NRA chief involved in gruesome cat killing as college fraternity member

Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Washington

October 14, 2024 at 3:00 AM

Douglas Hamlin, who was appointed to lead the NRA this summer in the wake of a long-running corruption scandal at the gun rights group, was involved decades ago in the sadistic killing of a fraternity house cat named BK, according to several local media reports at the time.

Hamlin pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge of animal cruelty brought against him and four of his fraternity brothers in 1980, when he was an undergraduate student at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. The charge was brought against Hamlin under a local Ann Arbor ordinance. All five members of Alpha Delta Phi were later expelled from the fraternity.

The details of the case, described in local media reports at the time, are gruesome. The house cat was captured, its paws were cut off, and was then strung up and set on fire. The killing, which occurred in December 1979, was allegedly prompted by anger that the cat was not using its litterbox.

The case caused such a furore locally that some students and animal rights activists wore buttons and armbands in memory of BK.

Hamlin served as the fraternity president at the time, according to the media reports. While Hamlin’s exact role in the killing is unclear, a report in the Ann Arbor News published in March 1980 – at the time of the court case – said that district court judge SJ Elden singled Hamlin out for criticism, saying he could have prevented it from happening as the leader of the fraternity.

The judge called the cat killing an “unconscionable and heinous” act and suggested the fraternity had tried to engage in a coverup to protect its members after the crime was exposed.

“Heartlessness must be in the job description to run the NRA,” said Nick Suplina, senior vice president for law and policy at Everytown for Gun Safety. “This revelation shows that the NRA has failed to turn the page on its scandal-plagued leaders and its doom spiral continues with Hamlin at the helm.”

One of the fraternity brothers who was charged at the time and spoke to the Guardian on the condition that his name would not be used said the incident had been “regrettable” and “not a good chapter for anybody”.

The Guardian contacted Hamlin through multiple spokespersons at the NRA and tried to reach Hamlin by phone but did not receive any response to questions about the incident.

Shelagh Abbs Winter, who was named in a media report as the student who reported the incident to authorities at the time, told the Guardian she recalled many of the details, including that she had felt compelled to report the incident to authorities after she learned what had happened from another student who was a pledge at the fraternity.

Winter was and remains an animal rights activist, and expressed surprise when she was contacted by the Guardian for this story, because she had not followed Hamlin’s career nor realized that the 1979 incident would still be personally relevant decades later.

“You don’t know how amazing this is to me, because I am a member of Moms Demand Action,” she said, referring to one of the most influential grassroots gun control advocacy groups in the country, which has proved to be a thorn in the side of the NRA. Winter said she remembered feeling threatened at the time for coming forward.

“Once a creep, always a creep,” she said.

A cook who worked at the fraternity at the time and asked not to be named said he recalled speaking to police and never returning back to work because he feared reprisal. “After it was disclosed that the police were investigating, a meeting was called, and the members were told to say nothing; not to cooperate; and not to, essentially, give up their brothers,” the person told the Guardian.

Related: How Tim Walz went from NRA favorite to ‘straight Fs’ on gun rights

According to press reports, the charges were ultimately expunged from the men’s records after they completed 200 hours each of animal-related community service.

Hamlin was elected by the NRA’s board to serve as CEO in July. After graduating from college, Hamlin joined the Marine Corps and later began working at the gun rights group, serving as executive director of its publications division.

Hamlin’s promotion followed a New York judge’s ruling that the longtime head of the NRA, Wayne LaPierre, would be barred from holding a paid position with the group after a jury found him guilty of misspending millions of dollars in NRA funds for his own benefit.

Two African countries say they need to kill elephants for food. Critics say it’s cruel and won’t work

By Laura Paddison, CNN

 6 minute read 

Published 1:00 AM EDT, Sat October 12, 2024

Elephants feed in Hwange National Park in northern Zimbabwe on December 16, 2023.

Elephants feed in Hwange National Park in northern Zimbabwe on December 16, 2023. Zinyange Auntony/AFP/Getty ImagesCNN — 

Drought is now so bad in parts of southern Africa that governments say they must kill hundreds of their most captivating, majestic wild animals to feed desperately hungry people.

In August, Namibia announced it had embarked on a cull of 723 animals, including 83 elephants, 30 hippos and 300 zebras. The following month, Zimbabwe authorized the slaughter of 200 elephants.

Both governments said the culls would help alleviate the impacts of the region’s worst drought in 100 years, reduce pressure on land and water, and prevent conflict as animals push further into human settlements seeking food.

But it’s triggered a fierce argument.

Conservationists have criticized the cullings as cruel and short-termist, setting a dangerous precedent.

The decision to offer up some of Namibia’s elephants to trophy hunters — tourists, often from the US and Europe, who pay thousands of dollars to shoot animals and keep body parts as trophies — has further fueled opposition and raised questions about governments’ motivations.

For some supporters of the cull, however, critics misunderstand conservation at best, and are “racist” at worst — telling African countries what to do and valuing wildlife over people.

An elephant grazes inside the Murchison Falls National Park in northwest Uganda on February 20, 2023.

An elephant grazes inside the Murchison Falls National Park in northwest Uganda on February 20, 2023. Badru Katumba/AFP/Getty Images

Elephants in the Huanib River Valley in northern Damaraland and Kaokoland, Namibia.

Elephants in the Huanib River Valley in northern Damaraland and Kaokoland, Namibia. Getty Images

It’s a heated debate that goes to the heart of what conservation looks like and how countries will deal with deep, devastating droughts that are only becoming more frequent as humans burn fossil fuels and heat up the world.

‘Immense suffering’

The situation facing southern Africa is dire. Crops have failed, livestock has died and nearly 70 million people are desperately in need of food.

Zimbabwe declared a national disaster in April. Namibia followed in May, declaring a state of emergency as drought left around half its population facing high levels of acute food insecurity.

The drought has been driven by El Niño — a natural climate pattern which has led to sharply reduced rainfall in the region — and exacerbated by the human-caused climate crisis.

“The reality is we are seeing an unprecedented increase in droughts,” said Elizabeth Mrema, deputy executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme. “There is immense suffering.”

Legal harvesting and consumption of wild game for food is common practice in cultures across the world, Mrema told CNN. “Provided the harvesting of these animals is done using scientifically proven, sustainable methods … there should be no cause for concern.”

A field of failed corn crops due to drought at a farm in Glendale, Zimbabwe, on Monday, March 11, 2024. A swathe of southern Africa about the size of France suffered the driest February in decades, killing crops and precipitating a power shortage that threatens to hit copper mines in a key producing region. Photographer: Cynthia R Matonhodze/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Related articleTens of millions facing hunger and water shortages as extreme drought and floods sweep southern Africa

Both countries say the culls won’t threaten the long-term survival of wild animal populations. They say it’s the opposite: reducing numbers will help protect remaining animals as the drought shrinks food and water resources.

All the animals in Zimbabwe and most in Namibia will be killed by professional hunters.

The animals will be shot, said Chris Brown, an environmental scientist at the Namibian Chamber of Environment, an association of conservation groups, which supports the cull. “Mostly it’s done at night with a silencer and an infrared spot so you can get very close to the animals. Headshot, animals drop,” Brown told CNN.

It’s “very humane,” he said, in contrast to farm animals squeezed into trucks before being killed in slaughterhouses. The meat will then be distributed to those in need.

Around 12 of the 83 Namibian elephants earmarked for the cull, however, will be killed by trophy hunters, Romeo Muyunda, spokesperson for Namibia’s Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism, told CNN.

This has led to an outcry. A report by 14 African conservationists, who say they must remain anonymous due to the risks of speaking out, says courting trophy hunters raises questions about “the real motive.”

Muyunda said none of the money would go to the government, instead the aim is to generate money for communities affected by human-wildlife conflict.

‘Cruel and misguided’

Elephants may be a prized sight on safari, but they can be dangerous for those living alongside them.

In Namibia, which has around 21,000 elephants, according to a 2022 survey, some areas have so many they have become “almost intolerable for people,” Brown said, with elephants destroying crops, harming livestock and even killing people.

The country has attempted to offload elephants before. In 2020, it announced an auction of 170, but only managed to sell a third of them. They cannot be sold or given away, Brown said, “the truth of the matter is that no one wants elephants.”

But others don’t buy the overpopulation argument.

“Namibia’s wildlife have survived but diminished over the last 12 years of droughts,” said Izak Smit, chairperson of Desert Lions Human Relations Aid, a Namibian non-profit. This is especially true in areas of the country where the culls will take place, he told CNN.

Bottles with homemade, non-lethal repellents around a perimeter fence at a homestead in Dete near Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe on May 25, 2022.

Bottles with homemade, non-lethal repellents around a perimeter fence at a homestead in Dete near Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe on May 25, 2022. Zinyange Auntony/AFP/Getty Images

In Zimbabwe, where the government says there are more than 85,000 elephants, some experts are concerns numbers have been overinflated.

It’s “a myth,” said Farai Maguwu, founding director of the Centre for Natural Resource Governance, because it takes no account of the fact elephants roam freely between countries in the region.

Safari operators in Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, one of the areas earmarked for cullings, “are actually complaining about a declining number,” Maguwu said.

Elephants are not the problem, he argued, pointing to poor land management and the increase of human settlements next to national parks and in buffer zones designed to separate animals and people.

An emerald glass frog (Espadarana prosoblepon) in the Chuchanti reserve, in Darien, Panama, 28 March 2023 (issued 05 April 2023). In the reserve area there are more than 40 camera traps, twenty in the canopy - the layer of branches and leaves formed by the tops of neighboring trees - and the others in the understory - the variety of vegetation that grows in the areas closest to the floor-. The idea is to collect data that allows understanding "the dynamics" of this neotropical forest.
Chucanti, a reserve  in the Darien of Panama with an overwhelming biodiversity - 28 Mar 2023

Related articleGlobal loss of wildlife is ‘significantly more alarming’ than previously thought, according to a new study

Conservationists are also concerned that killing these wild animals will push the delicate ecology of the two countries out of balance, making them even less resilient to drought.

It could also inadvertently increase human-elephant conflict, said Elisabeth Valerio, safari operator and conservationist in Hwange Park, Zimbabwe. The trauma of family members being killed can make elephants more aggressive, she told CNN.

Both Namibia and Zimbabwe say professional hunters will ensure entire groups are killed to prevent this.

Perhaps one of the biggest criticisms is that culls can’t do anything meaningful in the face of severe drought.

It’s a “false solution” when so many millions of people need food aid, Maguwu said. “A lot of us are hearing for the first time that elephant meat can be eaten,” he added, and expecting poor families to eat this meat is “an insult.”

The culls will do nothing to address hunger in anything but the most short-term way, said Megan Carr a senior researcher at the EMS Foundation, a South African social justice organization, calling them “misguided and cruel.”

Conservation biologist and natural resources consultant Keith Lindsay, also worries the culling could be used to push for a weakening of international rules on wildlife trading, such as selling ivory.

It could set up the narrative that “people who are opposed to wildlife trade, are opposed to starving people,” he told CNN.

A zebra at a waterhole in May 2015 at Halali in Etosha park in Namibia.

A zebra at a waterhole in May 2015 at Halali in Etosha park in Namibia. Martin Bureau/AFP/Getty Images

Namibian government spokesperson Muyunda said many of the criticisms ignore the suffering the drought is causing to both people and animals.

There is hypocrisy, too, he added, as Western countries have also culled animals. “Just because it’s Namibia and it’s an African country, then the decision is questioned.”

Brown, from the Namibian Chamber of Environment, went further: “It’s actually a racist thing: ‘Africa, they can’t manage their wildlife. We need to tell them how they should do it.’”

But as fossil fuel pollution helps drive increasingly severe and devastating droughts, many conservationists fear these culls will open the door to much more extensive wild animal killings.

The government may start something which they won’t be able to finish,” Maguwu said. “Something that will go on and on.”

Four Horrific Trophy Hunting Stories That Shook the World

6 hours ago

By Trinity Sparke

trophy hunter

Image Credit :Canon Boy/Shutterstock

 Add-Free Browsing

Subscribe to Newsletter

FoodMonster App

Support Us

Buy our Cookbooks

Sign Our Petitions

Help keep One Green Planet free and independent! Together we can ensure our platform remains a hub for empowering ideas committed to fighting for a sustainable, healthy, and compassionate world. Please support us in keeping our mission strong.Pay

Pay $49.99/Year + Go Ad-Free!

Trophy hunting, often framed as a controversial pastime, has long been a point of contention among wildlife enthusiasts and conservationists. While some argue that regulated hunting contributes to Conservation efforts, the grim realities behind certain hunts reveal a darker truth. Stories of creatures hunted for sport, often with little regard for their ecological importance or emotional impact, highlight the disturbing nature of this practice.

1. Cecil the Lion

Source: ABC News/Youtube

by Taboola

Sponsored Links

You May Like

AdYETI CoolersNever Watered Down

Take A Hot Plunge

Take It Stronger

Lasts Through Every Season

The ongoing global outrage over Walter Palmer’s killing of Cecil the lion highlighted serious ethical concerns regarding trophy hunting, particularly after investigations revealed he lacked a legal hunting permit. Critics argued that such practices, often defended as beneficial to Conservation, actually undermined efforts to protect endangered species and ecosystems. Palmer’s previous illegal hunting incident exemplified a troubling disregard for wildlife laws, suggesting that the purported Conservation funding from trophy hunting was often overstated.

2. Trophy Hunter Kills Sleeping Lion

Source: PETA/Youtube

According to this video, “many lions killed for “sport” in South Africa are captive-bred, making them habituated to humans and ultimately “easier” targets for trophy hunters.” PETA released video footage showing a group of hunters ambushing a captive-bred lion resting under a tree. After being shot and wounded by one of the hunters, the lion roared and charged, only to be met with four more shots from the hunter and his guides before he was finally killed.

3. Trophy Hunter Kills Giraffe

Source: CBS Evening News/Youtube

American trophy hunter Tess Talley faced significant backlash after posting a photo of herself with a giraffe she killed, prompting her to defend the image. In a segment titled “Trophy Hunting: Killing or Conservation,” Jim Axelrod explored the controversy surrounding her hobby of hunting big game, which often involves animals kept in captivity. Talley drew criticism after the photo of her killing the giraffe went viral on social media. She claimed that the pictures were part of her effort to display respect for the animals, attempting to justify her actions amidst outrage.

4. Girl Poses With Giraffe and Zebra

Source: ABC News/Youtube

A 12-year-old girl named Ariana Gordin ignited fierce outrage after posting photos of her trophy hunts on social media, revealing her passion for hunting exotic animals. Despite her young age, Ariana had already become a skilled sharpshooter and traveled abroad for big game hunts, including a recent safari in Africa with her father. While she defended her actions, expressing pride in her experiences, the online backlash was overwhelming, with many condemning her and even issuing death threats. Her father stated that they were offered the opportunity to hunt a problematic giraffe, which sparked further debate over the ethics of hunting.

The stories of trophy hunting show us the serious problems with this practice. They remind us how important it is to protect wildlife and the natural world. Each case highlights the need to rethink how we treat animals and work towards better ways to care for them. By standing against trophy hunting, we can help ensure that animals live freely and that future generations can enjoy the beauty of wildlife without the threat of unnecessary harm.

Being publicly-funded gives us a greater chance to continue providing you with high-quality content.

Collapsing wildlife populations near ‘points of no return’, report warns

As average population falls reach 95% in some regions, experts call for urgent action but insist ‘nature can recover’

The age of extinction is supported by

theguardian.org

About this content

Patrick GreenfieldThu 10 Oct 2024 02.26 EDTShare

Global wildlife populations have plunged by an average of 73% in 50 years, a new scientific assessment has found, as humans continue to push ecosystems to the brink of collapse.

Latin America and the Caribbean recorded the steepest average declines in recorded wildlife populations, with a 95% fall, according to the WWF and the Zoological Society of London’s (ZSL) biennial Living Planet report. They were followed by Africa with 76%, and Asia and the Pacific at 60%. Europe and North America recorded comparatively lower falls of 35% and 39% respectively since 1970.

Scientists said this was explained by much larger declines in wildlife populations in Europe and North America before 1970 that were now being replicated in other parts of the world. They warned that the loss could quicken in future years as global heating accelerates, triggered by tipping points in the Amazon rainforest, Arctic and marine ecosystems, which could have catastrophic consequences for nature and human society.

symbol

00:00

03:12

Read More

Matthew Gould, ZSL’s chief executive, said the report’s message was clear: “We are dangerously close to tipping points for nature loss and climate change. But we know nature can recover, given the opportunity, and that we still have the chance to act.”https://interactive.guim.co.uk/uploader/embed/2024/10/archive-zip/giv-4559jCCOm61dRRFw/

The figures, known as the Living Planet Index, are made up of almost 35,000 population trends from 5,495 mammals, birds, fish, amphibians and reptiles species around the world, and have become one of the leading indicators of the global state of wildlife populations. In recent years, the metric has faced criticism for potentially overestimating wildlife declines.

The index is weighted in favour of data from Africa and Latin America, which have suffered larger declines but have far less reliable information about populations. This has had the effect of driving a dramatic top line of global collapse despite information from Europe and North America showing less dramatic falls.

Hannah Wauchope, an ecology lecturer at Edinburgh University, said: “The weighting of the Living Planet Index is imperfect, but until we have systematic sampling of biodiversity worldwide, some form of weighting will be necessary. What we do know is that as habitat destruction and other threats to biodiversity continue, there will continue to be declines.”

Critics question the mathematical soundness of the index’s approach, but acknowledge that other indicators also show major declines in the state of many wildlife populations around the world.

Aerial shot of he border of rainforest and clearcut land
Brazilian rainforest in Humaitá. The report identifies land-use change driven by agriculture as the most important cause of the fall in wildlife populations. Photograph: Adriano Machado/Reuters

In a critique of the index published by Springer Nature in June, scientists said it “suffers from several mathematical and statistical issues, leading to a bias towards an apparent decrease even for balanced populations”.

They continued: “This does not mean that in reality there is no overall decrease in vertebrate populations [but the] current phase of the Anthropocene [epoch] is characterised by more complex changes than … simple disappearance.”

The IUCN’s Red List, which has assessed the health of more than 160,000 plant and animal species, has found that almost a third are at risk of extinction. Of those assessed, 41% of amphibians, 26% of mammals and 34% of conifer trees are at risk of disappearing.

The index has been published days ahead of the Cop16 biodiversity summit in Cali, Colombia, where countries will meet for the first time since agreeing on a set of international targets to halt the freefall of life on Earth. Governments have never met a single biodiversity target in the history of UN agreements and scientists are urging world leaders to make sure this decade is different.

Susana Muhamad, Cop16 president and Colombia’s environment minister, said: “We must listen to science and take action to avoid collapse.

“Globally, we are reaching points of no return and irreversibly affecting the planet’s life-support systems. We are seeing the effects of deforestation and the transformation of natural ecosystems, intensive land use and climate change.

“The world is witnessing the mass bleaching of coral reefs, the loss of tropical forests, the collapse of polar ice caps and serious changes to the water cycle, the foundation of life on our planet,” she said.

Susana Muhamad Rozo 001 in Bogota, Colombia, June 2022

Land-use change was the most important driver of the fall in wildlife populations as agricultural frontiers expanded, often at the expense of ecosystems such as tropical rainforests. Mike Barrett, director of science and conservation at WWF-UK, said countries such as the UK were driving the destruction by continuing to import food and livestock feed grown on previously wild ecosystems.

“The data that we’ve got shows that the loss was driven by a fragmentation of natural habitats. What we are seeing through the figures is an indicator of a more profound change that is going on in our natural ecosystems … they are losing their resilience to external shocks and change. We are now superimposing climate change on these already degraded habitats,” said Barrett.

“I have been involved in writing these reports for 10 years and, in writing this one, it was difficult. I was shocked,” he said.