Born to be wild, big cats break loose

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1998:

ALACHUA, Fla.–– Responding
to a “Help!” call from Doris Guay, co-owner
of Ron and Judy Holiday’s Cat Dancers
Ranch in Alachua, Florida, tiger trainer
Charles Edward “Chuck” Lizza III, 34, was
killed on October 7 by a bite to the neck.
Reported staff writer Karen Voyles
of the Gainesville Sun, “It was about 7:45
a.m. when Ron Guay began walking Jupiter,”
a 400-pound, three-and-a-half-year-old white
tiger tom, “from a night cage to a day kennel.
Workers arriving to install fencing for a new
kennel apparently startled the big cat. Ron
Guay,” Doris’ husband, “said he called to
Doris to bring out a couple of chicken necks
to take Jupiter’s mind off his anxiety. When
that failed, Guay asked his wife to wake
Lizza, but without his glasses or contacts, he
(Lizza) was unable to see which animal Guay
had on a leash. Wearing a pair of slightly too
big mocassins as slippers, Lizza stumbled
over a scrap of chain link fencing and fell to
the ground. The tiger attacked him,” as Ron
and Doris Guay togther were unable to hold
the animal back.

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Action but no whaling––yet

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1998:

NEAH BAY, Washington– – Makah
Tribal Council plans to kill grey whales
appeared in disarray in mid-November––but the
hunt was still definitely on, Makah Whaling
Commission president Keith Johnson told
increasingly skeptical media.
“Instead of engaging its first whale in
70 years,” Seattle Times reporter Lynda V.
Mapes wrote on November 9, “the tribe has
only tangled with whaling opponents and the
press. Instead of answering questions about the
hunt, the tribe is being grilled about arrests by
tribal police of whaling protesters on November
1. Tribal members are asked why their youngsters
threw rocks at nonviolent whaling protesters.
And they are questioned about their police
chief’s fitness for duty.”

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Hunting on opposite sides of the earth

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1998:

JODPUR, India; ANCHORAGE, Alaska;
MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota; DENVER, Colorado––
A U.S. federal indictment issued on October 23 in
Anchorage, Alaska, charged Jon S. “Buck” McNeely,
producer and host of the nationally syndicated TV show
“The Outdoorsman with Buck McNeely,” with illegally
using three aircraft to poach caribou.
Also charged were hunting guide James M.
Fejes of Anchorage, Fejes’ assistants Blaine A. Morgan
and William M. Vollendorf, and hunting client Michael
Doyle, of Minnesota.
The case was little noted by national media.

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Another fine mess

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

NOKESVILLE, Va.––Philip J.
Hirschkopf, attorney for the Humane Society of
Fairfax County since 1988, and board member
Beth Richelieu, a paralegal who works for
Hirschkopf, resigned in August and told The
Washington Post that they would ask the Fairfax
County commonwealth attorney and Virginia
state attorney general to investigate a pending
transaction in which HSFC would purchase the
34-acre Chestnut Crossing Farm from Heather
Kirby Viar, 28, for $800,000.

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Judge to decide which Frank is frank

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

KENOSHA, Wisc.––A year-long dispute
over custody of the Society of St. Francis,
one of the older no-kill shelters in the U.S.,
emerged into view on August 25 when a faction
aligned with cofounder Robert E. Frank allegedly
tried to take the donor lists and office keys from a
faction aligned with his son, Dennis Frank.
Each side accused the other of gross mismanagement.
Each claims to constitute the properly
elected board of directors.
Summoned to intervene, Kenosha
County sheriff’s deputies reportedly brokered a
brief truce. On September 4, agreed the factions
in separate communications with ANIMAL PEOPLE,
they reached an interim agreement over procedures
for running the Society pending resolution
of crossfiled lawsuits.

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Appointments

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

Patricia Olsen, DVM, formerly
director of veterinary programs at
the American Humane Association, has
left to take a senior post at Guide Dogs
for the Blind.
Franklin Loew, DVM, former
dean of the veterinary schools at both
Tufts and Cornell, is new president of
Becker College in Massachusetts.
The United Animal Coalition,
taking over management of the Guilford
County Animal Shelter in Greensboro,
North Carolina, from Sheriff B.J.
Barnes, on September 25 named as shelter
director Sharon Harrison-Pope, a
10-year sheriff’s department staffer.

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The bloody British

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

The Countryside Alliance,
near collapse only six months after mustering
250,000 protesters in London to
oppose a ban on fox hunting, issued a
new eight-point mission statement on
September 10. The Alliance goals are
now stated as being to “preserve the freedoms
of country people and their way of
life; lead campaigns for country sports,
their related trades and activities, and the
countryside; and to cooperate closely
with other organizations to promote and
protect the rural way of life.” The
Alliance, depending for numbers upon
uniting small numbers of hunters with
large numbers of nonhunting rural residents,
has struggled from the start with
the conflict between defending hunters’
presumed right to trespass in pursuit of
wildlife and land owners’ wish to control
the activities of trespassers also including
hikers and birdwatchers.

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Sounds of silence

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

Last Chance For Animals on August 17
set up a site called >>www.CoulstonKills
Chimps.com<<, to attack the U.S. Air Force decision
11 days earlier to leave 111 former NASA
chimpanzees in possession of the Coulston
Foundation, a research supplier, while sending
only 30 to the Primarily Primates sanctuary in San
Antonio and none to any other sanctuaries.
According to LCA spokesperson Roy Bodner, “The
president of the Coulston Foundation, Travis
Griffin, on August 19 threatened legal action
against LCA’s web provider if the site was not
removed immediately.” The provider refused, until
and unless advised that the site contained illegal content.
“On August 20 a frustrated Griffin contacted
LCA’s website server’s upstream provider,” Bodner
continued, “and by Griffin’s later admission,
‘objected to their hosting defamatory material,’”
threatening to sue the upstream provider. “That
threat,” Bodner said, “resulted in the website’s
entire server being abruptly removed from the
Internet.” LCA executive director Eric Mindel said
his organization was seeking to place the site with
another server, and was “consulting with our attorney
to examine possible legal action against the
Coulston Foundation.”

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Horse cases

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1998:

Renae Ferguson, 28, of Sylmar, California, and
her father, Edward Perry Reddeck, 56, were arraigned on
August 26 on multiple cruelty counts, while Ferguson’s
mother, Darlene Craig, 48, was arrested at the Los Angeles
courthouse for investigation of similar charges, after equestrian
Cathy Becker-Skaggs investigated the fate of a 15-yearold
mare she had donated to Ferguson for the “West Coast
Riding Academy”––which never existed. Police and
Chatsworth animal control officers said Ferguson and family
apparently got horses via ads soliciting donations for the fictitious
“nonprofit riding school,” then allegedly sold them,
often through ads in the same publications. Six neglected
horses were confiscated, including Becker-Skaggs’ horse,
Libertee, who is reportedly recovering well.
Carolyn and Christopher Carradine, of Santa
Barbara, California, are reportedly suing horse trainer Monty
Roberts, for $100,000 in veterinary costs and other material
damages, alleging that he ruined the health of a thoroughbred
of theirs named Big Red Fox by riding him “to the point of
extraordinary fatigue” in pursuit of an untamed mustang during
the making of a BBC documentary called “The Real Horse
Whisperer” on March 30, 1997. Roberts is author of a bestselling
autobiogrpahy, The Man Who Listens To Horses,
which includes a mention of the incident in an afterword. He
t o l d London Sunday Times reporter Christopher Goodwin
that the Carradines had sued “purely to extract money from
me.” The BBC denied that Big Red Fox had been mistreated.

Man’s companion & friend
Marie Dana, 32, former companion of the late
bathroom fixture maker Sydney Altman, on September 22
filed suit contesting Altman’s will. Altman, who died in
December 1994 at age 60, left his Beverly Hills home and
$350,000 to his dog Samantha, termed his “loving companion.”
Ms. Dana, called his “good friend,” was left a stipend
of $60,000 a year to be Samantha’s caretaker, plus $50,000
cash. Upon Samantha’s death, the will stipulated, “the
arrangement with Marie Dana is cancelled, and I wish the
house to be sold and the money distributed to” People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals and Last Chance for
Animals. Dana is reportedly seeking $2.7 million.

Lobbies
The lobbying group Teaching Animal Awareness
in Legislation, of Connecticut, has disbanded after three
years, unable to raise the funds to keep president Cherylann
H a a s on the job fulltime in the state capitol. Haas instead
has doubled as an assistant animal control officer in Fairfield.
Maine Republican state representative R o b e r t
Fisk and about 150 backers have formed Maine Friends of
A n i m a l s, a lobbying organization which is to seek betterfunded
animal shelters, better trained animal control personnel,
a felony anti-cruelty law, and a ban on leghold trapping.
Fisk’s term of office ends this year.

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