• Two Connecticut dogs went missing in November due to a damaged fence.
  • A hunter killed the dogs and claimed he thought they were coyotes.
  • The man, who has been charged with tampering with evidence, forgery and other crimes, said he is ashamed of what he did.

A New York hunter is facing multiple hunting charges after skinning two dogs he thought were coyotes.

The two German shepherds escaped from their family’s home in late November, weeks before hunter Michael Konschak made what he called a “split second” decision to shoot the dogs with a crossbow.

The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection arrested Konschak, 61, in February and charged him with:

  • Tampering with evidence
  • Forgery
  • Interfering with an officer
  • Hunting on private land without written consent from a landowner
  • Violating wild game hunting regulations

According to Danbury State’s Attorney David Applegate, the case is still being investigated and Konschak could be hit with more charges.

Konschak applied for a probation program that could’ve erased the charges but a judge rejected his request Wednesday, the Associated Press reported.

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What happened to the dogs?

According to court documents from the Superior Court of Connecticut, two German shepherds named Leiben and Cimo went missing on Nov. 18.

They escaped from their family’s yard in Ridgefield, Connecticut, about 45 miles west of New Haven. According to the documents, an animal, possibly a black bear, had damaged the family’s six-foot high fence, allowing the dogs to escape. Neither dog had a collar on.