Byline: TIMOTHY D. MAY Associated Press
HARRISBURG, Pa. -- The deer hunter had never seen anything like it: a set of elk antlers with a six-foot spread and branches as thick as baseball bats.
It was mounted on a wall in the lobby of the Pennsylvania Game Commission's headquarters as part of an exhibit that showcases the infamous trophies seized during investigations of some of Pennsylvania's more notorious poaching cases.
Printed on an 8-by-11-inch sheet of laminated paper were the vitals. The rack belonged to an enormous bull elk illegally killed in October 2000 in Cameron County. The animal was known to many in the area because of the majesty of …
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