Sure, they look cute, but they can do tens of thousands of dollars in damage in a year. They tunnel under everything, your house, porch, garage, driveway, etc. IF left unchecked, you could be busting up all the concrete and pouring a new floor, foundation, driveway, etc. They don't seem to have any natural preditors around here and keep multiplying by 6 or 8. I have two dens, one under my back porch and one under the front porch. These holes usually come in pairs, so most often, there are 2 holes per den. In the last couple years I've killed 10 last year, and 8 the previous year. Last fall thought I had them finished off but I didn't fill in their holes. This year, it looks like another family is moving in, and using the old den. They travel from neighboring property to yours looking for a new place to take up residence and an old den is inviting....
I've got them by connibear trap, live trap, and 12 gauge #6 shot. I recommend against anything smaller, and a 22 is inhumane. They are extremely tough, and even a 12 gauge with a target load, they will survive long enough to run back to their hole. The live traps worked for me with apples and cantelope, but I also caught lots of raccoons. Some Ground hogs refused to go in the trap.
Once they are gone, you need to do work to keep them out. Around every foundation or vertical wall, take some heavy gauge metal mesh, chicken wire, etc. and bend it in an L shape. Install it so that it goes up above the ground level of the foundataion, then under the ground a couple inches, then out away from the foundation 3-4 feet. The critters will try to dig a hole alongside the foundation and discover the wire. They don't know (or want to) to dig 4' away from the foundation. IF you don't do this, they will keep coming back, traveling from neighboring properties.
Brian