West Tisbury Man Charged After Euthanizing Deer

A West Tisbury man has had his guns seized and is facing criminal charges after shooting an injured deer on Barnes Road.

A West Tisbury man has had his guns seized and is facing criminal charges after shooting an injured deer on Barnes Road.

Rafael N. Louback, 36, is being charged with discharging a firearm within 150 feet of a highway, hunting without a license, hunting at night and hunting out of season.

On Feb. 29, Edgartown police were dispatched to a motor vehicle accident involving a deer on Barnes Road, according to the police report. The responding officer, Jake Sylvia, found two cars on scene.

The report states that Liana Cajado had hit a deer and called her husband, Mr. Louback, to assist her. Mr. Louback then called police to report the incident and drove to the scene to help his wife.

When Mr. Louback arrived, he found the deer “flailing around,” and unable to move itself from the travel lane, Officer Sylvia wrote. After numerous unsuccessful attempts to remove the deer from the road, Mr. Louback “said he then drew his 9mm handgun from his waistband and fired one round into the deer’s head,” the report continued.

It was noted in the report that there were no homes within 1,000 feet of the area where Mr. Louback discharged his weapon.

Mr. Louback’s 9mm Ruger pistol was seized by officers on scene. Edgartown police then notified West Tisbury police of the incident, who secured the rest of Mr. Louback’s guns at his residence, according to the report.

Edgartown police then contacted local environmental police Sergeant Scott Opie, who advised that Mr. Louback may be charged with hunting violations in addition to the criminal gun charge.

“I appreciate the intent of the action, but that is not his job,” said Edgartown police chief Bruce McNamee, of Mr. Louback’s decision to euthanize the deer. “The officer dispatched would be the one to make that call.”

Mr. Louback has a hearing scheduled before the clerk magistrate on Wednesday, which will determine if there is probable cause to make an arraignment.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/10/2020 - 13:12

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Annie Chappaquiddick

That is an insane over-reaction if, in fact, the reporting is accurate. I’d like an explanation from our police force.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/10/2020 - 18:14

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Kris West Tisburu

Evidently the police would rather have the animal suffer than have someone use their common sense to humanely put it down. This is absolutely absurb and the police should be embarrassed by their actions.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/10/2020 - 21:11

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Jenny B Chilmark

I would have done the same! I have come across many deer that have been wounded and often wished I had a gun to put them out of their misery, rather than wait for the police. If you know how to handle a gun and you have a license, you should be able to end suffering.

This is a waste of time.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 03/11/2020 - 07:06

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

To the 2nd commentor. You made a stupid comment,the cop would have done the exact same thing. Maybe you would prefer he left the poor animal flopping around and grunting in pain. You've probably never seen a deer hit and suffering after getting hit. He had a legal permit and these dummies are treating him like a criminal. And what is it he should have known better in your opinion.

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