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WI: Teen gets fines, community service for Waupaca poaching; loses hunting rights for 2 years

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Teen gets fines, community service for Waupaca poaching; loses hunting rights for 2 years

4/28/2026

One of the teens charged in a deer and racoon poaching case in Waupaca was convicted Tuesday.

Ian Johnson, 18, pleaded no contest to resisting a conservation warden. Three other counts, including two of illegal shining, were dismissed but considered at sentencing. Johnson was fined $300 and must perform 80 hours of community service, court records show. His hunting and fishing privileges were revoked for two years.

Johnson was also convicted of multiple ordinance violations, including for hunting out of season, hunting after hours and firing a weapon from a vehicle. He was fined $824.70 for those. Other citations were dismissed.

Ethan Lashua has a status conference May 6 and Landan Fuhs has a status conference June 3. They face similar charges and ordinance violations.

The criminal complaint said an investigation began Sept. 23, after someone reported hearing multiple shots, believed to be from a handgun, in the area along Elm Valley Road, south of Scandanavia.

A week later, a tip was called into a Wisconsin DNR violation hotline. The caller said the occupants of a red car were observed shooting an antlerless deer in a soybean field on the corner of County Highway V and North Foley Road. The witness was able to get a partial license plate number.

Authorities connected the car to Fuhs. During an interview with investigators, he admitted to shining and shooting at multiple deer and racoons. Fuhs told investigators he used a pistol to shoot at approximately 12-15 deer since spring 2025. He believed he only hit 3-5 of the animals, recovering two of them.

The criminal complaint said Fuhs admitted he knew what he was doing was wrong. Officials added “as a coyote hunter who uses thermal/night vision when hunting, he commonly sees deer at night and often times they walk near to him. In addition, he stated he ‘wasn’t thinking’ when he does this and often regrets doing it right after he ‘pulls the trigger.'”

While Fuhs said he was alone during some of these incidents, he also said Johnson and Lashua were with him on other occasions.

During questioning, Johnson said he shot no deer, but did admit to shooting at over a dozen racoons. Lashua said he was never around when the animals were shot, but then contradicted his story.