Bullfeathers

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1999:

Now that SHARK founder
Steve Hindi has shown activists how
to spot the use of electroshock to make
rodeo animals buck, confirmation of
the practice is coming from virtually
every rodeo where people are looking
for it. For instance, Rockford Register
Star reporter Chris Green accompanied
Animal Watch representatives to
Kid’s Day at the World’s Toughest
Rodeo on Valentine’s Day in
Rockford, Illinois, where Green “witnessed
an animal handler or ‘stock
contractor’ discreetly remove a cattle
prod from his rear pocket and shock a
horse and two bulls,” according to the
Register Star’s February 15 edition.
World’s Toughest Rodeo spokesperson
Debra Weaver told Green that shockprodding
could bring a $250 fine from
the Professional Rodeo Cowboys
Association––and said Green was the
first person to tell her about it.

Rats, mice, birds comment time extended

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1999:

PHILADELPHIA––The USDA has extended until May 28 the comment period on a proposal announced January 29 to amend the definition of “animal” in the Animal Welfare Act enforcement regulations so as to remove the exclusion of birds, rats, and mice which has been in effect since 1970.

ANIMAL PEOPLE, in a March edition front page on the proposed amendment, a longtime goal of the animal protection community, wrongly attributed it to a petition submitted to the USDA by United Poultry Concerns.

In fact, the petition was filed in April 1998 by the Alternatives Research & Development Foundation, an affiliate of the Philadelphia-based American Anti-Vivisection Society.

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WHOSE GAME ARE WILDLIFE AGENCIES PROTECTING?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1999:

ALBUQUERQUE, BOISE, SACRAMENTO,
SALT LAKE CITY–– The
Idaho Fish and Game Commission on March 5
voted 4-3 to fire state fish and game director
Steve Mealey, notorious for mooning a shoreline
statue from a boat last summer.
The New Mexico Game Commission
on January 26 cancelled a $2.8 million
black bear study, commissioned from the
Idaho-based Hornocker Wildlife Institute,
because Hornocker officials refused to meet
with them to discuss allegations by former
Hornocker biologist Jenny Cashman that she
was repeatedly drugged and raped in 1995-
1997 by co-worker Patrick F. Ryan.

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Predators, reintroductions, and harsh reality

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1999:

DENVER, EUGENE––Three of
the first four Canadian lynx who were released
into the Rio Grande National Forest of southcentral
Colorado by the state Division of
Wildlife during the first days of February
starved to death by March 23.
C-DoW had confidently predicted
that the reintroduction would succeed, and
would keep lynx off the federal endangered
species list. C-DoW biologist Gene Byrne
even suggested that the department might reintroduce
wolverines, too, as early as next year.
By mid-March, however, C-DoW
had recaptured the last of the released lynx, to
avoid losing her to starvation, and was holding
eight more until later in the year, when
prey might be more abundant.

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Editorial: Building shelters won’t build a no-kill nation

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1999:

On pages 12 and 13 of this edition, the Duffield Family Foundation, now doing
business as Maddie’s Fund, answers the question weighing most heavily on the minds of
ANIMAL PEOPLE readers since October 1998, when we announced that PeopleSoft
founders Dave and Cheryl Duffield had committed the entire $200 million assets of their
foundation to making the U.S. a no-kill nation, and had hired Richard Avanzino to direct the
effort, beginning at his retirement after 24 years as president of the San Francisco SPCA.
The $200 million question, bluntly put, is “How do we get on the gravy train?”
The answer, summarized, is “Build a railroad.”
As the ad explains, Maddie’s Fund wants to see animal care and control organizations
for harmonious partnerships, to reach the no-kill destination on a specified timetable.
Get there early and you might get a bonus––but crash like Casey Jones, cannonballing along
in disregard of others stalled on the tracks, and you won’t even get a ticket to ride.

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Seals save life, need help

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, April 1999:

ST. JOHN’S––Charlene Camburn,
30, of Cleethorpe’s, England, is one fish
processer who has only good words for seals.
Watching the colony of 400 grey
seals at the Donna’s Nook nature reserve on
February 1, Camburn became stranded by high
tide on a sand bar off the Lincolnshire coast,
along with her boyfriend, Chris Tomlinson,
36, and their son Brogan, seven. As night fell,
they decided Camburn, the strongest swimmer,
should strike for the mainland to seek help––but
the current swept her into the bitterly cold, fogshrouded
North Sea.
“I kept going under toward the end.
It seemed much easier to die than stay alive,”
Camburn told Steve Dennis of the London
Mirror. “I thought Chris and Brogan had died.
But I could feel the seals going under my feet.
They nudged my legs and feet and kept diving
beside me, and I kept bobbing back up.

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Court Calendar

From: Animal People, March 1999:

Judge Barbara Kluka of Kenosha County, Wisconsin, in early February dismissed a felony charge of illegal possession of an electric weapon filed against Vegan Street electronic information service founder Marla Rose, of Chicago, at an anti-rodeo protest in October 1998. The “weapon,” displayed as a demonstration prop, was a cattle prod identical to those typically used to jolt bulls as they leave the chutes during bull-riding events. Wrote observer John Beske in a World Wide Web posting, “If Rose had been found guilty, the case might have set forth a spate of restrictions against electric cattle prods, possibly turning Wisconsin dairy farmers and hardware store owners into sudden felons, and likely banning the use of electric prods in rodeos and circuses. So in once sense Ms. Rose’s victory is a sort of defeat: it absolved the very device she was trying to denounce.” But Rose was upbeat. “We were able to demonstrate,” she said, “that police officers and prosecutors consider electric cattle prods to be dangerous weapons.”

Hilma Ruby, 61, of Rochester Hills, Michigan, and Patricia Dodson, 49, of Royal Oak, Michigan, were on February 22 fined $23,000 apiece and sentenced to serve six months each in jail for their part in releasing 1,540 mink from the Eberts Fur Farm near Chatham, Ontario, on March 30, 1997. About 500 of the mink froze to death, were hit by cars, or killed each other in fights soon after the release. Fur farmer Tom McClellanclaimed the raid cost him $500,000. Ruby and Dodson pleaded guilty more than a year after co-defendants Robyn Weiner and Alan Hoffmanplea-bargained fines and community service. A fifth defendant, Gary Yourofsky, is due for trial in March.

Texas District Judge John Marshall on February 5 reaffirmed his August and October rulings that pigeon shoots formerly held by the Dallas Gun Club are illegal because the conditions under which the birds are held and released are inhumane. Texas law permits captive bird shoots, but Marshall has repeatedly ruled that the birds must be have a fair chance at escape. Dallas Gun Club president Russ Meyer said the club would appeal again. Attorney Don Feare, representing pigeon shoot opponents, responded that further appeals are welcome because they will help lead toward an ultimate ban on such events. Feare is also president of the Wildflight Rescue Foundation. (See related article)

A peregrine falcon seen killing a starling in midair on February 12 validated the Fund for Animals’ claim that a starling poisoning program scheduled by USDA Wildlife Services under contract to Jefferson County, Kentucky, might put peregrine falcons and other federally protected raptors at risk. The Fund filed for an injunction against the planned poisoning on January 29. Jefferson County put the poisoning on hold, at least until fall, several days after the falcon appeared.

U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler, of Washington D.C., on February 12 ruled that USDA Wildlife Services sharpshooters may not kill deer for Iowa City without meeting National Environmental Policy Act requirements to produce an environmental assessment of the program, publicize and distribute the assessment in order to receive public comment, and provide an adequate comment period. The USDA gunners had already killed 22 deer in two days when stopped by a temporary injunction on January 22, obtained by joint petition from the Fund for Animals, Animal Protection Institute, Friends of Animals, Humane Society of the U.S., and University of Iowa Animal Rights Coalition.

Is CSU trying to hide sources of greyhounds found in labs?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1999:

DENVER––A Colorado bill appearing to attempt to
circumvent the record-keeping requirements of the federal
Animal Welfare Act cleared the state house on February 10 and
is pending in the state senate as SB 1228.
Reported Dan Luzadder of the Rocky Mountain News,
“Representative Steve Johnson, R-Fort Collins, a veterinarian
and sponsor of the bill, said Colorado State University requested
the bill to maintain confidentiality among clients and vets” at the
CSU teaching hospital.
The bill seeks to exempt CSU from having to produce
veterinary records pertaining to owned animals under the state
Freedom of Information Act, unless the records are requested by
the owners themselves.

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Cockfights spur murder, mayhem, drug deals and counterfeiting

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1999:

SAN BERNARDINO, Cailf. – –
Gamecock expert Grady Coker, M.D., contended
in a December letter to ANIMAL
PEOPLE that cockfighting isn’t associated
with violent crime, but the gunfire erupting on
January 23 at an illegal cockfight in San
Bernardino, California, told a different story.
Seven people were hurt, “including
a toddler and an 11-year-old,” according to
police, who said they found bloody roosters,
syringes, and illegal steroids at the scene.
Arrested at another site where gamecocks were
also found were Robert Elizarraraz, 23;
Sergio Villarruel, 19; Salvador Ochoa, 18;
and an unidentified 17-year-old.
“There apparently was a dispute during
the event, and several suspects were asked
to leave,” said police sergeant Mike
Blechinger. “They did leave, but returned
with guns and [allegedly] started shooting into
the crowd.”

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