RED WING - Among the score or more of long-faced men and women who were part of the weekly "cattle call" here Thursday in Goodhue County District Court, Troy Alan Reinke didn't particularly stand out.
Dressed in blue jeans, running shoes, long-sleeved T-shirt and camouflage fleece jacket, Reinke could have been among the many who appeared before Judge Kevin F. Mark for boozing and driving.
Instead, Reinke, 32, of Cannon Falls, is alleged to have poached a monster whitetail buck Halloween evening, a charge that has riveted many deer hunters, in Minnesota and throughout the nation.
The reason: The buck that allegedly fell at Reinke's hands would have been the highest-scoring 8-point whitetail ever registered by Pope and Young or Boone and Crockett, which chronicle such trophies.
Reinke pleaded not guilty Thursday morning to 13 misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors stemming from the poaching case.
The Department of Natural Resources says Reinke first told officers he killed the big buck with a bow, after earlier in the season felling a smaller buck and doe. Reinke was licensed to kill only one deer, a buck or doe, and because he hadn't registered either of the smaller animals -- saving his tag for the trophy buck -- all three were deemed poached by the DNR.
The Goodhue County complaint against Reinke alleges he took the big buck to a taxidermist, who "caped" it in preparation for mounting. Subsequently, the animal's hide, along with its skull and antlers, were confiscated by the DNR.
When tests on the hide showed it was killed by a gun, not a bow, Reinke changed his story, according to the DNR, saying in fact he didn't kill the buck with a stick and string, but instead found it already dead.