Virginia dogfighting case embarrasses pro football

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2007:
WASHINGTON D.C.–Sixty-six pit bull terriers seized from a
15-acre property in Surry County, Virginia owned by Atlanta Falcons
quarterback Michael Vick on April 25, 2007 upstaged the signing
eight days later of a landmark federal anti-animal fighting bill.
Signed by U.S. President George Bush on May 3, 2007, the
bill created federal felony penalties for transporting animals across
state lines to fight. Previously a misdemeanor, the offense now may
be punished with up to three years in prison and a fine of $250,000.
Vehemently opposed by gamecock fighters and breeders, the
bill had received more coverage as it moved through Congress than any
other recent animal-related bill not having to do with endangered
species.
But the signing of animal fighting bill was relegated to
bottom paragraphs of coverage of the Vick case, the most recent and
sensational of a string of incidents involving alleged fighting dogs
and professional athletes–especially football players.
No one had been charged yet in the Vick case, as of May 28.
At least six agencies at the federal, state, and local levels were
reportedly reviewing the evidence to determine whether crimes had
been committed, and if so, what charges should be filed against
whom. From six to 10 people, including Vick, had been mentioned
in news reportage for having some possible involvement.
The case heated up on May 27, after the ESPN program Outside
The Lines broadcast an interview with a source identified as a
confidential police informant, who claimed to have witnessed Vick
participating in dogfighting-related activity, beginning in 2000,
when Vick played for Virginia Tech.

Read more

Melamine fed to fish

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2007:
VANCOUVER–The potential for global ecological disaster as
result of cheating in international trade was illustrated on May 8,
2007, when the Vancouver-based Canadian division of Skretting
International recalled fish food sold to 25 Oregon Department of Fish
and Wildlife hatcheries because it contained melamine.
As melamine is water-soluable, it does not accumulate in the
bodies of fish, unlike heavy metals such as mercury and chemical
compounds, such as PCBs.
“We do not believe this poses any significant human health
threat,” said FDA food safety chief David Acheson.
But melamine itself was not the cause for worry. The greater
concern was what if the contaminant had been more volatile,
longer-persisting, or biologically active?

Read more

Mitt Romney becomes first 2008 Presidential candidate to pander to hunters

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:
KEENE, N.H.– Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney on
April 3, 2007 became the first 2008 Presidential contender to
identify himself as a hunter, and the first to be embarrassed when
his claims about hunting could not be verified.
Questioned at a campaign event in Keene, New Hampshire,
about his position on gun control, Romney responded, “I support the
Second Amendment. I purchased a gun when I was a young man. I’ve
been a hunter pretty much all my life. I’ve never really shot
anything terribly big,” Romney confessed. “I used to hunt rabbits.
“Shooting a rabbit with a single-shot .22 is pretty hard,”
Romney added, so–according to his statements–he switched to using
a semiautomatic rifle.
Associated Press political reporter Glen Johnson investigated
Romney’s story.

Read more

Noah’s Wish founder Terri Crisp resigns; state probes use of Katrina funds

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:
SACRAMENTO–“As of today, [founder] Terri Crisp is no longer
associated with Noah’s Wish, Inc. in any capacity,” the Noah’s Wish
web site announced on March 28, 2007. “We wish her well in her
future endeavors.”
Signed by the “Noah’s Wish Board of Directors,” the message
disclosing Crisp’s departure followed two days after a similarly
signed March 26 acknowledgement that “Noah’s Wish is in the midst of
an ongoing civil investigation by the California Attorney General’s
office concerning funds received by Noah’s Wish during Hurricane
Katrina.”
Noah’s Wish told the Chronicle of Philanthropy in November
2005 that it had received $6.5 million in donations after Katrina.
“Tax documents for Noah’s Wish obtained by the Sacramento
Business Journal reported revenue of $8.4 million, almost all of it
from contributions, between July 1, 2005, and Dec. 31, 2005,”
reported Business Journal staff writer Kelly Johnson on March 30,
2007.
“Some $4.8 million was in unrestricted assets,” Johnson
said, while $1.5 million was declared as “temporarily restricted
assets.”
Charitable donations are deemed legally “restricted” when the
donors in some manner expressly communicate, at the time of giving,
that the donations are meant exclusively to serve one particular
purpose. A vague statement such as “to help animals” does not
restrict a donation, but a statement stipulating “to help the New
Orleans animals” or “to help the Katrina animals” might be construed
as a binding restriction.

Read more

IFAW takes over Cape Cod Stranding Network

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:
HYANNIS–The not-quite-10-year-old Cape Cod Stranding Network
is now a project of the Yarmouthport-based International Fund for
Animal Welfare.
IFAW director of animals in crisis and distress A.J. Cady and
Cape Cod Stranding Network executive director Katie Touhey announced
the merger on April 11, 2007.
The five stranding network staff will join IFAW, now
employing 135 head office personnel and 350 other people worldwide,
reported Cape Cod Times staff writer Doug Fraser. Currently housed
at the National Marine Life Center in Buzzards Bay, the Cape Cod
Stranding Network is to relocate soon to the new IFAW headquarters in
Yarmouth.

Read more

Judge halts Alaska wolf bounties

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:

ANCHORAGE–Alaska Superior Court Judge William Morse on March
30, 2007 ruled on behalf of Friends of Animals, Defenders of
Wildlife, and coplaintiffs that the Alaska Department of Fish & Game
does not have the authority to pay bounties to aerial gunners for
killing wolves.
However, Morse added, the Alaska Board of Game can
authorize bounties. Morse held that the 1984 repeal of a state law
allowing bounties applied only to administrative actions of the
Department of Fish & Game, not to actions of the Board of Game.
Thus, while the Morse verdict suspended a bounty program introduced
on March 21, it left the possibility that the Board of Game may
reinstate it, or start a new bounty program.

Read more

Rodeos kill children too

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:
TUCSON–Tucson police chief Richard Miranda on March 19,
2007 announced that the Pima County Attorney’s Office will not charge
anyone for causing the February 22 death of five-year-old Brielle
Boisvert during the 82nd annual La Fiesta de los Vaqueros rodeo
parade. Three years younger than the minimum age for parade
participants stated on the entry form, Boisvert was thrown from her
horse and trampled by a bolting team of horses who were pulling a
wagon.
The parade is promoted as the longest in the world using no
motor vehicles–and has had serious accidents before, though no
previous fatalities. “At last year’s parade,” recalled Associated
Press, “Mayor Bob Walkup bruised an arm and his wife Beth suffered a
concussion and whiplash when two runaway horses slammed into a
150-year-old buggy.”

Read more

National High School Rodeo loses top sponsor after probe affirms abuse

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:
SPRINGFIELD–“Choice Hotels, has
terminated sponsorship, scheduled to run until
2009, of the National High School Rodeo
Association,” SHARK president Steve Hindi
announced on April 24.
“The early termination, for rules
violations and animal abuse, follows a review of
video documentation supplied by SHARK,” Hindi
said, crediting SHARK staff member Janet Enoch
for successful liaison with Choice corporate
officials.
The Choice chain “includes Clarion,
Comfort Inn, Comfort Suites, Quality Inn,
Sleep Inn, Econolodge, Rodeway, Cambria Suites,
Mainstay Suites, and Suburban Extended Stay
Hotel,” Hindi said.

Read more

Judge says horse slaughter violates National Environmental Policy Act

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, May 2007:

WASHINGTON D.C.–U.S. District Court Judge Colleen
Kollar-Kotelly on March 28, 2007 ruled in Washington D.C. that the
USDA violated the National Environment-al Policy Act by allowing
horse slaughterhouses to continue killing horses for human
consumption, after Congress in 2005 cut off funding for mandatory
USDA inspections.
The USDA responded to the Congressional budget cut by
allowing the three horse slaughterhouses left in the U.S. to fund
their own inspections. Judge Kollar-Kotelly held that this action
should have been subject to an environmental impact review.

Read more

1 66 67 68 69 70 321