After two years as a Game Warden Lieutenant in the Law Enforcement Division’s 5th District, Gary Emmons has been promoted to Captain and is now chief of the 11-county area.
“I consider it a great honor to have been selected for the job, and I hope to use this opportunity to have a positive impact on my fellow Game Wardens of the 5th District,” Emmons said.
Emmons was introduced to hunting and fishing by his father while growing up in Perry. “I’ve been tagging along with him and my older brother on hunts for about as long as I can remember, actually learning to shoot rabbits and squirrels with an old .22-caliber Colt single-action revolver when I was around 8 years old. We spent many days and nights fishing along the banks of the Black Bear and Red Rock creeks in Noble County.”
After graduating from Perry High School in 1994, he attended Northern Oklahoma College in Tonkawa and earned a bachelor’s degree in wildlife ecology and management from Oklahoma State University.
Emmons started his Wildlife Department career in 1999 as a contract research technician working during the final three years of the Packsaddle Quail Chick Ecology Study. He was hired as a game warden in 2002 and was assigned to Lincoln County.
He is a CLEET-certified instructor in defensive tactics, firearms and law enforcement driving. In 2014, Emmons was honored by the Shikar-Safari Club International as Oklahoma’s Wildlife Officer of the Year, as selected by his peers. As Captain, Emmons will oversee two Lieutenants and 11 Game Wardens in Law District 5 from Payne County to Love County. Cities within District 5 include Oklahoma City, Edmond, Stillwater, Guthrie, Chandler, Shawnee, Norman, Ardmore, Sulphur and Marietta.
In his spare time, Emmons enjoys bass fishing in farm ponds, hunting and firearms training. Married for 21 years, he and his wife, Misty, have two sons.
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