sarley’s radio show, “The Outdoors Experience,” airs live at 5 a.m. Sundays on AM-560. He can be contacted at sarfishing@yahoo.com.

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