Conservation Warden Wall of Honor
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Neil
L. LaFave
1939-1971
Researched by Judith Borke,
Wisconsin Conservation Warden Museum
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Neil L. LaFave was a game technician with
special conservation warden credentials when he was shot and killed by
a violator in the Sensiba Wildlife Area in Brown County on September 24,
1971. The nine-year Department veteran had gone to the game preserve to
post signs that afternoon but failed to return home in the evening, his
32nd birthday. His shot and decapitated body was found the next day, partially
buried in a swampy area. A three-month investigation followed, and through
questioning of all LaFave's acquaintances and hunters he had arrested
for game violations, authorities became suspicious of one young hunter.
The first-time use of Wisconsin's new Electronic Surveillance Law for
a murder case helped convict a 21-year-old that LaFave had cited for hunting
pheasants out of season earlier that fall in the Sensiba area. (After
ten years in prison, the assailant escaped and was shot to death by a
posse attempting to recapture him.) LaFave was survived by his wife Peggy
and children, Nicole, 2 and Lonny, 4.
A large boulder cenotaph with an inscription
was placed at the entrance to the Sensiba Wildlife Area in 1972 as a memorial
to Neil LaFave. His name is engraved on the Wisconsin Law Enforcement
Memorial on the State Capitol grounds in Madison.
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(Sources:
"Case of the Butchered Game Warden," by Eddie Krell, unknown magazine
and date; warden memorial reporting form at Conservation Warden
Museum, Poynette.)
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Last Revised: Wednesday December 07 2005
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