California couple confided about stuffed mountain lion to fellow fliers, authorities say. They were in for a shock

California couple confided about stuffed mountain lion to fellow fliers, authorities say. They were in for a shock



They were just passengers aboard an airplane, flying over California and having a chat.

The couple was relating their adventures in hunting to the pair of fliers in the row ahead of them. Things apparently got cozy, and they confided that they had hunted a mountain lion. In fact, they said, a close relative was a big fan of wild animals that had been stuffed and mounted — they had , a wolverine and in a “trophy room.”

Not only that, the couple had a trophy of their own, the skull of a green sea turtle, and it was with them aboard that very plane.

The passengers in the row ahead were sure to have listened with avid interest. They were officers with the .

As the CDFW related the tale, the pair were dressed in plain clothes and flying to Northern California after attending a training session in San Diego.

When the plane landed, the hunters were asked by their their traveling companions if they could get a peek at that sea turtle skull.

According to wildlife officials, the couple “acknowledged the potential unlawful possession.” Then they waited till the coast was clear — making sure no TSA agents were around.

They pulled out the skull that authorities said they had secreted inside a jacket in their carry-on luggage.

Those bones belonged to a federally listed that is illegal to possess and transport.

After the wildlife officers got back to their stomping grounds, they wrote up search warrants — one for the couple’s Chico home and another for the family member in Napa County with the fondness for .

At the Chico residence, the CDFW says mountain lion claws, a ringtail cat and a mounted were among the finds.

Mountain lions, ringtail cats and are protected species in California, as the agency notes, and permits are required for mounted raptors.

At the Napa County home, full-body taxidermied mountain lions and a wolverine were discovered, the agency said.

The assisted in search warrants, investigation and prosecution of Byron Lee Fitzpatrick, 24, Shannon Lee Price, 28, and Harry Vern Fitzpatrick, 64.

All three pleaded guilty to violating fish and game codes, were assessed fines of $1,865, $1,015 and $605, respectively, and placed on probation. The younger pair were prohibited from hunting for a year.

“Like human and narcotics trafficking,” the CDFW noted in a news release stressing the seriousness of the incident, “ of both live animals and animal parts is known to fund transnational criminal organizations and their violent activities all over the world.”

This article by Amy Hubbard was first published by American Military News on 27 February 2025. Lead Image: Taxidermied mountain lions were seized in a Napa County, California, home after a traveling couple inadvertently told a pair of wildlife officials about them. (California Department of Fish and Wildlife/TNS).

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