![milo hanson buck milo hanson buck](http://cdn.playbuzz.com/cdn/1e1bd18b-fe73-4285-87d9-3e72ddea00ca/dbf1e16b-7e49-4859-be8f-8ecd96ef0e59.jpg)
On a Wisconsin deer drive, Johnny King killed a Wisconsin buck for the ages. He was sentenced to 30 days in jail and banned from hunting anywhere in the world for a year. And while Spann was not carrying the weapon, he was ruled to be hunting because he was calling to turkeys, carrying hunting equipment, carrying dead turkeys and illegally spreading bait to attract turkeys. Federal game wardens had obtained video footage and Facebook photos of Spann assisting other hunters on hunts in Tennessee. Magistrate judge found that Spann had violated the terms of his plea agreement that banned him from hunting for six months. Unfortunately, Spann’s trouble didn’t end with the 6-month hunting ban that was placed on him from the first violation. Spann’s side of the story and excuse sounded legit. He killed the deer on land he had permission to hunt, but he didn’t have the proper license. In November 2012, Spann pleaded guilty to a 2007 violation of the Lacey Act when he transported the illegally tagged buck from Kansas to Tennessee. The buck had non-typical antlers at about 230 inches on the Pope & Young rating scale, with a net score of 224 inches. If the buck had been shot legally, it would have been one of the top bucks shot in Kansas, and one of the top shot in the world at that time.
MILO HANSON BUCK LICENSE
Spann killed a trophy Kansas buck without the proper license in 2007. Spook Spann is another hunter that learned that ignorance is no excuse when it comes to breaking the law.