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While a voluntary national livestock identification system exists, few ranchers and farmers participate in it. "Unfortunately, cattle don't have a serial number that goes with them or some type of permanent ID" short of branding, said Jim Fraley, an Illinois Farm Bureau livestock specialist. "Thieves look at it as an opportunity and can market the cattle under their name. It's a fairly easy thing to do." Owners' vigilance has paid off in some cases. A Colorado rancher who was hunting prairie dogs spotted one of his branded, missing cows on another man's property. Deputies swooped in and found 36 cows and 31 calves worth $68,000 and belonging to nine different people. An Alabama rancher reported a couple of his cattle missing, and then two more were stolen the next night, Chilton County Sheriff Kevin Davis said. Sheriff's investigators installed cameras on the property but got nothing before pulling them days later. Not long after, the farmer called because he spotted two men with a pickup truck and what turned out to be a stolen trailer on his land. Deputies arrested the men and found five of the six missing cows
-- half of them pregnant -- at various locations. The sixth animal already had been slaughtered. Davis credited luck and the rancher's "heightened alert" for snaring the two suspects. "The boldness is the thing -- for them to come back three different times to the same pasture," he said. "Obviously, they didn't feel very threatened about being caught. But I've never given criminals credit for having high intelligence." And they're not finicky. An Ohio woman has been charged with taking $110,000 worth of frozen bull semen
-- which can valuable to breeders in even small amounts -- from a liquid-nitrogen tank at a Moorefield Township genetics company where she once worked. Nor are all the thefts big. Someone recently made off with two horses -- ages 16 and 7
-- from a home near Hanover in northeastern Illinois' Jo Daviess County. Back in Oklahoma, Payne replaced old wire gates on his ranch near Chelsea, with "big, old heavy-duty steel ones," hoping to safeguard his other cows. "That's about all I can do," he said. "Like everyone says, it never happens to me. I guess that's wrong."
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