Charge: Woman cut down trees on protected land to improve her view

? A woman has been indicted on charges that she had three large trees up to a century old cut down on sensitive federal land near Lake Tahoe to improve her view, prosecutors said Wednesday.

Officials said they weren’t aware of any similar federal prosecutions.

Patricia M. Vincent, 58, was indicted last week on charges of theft of government property and willingly damaging government property. If convicted, she faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine for each count.

The three ponderosa pines stood on a plot the U.S. Forest Service had designated as environmentally sensitive as part of a water quality plan to help protect the clarity of Lake Tahoe. The trees were estimated at 80 to 100 years old; trees that age would be at least 2 feet in diameter at the base of the trunk.

“It is important that public lands, which are held in trust for the benefit of all citizens, are appropriately protected by our land management agencies,” U.S. Attorney Gregory Brower said in a news release. “Individuals who unlawfully encroach on these lands and cause damage will be prosecuted.”

Forest Service spokesman Rex Norman said that there have been other cases of trees being cut down illegally on national forest land in the Tahoe Basin but that he was not aware of any similar federal prosecution. Natalie Collins, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney in Las Vegas, said she also did not recall any similar prosecution.

The indictment accuses Vincent of hiring a commercial tree removal business in April to cut down the trees to enhance her view in Incline Village, one of the wealthiest towns on the shore of the mountain resort lake.

The damage exceeded $10,000, the indictment said.

The site is among several parcels of land the federal agency has established as conservation lots aimed at maintaining mature vegetation, which helps stabilize soils and combat erosion that contributes to the lake’s degradation.