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|  |  | | Customer Reviews: | | | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Couldn't get into it - way too country for me. Aug 06, 2007 I tried but couldn't get into this music album. Way too country for me and nothing memorable. If you like country you might find it OK but it just wasn't for me.
1 of 2 found the following review helpful:
happy shopper Jan 05, 2007 A wonderful gift for my boyfriend who is a fan of Montgomery Gentry. He plays the CD so much and has such enjoyment from it! Thanks - we both were very satisfied with this item!
0 of 11 found the following review helpful:
Cowardly Cowboy Music. Aug 21, 2006 Nothin like a big cowboy hat, and a gun to make you feel like a man. Shameful and sad.
6 of 16 found the following review helpful:
what a coward Aug 19, 2006 what, couldn't find a kitten or a puppy to run down? Stupid 'neck.
5 of 12 found the following review helpful:
Don't buy there music Aug 18, 2006
Country Singer Charged With Killing A Tame Bear
(WCCO) Minneapolis Country singer Troy Lee Gentry was indicted Tuesday in federal court on a charge of illegally killing and tagging a tamed black bear.
Gentry, of Franklin, Tenn., and Lee Marvin Greenly, a 46-year-old wildlife photographer from Sandstone, Minn., appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Raymond Erickson in Duluth, Minn. Tuesday morning. Their case being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael A. Dees.
According to the indictment, Greenly sold Gentry a tame, trophy-caliber black bear named "Cubby" for approximately $4,650 in October of 2004. Greenly housed several animals for use in his photography business.
After the transaction, the indictment reports that Greenly and Gentry tagged the bear with a Minnesota hunting license. Gentry then allegedly killed the captive bear with a bow and arrow while the animal was still enclosed in a pen on Greenly's property.
The indictment further alleges that Greenly and Gentry registered the bear with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources as though it had been hunted in the wild before shipping the animal's hide to a taxidermist in Kentucky for mounting.
According to the Lacey Act, it is illegal to falsely tag a tame bear for the purpose of hunting.
The bear's death was videotaped and allegedly edited after the fact to make it appear that Cubby had been killed in a "fair chase" situation.
Greenly is also facing two further charges of violations against the Lacey Act, including guiding hunters to the Sandstone National Wildlife Refuge, where black bear hunting is illegal, and unlawfully setting up bear-baiting stations in the area.
Both Gentry and Greenly have been released on bond pending their next court appearance. If convicted on the charges, they could both face a maximum potential penalty of five years in federal prison and a $20,000 fine.
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