Five facing charges for illegal deer hunting in North Carolina following tip-off


by Matthew HinsonThu, January 18th 2024

https://wpde.com/news/local/six-people-face-180-charges-for-illegal-deer-hunting-in-north-carolina-following-tip-off

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An anonymous tip to the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission has resulted in five people receiving more than 160 combined charges related to the illegal hunting and killing of deer.

ABC-affiliate WWAY reports that an investigation began in 2023 and involves people in Pender, Duplin, Sampson, and Vance Counties.

Authorities with the NCWRC say that the tip was received from their Tip411 tipline.

Individuals charged, according to North Carolina Wildlife:

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Nicholas Rackley, Duplin County (Offense date 11/28/23, first appearance scheduled for 1/25/24)

  • 15 counts misdemeanor Shine/Sweep Light For Deer
  • 30 counts misdemeanor Poss Deer Taken Closed Season
  • 15 counts misdemeanor Spotlight Deer/Night Deer Hunt

Dylan Scott, New Hanover County Offense date 11/28/23, first appearance scheduled for 1/25/24)

  • 15 counts misdemeanor Spotlight Deer/Night Deer Hunt
  • 15 counts misdemeanor Shine/Sweep Light For Deer
  • 30 counts misdemeanor Poss Deer Taken Closed Season
  • 22 counts misdemeanor Fail Report/Tag Big Game
  • 14 counts Hunt With Use/Aid Vehicle

Mark Adams, Pender County (Court date 2/15/2024)

  • 4 counts misdemeanor Possess Unlawfully Taken Wildlife to Wit: DEE113-291.3

Jacob Burnette, Vance County (Court date 2/28/24)

  • 1 count misdemeanor Spotlight Deer/Night Deer Hunt
  • 1 count Take, Possess, Or Transport. To Wit Deer TA113-294(D)

William Melville, Sampson County

  • District Attorney Ernie Lee tells us that Melville pled guilty in Sampson District Court to the Class 1 misdemeanor of willfully borrowing a big game tag to whit: whitetail deer. He pled guilty on January 8, 2024. Melville had three additional Class 3 misdemeanor charges on the same citation dismissed

This story will be updated as more information is made available.

East Yorkshire duck farmer fined over bird flu offences

5 hrs ago

POULTRY

COURT

CRIME

FARMING

By Joe Gerrard

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https://www.northernfarmer.co.uk/news/24098259.east-yorkshire-duck-farmer-fined-bird-flu-offences/

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Beverley Magistrates Court Picture: GOOGLE

Beverley Magistrates Court Picture: GOOGLE

A duck farmer who supplied meat to a local restaurant following a bird flu outbreak in his flock has been ordered to pay £28,000 in fines and costs.

Daniel Mathison, 49, a partner at poultry business Mathison (Farmers) Leven, East Yorkshire, admitted four offences relating to an outbreak of avian influenza on the premises, as well as an offence of operating a slaughterhouse without approval from the Food Standards Agency (FSA). He was fined £20,000 in total, including £4,000 for each of the offences.

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Beverley magistrates heard how inspectors from the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) visited the Southfield Farm due to a potential outbreak of bird flu and found regulations designed to prevent the spread of disease were being breached. The end of a duck-rearing shed was fully open and no records of bird deaths had been kept.

East Riding Council said officers also found that Mathison continued to supply meat to a local restaurant while waiting for bird flu test results, breaching restrictions on moving anything on or off the farm. Slaughtering and meat production activities were also above the limit at which approval and on-site supervision by the Food Standards Agency was required.

Avian influenza was confirmed in the duck flock in April last year. A further breach of restrictions imposed during bird flu occurred last May, when old insulation was removed from the premises, magistrates heard. During sentencing, the magistrates said these actions could have had wide-reaching and serious consequences for other farmers and the local community.

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Angela Dearing, director of housing, transportation and public protection at East Riding of Yorkshire Council, said: “It is highly likely this avian influenza outbreak would not have happened if compulsory housing measures to ensure separation from wild birds had been complied with. It is fortunate the outbreak did not spread further when the disease control restrictions were breached.

“In addition to the catastrophic consequences for this business, the measures required to control the outbreak and prevent it spreading further significantly impacted on other local livestock keepers and the community. The outbreak also resulted in substantial financial and resource costs for Defra, APHA, the council and other partner agencies involved.”

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She added: “It is therefore vitally important that all livestock keepers play their part and adhere to animal disease control regulations, which are in place to protect against potentially devastating effects on their own livestock and businesses, animal and public health, and the economy.”

Aled Edwards, the APHA’s head of field delivery for England, said the agency took potential breaches of animal health and welfare very seriously. Mr Edwards said: “I hope the sentence will act as a reminder to others of the importance of these legal requirements in minimising the risk of further spread of disease, and the consequences of not adhering to the rules.”

The Leven farm supplies meat under the brand name Yorkshire Ducks and Geese. In addition to the fines, Mathison was ordered to pay an additional £6,000 towards costs and a £2,000 victim surcharge.

Advocates question plan to trap, study coyotes in Vancouver parks

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CTV NEWS VANCOUVER JOURNALIST

Martin MacMahon

Published date: Sunday, February 4th 2024 – 6:57 pm
Modified date: Sunday, February 4th 2024 – 7:32 pm

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Martin MacMahon

A quiet plan to trap and study coyotes in Stanley Park and Pacific Spirit Park has a wildlife protection charity calling for a rethink.

The research led by the University of British Columbia comes after dozens of attacks by coyotes in recent years – and involves trapping and studying the animals.

However, a wildlife protection charity questions the approach.

“Even if these traps don’t injure the animal, it’s the behaviour of the animal once trapped that can cause the most horrific injuries,” said Lesley Fox, the executive director of the Fur-Bearers. “That includes broken teeth, bones, lacerations.”

The research is set to be carried out over 31 locations, and trapping will take place while the park is closed either late at night or early in the morning.

But Fox worries dogs and wild animals could be put at risk.

“There’s non-invasive techniques such as camera traps, the use of (Artificial Intelligence), scat analysis,” Fox suggested by way of alternative approaches.

But the study’s principal investigator, UBC ecologist Sarah Benson-Amram, detailed in a statement:

“This research will gather data that will inform future management strategies to support coexistence with urban wildlife both locally and in other municipalities across Canada.

“I want to reassure those who may be concerned, the risk to people, pets and coyotes in the park is extremely low. Trapping has not yet begun. When it does, the work will take place in remote areas, when the park is closed to the public, using the safest and most humane methods available. Signs will be posted indicating research areas and my team will be able to respond to triggered traps within minutes. Dogs must be on leash in Stanley Park except in designated areas where traps will not be placed.

“I also want to assure that all required permits are in place. Following extensive vetting and review, the project was conditionally approved by the UBC Animal Care Committee pending receipt of all necessary licenses and permits. A provincial permit has been issued for the project and the Park Board has approved it to take place within Stanley Park. All required licenses and permits have been provided.

“Human ethics approval is only required when a project involves human participants. All levels of project approval take the welfare of all humans and animals potentially impacted very seriously. The project is designed to safeguard the well-being of coyotes and park users.

“All due diligence has been conducted in the planning of this project. The project utilizes non-invasive observational methods whenever possible. The research team has worked with both UBC and provincial wildlife veterinarians to ensure that we are using the safest and most humane methods available. We are also working closely with professional trappers to ensure that trap placements and protocols are as effective and safe as possible.”

But none of that is comfort to Fox and her organization.

“We still have a long way to go, and using leg hold traps, using collaring, again these methods are extremely dated,” Fox said. “There are replacements for these types of devices, and as a university, UBC needs to be championing modern, non-invasive ways of studying wildlife.”

The Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship told CTV News minister Nathan Cullen was unavailable for an interview Sunday – and that it was unable to provide a statement.

https://www.iheartradio.ca/ctv-news-content/advocates-question-plan-to-trap-study-coyotes-in-vancouver-parks-1.21590052

No more prizes for killing ‘nuisance’ animals under these hunting contest bans

BY: ALEX BROWN – FEBRUARY 4, 2024 3:00 PM

https://lailluminator.com/2024/02/04/nuisance-animals

     

A coyote walks across fresh snow in Boulder, Colorado

 A coyote walks across fresh snow in Boulder, Colorado. Some hunting clubs sponsor contests, often targeted at coyotes, with prizes awarded to hunters who bring in the biggest carcasses. In some states, wildlife officials and lawmakers are working to ban or restrict such events, saying they give hunting a bad name. (Brennan Linsley/The Associated Press)

Last month, 50 hunters gathered in New York’s Mohawk Valley to take aim at the local coyotes. A hunting club offered prizes for the largest male and female carcasses, paying out $400 to the winning contestants.

The event was among the last sanctioned animal hunting contests in the state, following lawmakers’ passage of a ban on such events that will take effect later this year.

“There’s growing awareness of these contests and the damage they’re causing ecologically,” said Renee Seacor, carnivore conservation director with Project Coyote, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting carnivore species. “Public attitudes on wildlife management are shifting.”

New York became the 10th state to ban or limit wildlife hunting contests with the December enactment of the new law. Oregon’s wildlife agency also imposed a ban last year on such events on state lands. So far, the bans have largely been passed in Democratic-led states. In some states, including Nevada, wildlife commissions — which are often stacked with hunting proponents — have rejected petitions to ban the practice.

So far this year, Illinois and New Jersey are following New York’s lead by seeking to ban contests through legislation rather than state agency rules. The Humane Society of the United States estimates that such contests kill more than 60,000 animals every year.

In addition to coyotes, hunting contests have targeted bobcats, foxes, crows, squirrels and many other animals that lack the strict regulations applied to traditional game animals such as deer and elk.

Advocates of the bans say the contests are pointless killing sprees fueled by bloodlust and cash, based on outdated perceptions that some species ​​— primarily coyotes — are “nuisance” animals.

But some hunters fear the bans are part of a broader effort to crack down on hunting opportunities. Steven Rinella, a hunting advocate renowned for his “MeatEater” TV show and podcast, noted that contests must fall within existing rules set by wildlife managers.

https://stateline.org/2023/06/07/political-appointees-set-state-wildlife-policy-critics-say-thats-a-problem/embed/#?secret=OEF4cEU3PF#?secret=qcv7OWBm96

“Any of the individuals who are participating in these contests could at any time be out doing the exact same practice,” he said in an interview. “To target the competitive derby component in this is basically just saying, ‘I disapprove of hunting, and this is a thing I can go after and win.’”

Brian Gray, president of the Mohawk Valley Coon and Cat Club, said contests such as the one his hunting club held last weekend help sustain the organization’s membership.

He intends to continue holding contests once the ban takes effect, organizing by word of mouth to avoid state enforcement “unless someone tattles.” If challenged, Gray said, he intends to relabel the event a “photography contest,” with prizes for the best photos of dead coyotes instead of for the carcasses themselves.

“Some of our guys have $6,000 scopes on their rifles, and they’re never going to get to use them for anything else,” he said. “This club has been in my family since the ’40s, and I don’t want to lose it.”

Coyotes under fire

For much of America’s history, predator animals such as coyotes and wolves were viewed as troublesome varmints and subjected to state-sponsored extermination campaigns. While this practice cleared vast landscapes of wolves, grizzly bears and other animals, coyotes only became more abundant.

Coyotes respond to hunting pressure by dispersing and birthing larger litters, as author and historian Dan Flores describes in his book “Coyote America.” While coyotes once lived only in the arid West, the efforts to eradicate them have driven them to every corner of the North American continent. They’ve filled the ecological niches left vacant in places where wolves and cougars were killed off, and they’ve learned how to thrive in cities, with abundant prey of rats and mice.

“The American public has long regarded this animal as something like a cockroach with fur,” Flores said in an interview. “But our attempts to wipe them out triggered an evolutionary response from them to scatter and spread.”

Wildlife experts say efforts to protect livestock and pets by shooting coyotes only causes more breeding from surviving animals — which results in coyotes that are less schooled about avoiding conflict with humans.

“There’s the suggestion that these animals are really bad for us, but you can’t shoot your way out of that,” said Barbara Baker, chair of the Washington Fish and Wildlife Commission, which outlawed hunting contests in 2020.

Hunting advocates counter that the species’ resilience proves coyotes can be hunted sustainably.

Gray, president of the hunting club in New York, blamed coyotes for killing livestock and pets in Mohawk Valley, but said there has been no decline in those attacks following hunting contests that killed scores of coyotes. He asserted residents should be allowed to fight back.

In many states, even those that have banned contests, hunters can shoot as many coyotes as they please with few restrictions on seasons or weaponry.

A growing movement

California became the first state to ban hunting contests in 2014, following a vote from state regulators.

“Most ethical hunters object to these contests,” said Mike Sutton, who was serving as president of the California Fish and Game Commission at the time. “They’re inconsistent with our current understanding of predator ecology, and they give hunters a bad name.”

Tony Wasley serves as president of the Wildlife Management Institute, a conservation group with roots in the hunting community, and holds leadership roles in several hunting-related organizations. He supported an effort to ban hunting contests when he served as director of the Nevada Department of Wildlife in 2021.

In testimony before the Nevada Wildlife Commission, he noted that the agency’s role is to recruit more hunters, who supply much of the agency’s budget through license fees. That task, he said, is made difficult when images of mass slaughter circulated on social media tarnish their public image.

“I fear what indiscriminate killing says about hunters or the ethics of hunting more broadly,” he said in an interview. “To verminize every coyote and say that [killing it] is some benefit to another species would be difficult to substantiate.”

Despite Wasley’s support, the proposal to ban hunting contests was rejected by the agency’s commission, which by law is made up predominantly of hunters and anglers.

I fear what indiscriminate killing says about hunters or the ethics of hunting more broadly.

– Tony Wasley, Wildlife Management Institute

Tommy Caviglia, who was the commission’s vice chair at the time, argued that few members of the public are even aware of the contests, the Nevada Current reported, saying the proposal was driven by the “anti-hunting side of the world.”

While some individual hunters have spoken in favor of the contest bans, organized sporting groups have largely remained silent or opposed them as a “slippery slope” to further hunting limitations.

“Hunting is already highly regulated, and people don’t understand the amount of nuance that there is,” said Torin Miller, senior director of policy with the National Deer Association, a nonprofit that advocates for wildlife habitat and hunting. “All of these contests have to occur within the bounds of seasons and bag limits that agencies have put in place.”

Miller said that contest bans should be decided by wildlife agencies, not legislators.

State bans

In December, New York became the fourth state to enact a ban through legislation, following Maryland, New Mexico and Vermont. The bill passed 88-53 in the New York Assembly, and 46-15 in the Senate.

“This does not serve a wildlife management purpose,” said Assemblymember Deborah Glick, the Democrat who sponsored the bill. “There were hunters who felt it gave them a black mark and distorted what people thought of hunters.”

Some lawmakers who opposed the bill said the ban illustrates a growing urban vs. rural divide.

“It fails to understand and simply ignores the impact on the heritage and traditions of many rural upstate communities, farmers, and local environments and economies,” said Republican state Sen. Tom O’Mara, according to The Press & Sun-Bulletin.

https://stateline.org/2023/05/31/state-wildlife-agencies-focus-on-hook-and-bullet-work-some-see-a-new-path/embed/#?secret=gpwyey0QR0#?secret=EwQ9pQyskb

The New York bill followed an agency decision in Oregon to ban contests on state lands.

Under Oregon law, wildlife managers’ authority in the state does not extend to “predatory animals” on private lands, said Michelle Dennehy, communications coordinator with the Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife, but the agency responded to public concern about the contests on public lands.

While many of the bans enacted so far have been issued by state wildlife agencies, advocates are increasingly turning to lawmakers to act — especially in states where wildlife commissions are dominated by hunters.

“We have an outdated state agency that’s comprised only of hunters, so we have to go the legislative route,” said Brian Hackett, director of government and community relations at the Associated Humane Societies in New Jersey, a nonprofit that rescues wild and domestic animals.

New Jersey lawmakers advanced a contest ban measure through a Senate committee last year, but the session ended before it could progress further. A bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced a similar measure earlier this month.

In Illinois, lawmakers also are considering a bill to ban hunting contests. Democratic state Rep. Anna Moeller, the bill’s sponsor, said that wildlife officials deferred the matter to the General Assembly in response to pressure from some hunting groups. While the bill has yet to see any movement, Moeller said backers are working to educate lawmakers who are still unaware that such contests even exist.

“We support hunting that’s done in a sustainable and responsible way,” Moeller said. “When you’re wiping out large numbers of animals at a time, you’re creating an imbalance, and oftentimes we find there’s harmful consequences from being so reckless.”