Thai gibbon sanctuary survives killings of staff

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

Phop Phra, Tak, Thailand– The William E. Deters Foundation
For Gibbon and Wildlife Conservation Projects, founded in 1996 as
the Highland Farm & Gibbon Sanctuary, is recovering from perhaps the
most violent transition of leadership any sanctuary has ever endured.
On May 10, 2002, cofounder William Emeral Deters, 69,
housekeeper Ratchanee Sonkhamleu, 26, her three-year-old daughter,
Hmong worker Laeng sae Yang, and a Thai worker known only as Subin
were massacred during a botched robbery. Of the key personnel, only
cofounder Pharanee Deters, 60, remained.
But the animals still needed to be fed.
“My mind was in a dark hole for a long time,” Pharanee
Deters told ANIMAL PEOPLE in a recent update e-mail. “Very sad,
upset, suffering, depressed, angry–you name it, I had it all. I
even thought about eliminating myself. But every day I would think,
“If I am gone, who will take care of the 37 gibbons, six monkeys,
the birds, the dogs, the cats, the geese, the turkeys. So here I
am, still alive and working harder to keep these creatures alive and
happy.
“When Bill was alive, he was the creator and I was the doer.
Now I have to do both,” Pharanee Deters continued, with words of
appreciation for Edwin Wick, director of Wildlife Friends of
Thailand, and Roger Lohanan, director of the Thai Animal Guardians
Association. Wick and three volunteers helped maintain the sanctuary
for about two months after the murders. Lohanan and eight volunteers
helped for two weeks after Wick’s team left.

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Hunting hunters

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan– “Tribesmen in the Dera Ghazi Khan
district of Punjab province, Pakistan, recently fired on an advance
team preparing for the arrival of Crown Prince Sheikh Sultan bin
Hamadan al Nuhayyan, grandson of the emir of the United Arban
Emirates, and his royal falconers,” Boston Globe correspondent Jan
McGirk reported on December 28.
“In a separate incident,” McGirk continued, “in the
Ranjapur district, Pakistanis with guns, hand grenades, and
rockets attacked a police border post erected to protect the hunting
parties” of oil sheikhs who fly into Pakistan each winter.
“The police escaped unhurt, but several vehicles were
destroyed,” McGirk said. “The violence followed escalating tension
between the hunters and their Pakistani helpers,” McGirk explained,
“and Khosa and Bugti tribesmen who have been banned from shooting or
trapping houbara bustards for the past 30 years.”
A threatened species, but still a favorite target of
falconers, houbara bustards resemble pheasants. They are eaten for
purported aphrodisiacal qualities.

Bridging the animal care gulf in the Gulf of Thailand

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

Koh PhaNgan, Thailand–“The island government has just
done–for the first time since we have been here–a mass culling of
dogs,” PhaNgan Animal Care practice manager Amber Holland e-mailed
to ANIMAL PEOPLE on December 29.
“We are outraged to say the least,” Holland continued, “and
have had a letter printed in The National,” a leading Thai newspaper
published in English. “All of the dogs were desexed, vaccinated,
and healthy, and were indiscriminately killed for no other reason
than laziness and lack of creative thinking” by authorities who made
them scapegoats for slower-than-hoped-for Christmas tourism.
Koh PhaNgan, north of Koh Samui, is the smaller of two
islands in the Gulf of Thailand, close to the Malay Peninsula. Not
one of the busier and better known Thai tourist destinations, it
caters chiefly to divers–like Irish veterinarian Shevaun Gallwey,
who began visiting while practicing in Hong Kong.
“I have always been saddened to see the condition of the Thai beach
dogs when holidaying there, and have been frustrated, as a
veterinarian, at not being able to help them. So, when embarking on
a three-month visit to Koh PhaNgan in early 2001,” Gallwey told the
Asia for Animals conference in September 2003,

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North Shore alumni set adoption records on opposite coasts

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

SAN DIEGO, NEW YORK CITY –Home 4 The Holidays 2003,
rehoming 263,200 dogs and cats worldwide, boosted Helen V. Woodward
Animal Center executive director Mike Arms’ lifetime total of
adoptions facilitated to more than one million. Starting in humane
work with the American SPCA in 1967, Arms for 20 years directed the
North Shore Animal League adoption program.
Relocating from New York City to Chula Vista, California, Arms took
over management of the Helen V. Woodward Animal Center in 1998, and
initiated Home 4 The Holidays in 1999.
The North Shore Animal League rehomed as many as 44,000
animals at peak and averaged more than 40,000 adoptions per year in
the early 1990s. North Shore still places more animals in homes than
any other single-site animal adoption agency in the world, but has
averaged just over 22,000 rehomings per year during the early 2000s.
The slower pace has enabled North Shore to sterilize all animals
prior to adoption since 2001, a goal that eluded North Shore during
Arms’ tenure despite the expenditure of millions of dollars to expand
the veterinary facilities and staff. Placements of older animals
have increased; placements of puppies and kittens are markedly down,
reflecting the steep reduction nationally in puppy and kitten births
and shelter surrender rates.

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More death-by-dog cases charged

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

DENVER–The Elbert County (Colorado) Sheriff’s Department on
January 14, 2004 recommended charges of criminally negligent
homicide and unlawful ownership of dangerous dogs against Jacqueline
McCuen, 32, and William Gladney, 46. Their three pit bull
terriers on November 30, 2003 killed horse trainer Jennifer Brooke,
40, as she walked to her barn at about 7:00 a.m.
Her partner, Bjorn Osmunsen, 24, noticed at about 10:00
a.m. that she had not returned. He and another person, not named by
media, went to look for her. Osmunsen and the unidentified person
were chased back indoors. Seeing that the dogs were covered with
blood, Osmunsen called 911, then tried again to find Brooke, and
was also mauled.
Soon afterward neighbor Lynn Baker stepped outside.
“The next thing I know,” Baker told Denver Post staff
writers George Merritt and Jim Kirksey, “I’m being attacked by three
pit bulls. One was leaping for my throat as one was dragging me down
by my hand.”
Kicking the dogs back, Baker climbed into the back of his
pickup truck and yelled for help. While another family member placed
the second of many calls to 911, Baker’s son Cody, 16, attempted a
rescue with a 12-gauge shotgun. He wounded two of the dogs with bird
shot, enabling Baker to get into the cab of the pickup truck, drive
to Cody, and take the shotgun. Baker then shot the third dog, who
continued to attack.

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Another motion by fundraising counsel Bruce Eberle vs. ANIMAL PEOPLE is denied by court

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

FAIRFAX, Va.–Circuit Judge Gaylord L. Finch of Fairfax
County, Virginia, on December 19, 2003 denied the latest in a
series of motions filed against ANIMAL PEOPLE since July 2003 by
fundraising counsel Bruce Eberle and Fund Raising Strategies Inc.,
one of several firms that Eberle owns or controls.
The case is now closed in the Circuit Court and the time for
filing appeals has expired.
The series of motions, each denied, sought injunctions
against distribution of the June 2003 edition of ANIMAL PEOPLE and
accused ANIMAL PEOPLE of contempt of court, for causes originating
out of having published a table that disclosed proprietary financial
data about FRS and Eberle’s other companies.
The table accompanied a detailed account of the judicially
encouraged settlement of a libel suit brought by Eberle and FRS
against ANIMAL PEOPLE in July 2002. The settlement required ANIMAL
PEOPLE to correct two statements quoted and paraphrased from Wildlife
Waystation founder Martine Colette, an Eberle client, which were
never presented as anyone’s position other than hers, plus two brief
garbled summaries that never actually appeared in the ANIMAL PEOPLE
newspaper, nor at our web site. ANIMAL PEOPLE had long before
corrected and clarified all of the items at issue.

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Perjury charge v.s. Allison Lance-Watson, wife of Sea Shepherd founder Paul Watson

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

SEATTLE–Allison Lance-Watson, 45, wife of Sea Shepherd
Conservation Society founder Paul Watson, was on January 14, 2004
arrested, briefly shackled, charged with lying to a federal grand
jury, and released pending a February preliminary hearing without
being required to post a cash bond.
Federal Bureau of Investigation special agent Fernando Gutierrez
alleged in a written complaint that Lance-Watson knew more than she
admitted about events that included a 2:30 a.m. arson at the
headquarters of Holbrook, Inc., a timber firm in Olympia,
Washington, on May 7, 2000, and the unauthorized removal of 228
chickens from 57 cages the same night at the Dai-Zen Egg Farm in
Burlington, Washington, a 30,000-hen complex located about two
hours’ drive to the north. The farm is not far from the intersection
of the primary route from Friday Harbor, home of the Watsons, to
the mainland and Interstate 5, which passes through Olympia.
The hen removals were claimed almost immediately in the name
of the Animal Liberation Front, via ALF press officer David
Barbarash, of Courtenay, British Columbia.

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Heart jab illegal in New Mexico

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

ALBUQUERQUE–“You asked whether it is a violation of [New
Mexico] anti-cruelty laws to use intracardiac administration of
euthanasia on a conscious animal in an animal shelter or humane
society facility,” attorney general Patricia Madrid wrote to New
Mexico senate president pro tempore Richard M. Romero on December 8,
2003.
“In my judgement,” Mad-rid said, “this procedure–which
causes immediate trauma and death and which is not preceded by
medication that anesthetizes or puts the animal to sleep first–is
unlawful.”
Madrid quoted the applicable law to Romero, underlining the
phrase “tormenting an animal.”
“I am aware,” Madrid wrote, “that my legal opinion may
economically adversely impact the majority of animal shelters and
humane facilities in our state. It is not my intention to overly
burden these facilities or portray them as inhumane institutions.”
Madrid said she would be pleased to support a bill that
specifically bans the so-called “heart jab” method of killing animals.
“We believe a case could be made under the animal cruelty
statute,” clarified Samantha Thompson, spokesperson for Madrid,
speaking to Isabel Sanchez of the Albuquerque Journal. “However, it
is not explicit under the law, nor is there legal precedent.

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Projects

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2004:

The Student Animal Rights Alliance on December 29, 2003
announced a search for an unpaid student intern to coordinate a
campaign “to build racial and ethnic diversity in the animal rights
movement.” Part of the job will involve developing the outreach
strategy. Particulars are available from Patrick Kwan, c/o SARA,
P.O. Box 932, New York, NY 10013; 212-696-7911;
<info@defendanimals.org>.

The ASPCA/Chase Pet Protectors Award 2003 grand prize of
$10,000 for innovative program development went to Georgia Legal
Professionals for Animals, the American SPCA announced at year’s
end. Dogs Deserve Better, of Tipton, Pennsylvania, received
$7,500 for public education against dog-chaining; Rondout Valley
Animals for Adoption, of Acord, New York, developer of the
controversial Sue Sternberg dog behavior screening method, received
$5,000; the San Diego Humane Society received $3,000; and awards of
$1,500 were presented to Cobb County Animal Control of Marietta,
Georgia; the Place-A-Pet Foundation in Cleveland, Ohio; and the
Wisconsin Humane Society, in Milwaukee.

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