Monday, May 18, 2009

Hot 'Rats and Hungry Ferrets

Here's a little local-history true crime story Dusty D wrote. Hope you enjoy it!

Ypsilanti’s most tenacious hunter was Otto Rohn. He hunted other Ypsilantians, and caught many, as deputy game warden. In November of 1907 he lay for hours on frozen marsh-ground south of town, concealed amid the reeds and marsh hay, watching three men sealing their fate.

The Monroe Marsh at the mouth of the Raisin River was coming to the end of its decades of renown as a rich hunting and fishing ground. Pollution and encroaching industry were damaging the marsh. Native Americans had fished there for sturgeon and trapped beaver and muskrat. By the mid 1800s, “market hunters exploited the abundant aquatic resources of the marshes, harvesting waterfowl by the thousands to supply eastern and urban markets,” notes one Monroe Marsh history. One gunshot often brought down multiple birds, and hunters often took several hundred in a single night. This was the lush habitat that Ypsilanti poachers Leon Willetts, Archie Navarre, and Harry Duval had snuck to, in search of the water-loving animals whose luxurious fur was used to line ladies’ cloaks and mens’ coats.

The men did not notice that they, too, were prey. “Rohn went out into the marsh early, on the north side of the canal, and saw the three hunters,” says the November 11, 1907 Ypsilanti Daily Press. “He walked back some distance to get across, then slipped up as near them as he dared and lay there on the wet, half-frozen ground for three hours, until he saw enough to convince him that he was justified in arresting the men.”

Confronting often heavily-armed lawbreakers in the remote wilderness was not a job for the meek. Rohn made up for his relative lack of firepower with considerable grit. “When he stepped out on the hunters,” says the Press, “he covered them with his revolver, handcuffed two of them together, and told the third that if he made any attempt to run away he would shoot him.” The men weren’t happy with the wily warden, and refused to carry back the dozen ’rats they’d nabbed. Rohn “had to carry the rats back to town, besides watching his prisoners.” Luckily, wrangling three sullen criminals and a pile of dead beasts single-handedly all the way back to Ypsi was no problem for Rohn. Pending their trial, the men were jailed.

Nabbing the muskratters was not Rohn’s biggest bust. The next January, in a one-week sweep, he caught four men “hunting rabbits with ferrets in Washtenaw County,” notes the January 18, 1908 Ypsilanti Daily Press. This technique used ferrets and nets. The trained ferret entered a rabbit burrow whose multiple entrances were covered with individual nets. The ferret harassed a rabbit until it fled from the burrow—and into a net. Detroiters Louis and Albert Petzoldt and Adrian residents Joe Schwab and Edward Gruscow each paid $10 in fines plus costs ranging from $7.75 to $12.75.

Yet another newsworthy bust appeared in a different town newspaper, the November 17, 1913 Daily Ypsilantian-Press. “Otto Rohn arrested a man by the name of Baylis Sunday afternoon,” says the article. Unlike the muskrat poachers and the rabbit hunters, this foolhardy criminal, holding a highly suspicious object, tried to defy the formidible Rohn. “Although the young man protested . . . that he had only taken it from a dog, he was promptly escorted to the city jail.” Baylis’ “dog” dodge collapsed in court 2 days later. He paid a $10 fine and court costs after pleading guilty to what might be the most pathetic crime in Ypsilanti’s history: unlawful possession of a squirrel.

No comments :