The Sun (San Bernardino)

Couple fined $18K for bulldozing iconic Joshua Trees

- By Alyssa Lukpat

A California couple who mowed down 36 protected Joshua trees to clear their land for a new house have been fined $18,000, a punishment the authoritie­s hope will discourage others from uprooting the iconic desert plants.

A nearby landowner reported seeing Jeffrey Walter and Jonetta NordbergWa­lter bulldoze the land and bury the trees in a hole in February, the San Bernardino County District Attorney’s Office said in a statement Tuesday.

The couple, who live in nearby Riverside County, wanted to clear the land and build a home on their property in Joshua Tree, California, just north of Joshua Tree National Park.

The couple told the authoritie­s they thought they were allowed to remove smaller trees, Douglas Poston, the supervisin­g deputy district attorney of the office’s Morongo Basin division, said in an interview Wednesday.

A wildlife officer went to the scene after receiving the report from a neighbor and used a backhoe to unearth the buried trees, the prosecutor­s said.

The spiky trees, which are technicall­y succulents, were granted temporary protection last year under the California Endangered Species Act. That means it is illegal to disturb or kill the trees, which are mostly found in the Mojave Desert in the Southwest.

The average Joshua tree lives around 150 years, according

A portion of the 36Joshua trees that were unearthed during an investigat­ion in San Bernardino County.

to the National Park Service. The tallest trees grow to over 40 feet tall.

The couple were charged with 36 misdemeano­rs for felling the trees, the district attorney’s office said. The office issued the $18,000 fine on June 22.

California’s maximum punishment for killing a Joshua tree is six months in jail and a fine of $4,100 per

tree, the prosecutor­s said.

“The fine was low because of a lack of criminal history,” Poston said. “The defendants were cooperativ­e, lacked sophistica­tion and made an early admission of fault.”

The couple have already paid part of the fine, the office said. They can earn credit toward the fine by volunteeri­ng for Joshua Tree National Park or for

the Mojave Desert Land Trust organizati­on. The prosecutio­n will dismiss the case against the couple if they fulfill all of their pretrial diversion requiremen­ts.

Poston said the couple were “kind of elderly” but not retired. The pair did not return emails or phone calls Wednesday.

This is the first time Poston has prosecuted a

case involving Joshua trees, he said.

The species has had a difficult few years. The National Park Service estimated that up to 1.3 million Joshua trees were killed when the Dome fire burned the Mojave Desert in August last year. Several of the trees at Joshua Tree National Park were graffitied and chopped down in 2019.

Experts say climate change, and its ensuing droughts and wildfires, are threatenin­g the very survival of Joshua trees, The New York Times reported last year.

State officials will decide sometime this year whether the trees should be permanentl­y listed as a threatened species, the California Fish and Game Commission said.

 ?? CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ??
CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES

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