Indictment: Ranch couple faces criminal charges over federal property boundary
News | Aug 9, 2024
Carrie Stadheim
cstadheim@tsln-fre.com
The cut and baled land and the untouched land in this photo represent where survey markers indicate property boundaries exist between Maude private property and USFS property. Charles Maude and Heather Maude were indicted separately for theft of federal property, and each must retain their own attorney – doubling their legal costs. Courtesy photo
image-23Charles and Heather Maude, a western South Dakota farm and ranch couple, have been indicted for theft of federal property. The summons, served June 24, 2024, charged that the Maudes, “Beginning at a time unknown, but no later than December, 2020…did knowingly steal, purloin and convert to their own use National Grasslands managed by the United States Department of Agriculture, a department and agency of the United States, namely, approximately, 25 acres of National Grasslands for cultivation and approximately 25 acres of National Grasslands for grazing cattle, having a value in excess of $1,000 and did aid and abet each other, all in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 641 and 2.”
The summons, signed by Alison J. Ramsdell, United States Attorney, charges them separately, which means they must retain two attorneys and they could each be sentenced to up to 10 years in prison and fined up to $250,000.
At issue is a property boundary between the Maudes and the U.S. Forest Service. The fence in question and the management practices the USFS is alleging are “theft” have been in place for generations.
MAUDE FAMILY HISTORYAccording to longtime neighbor Scott Edoff, Charles’ great-great-grandparents, Thomas and Rose Maude bought the land adjacent to the USFS land in question in 1910 and a member of the Maude family has operated that land, and the USFS property adjacent, since then.
<..snip..>
https://www.tsln.com/news/indictment-ranch-couple-faces-criminal-charges-over-federal-property-boundary/