Posted on 01/30/2013 9:58:42 AM PST by Kaslin
This is one of N reasons (where N is large and increasing exponentially) why respect for bureaucrats no longer exists.
Whoever issued the arrest warrant (whether deserved or not) should be fired, tarred, feathered, and dropped into the nearest lava pit.
I once saved an abandoned fawn. It was around my place, and alone for four days, before I knew for sure it was actually abandoned. Then it was sufficiently starving to death to walk right up to me. I put it in the fenced part of my yard. I called local wildlife agencies to find out what I should do. I was told by all of them to just put it back in the woods and let it die, and of course they all had to tell me it was the law, and I could be in legal trouble if I didn’t. I didn’t. I eventually found out they can be fed goat’s milk. Got some from Winn Dixie and fed it four times a day with a bottle, for three days. I found a wildlife rehabilitator some 75 miles away, and took it there.
Give an environmentalist a badge.
Incidents like these are why I don’t fly the American flag or celebrate “Independence Day” anymore. They used to symbolize freedom. This is not a free country anymore.
This is why the mad rapid expansion of government power must be halted.
Will common sense ever prevail in this country again????
I once represented a young man in the following circumstances:
He worked at a hardware store in an affluent suburban community. An elderly lady with a raccoon problem asked for advice on how to get rid of them, so he sold her a sizeable trap (the kind with the closing door on the cage, not the bear claw trap kind).
Next day the lady brought him back the trap, with a live raccoon inside. He asked his boss what to do with it, and he advised to drown it, just as they did with mice/rats. So he did.
The city police caught wind and arrested him, and charged him with cruelty to animals, as a Class D Felony.
Fortunately, the deputy prosecutor was a sensible man, along with the Sheriff’s Department animal control officer, who agreed that invasive raccoons were pests, and that unless they were killed, transplanting was not an option as they would just return. The charges were dismissed.
But it’s still a travesty that the State does stuff like this to perfectly law-abiding persons.
All too often, beaurocrats are mindless monsters, insensate droids which humm on, powered by tax dollars scammed and extorted from the public.
In some cases, beaurocrats try to buck the system, like the County Clerk in that County in New York which was served with a records request by Gannett for the names and addresses of gun owners in that County and he refused to release said information.
SOMEWHERE in the Indiana Division of Natural Resources, there MUST be SOMEBODY with a FUNCTIONING BRAIN!!!
Drowning is a HORRIBLE way to kill a mammal.
He should have shot it in the head or released it somewhere where there were few people.
A fawn is reasonable, but there are lots of people who illegally feed deer here in Virginia in the fall and early winter. The law is mostly intended to preclude hunting over bait. People don’t consider the ill effects of overpopulation and the areas with no hunting are the worst for bleeding heart suckers and their welfare wards.
Combined, their work incomes couldn’t total $2,600 a month? Bulls**t.
So, an enforcer for pinhead bureaucrats was stung by pinhead bureacrats. Just deserts, as far as I’m concerned.
In my experience ,”conservation officers” are real a**holes!
I found them overbearing jerks filled with self-importance and whiners. And THEY have power under Indiana law to go anywhere wild animals go without needing a warrant,i.e. they can come onto your farm without even notifying you to “seed’ a new turkey flock or check for whatever.
Indiana DNR “officers” have charges other people in my area with this keeping wildlife illegally charge,and it has usually been a kind-hearted person rescuing an injured animal.
Oh they also severely punish someone poaching the over-populated deer herd for food;they will take the meat,the freezer,the vehicle it was transported in,and the gun. AND impose huge fines.
I think they would cheerfully hang poachers if only the king would decree it like in the good old days of merry England!
I have NO respect for CO’s.
I find it impossible too, unless they live in a luxury appartment /s>
“I think they would cheerfully hang poachers if only the king would decree it like in the good old days of merry England!”
Marry! By our good Lady!!!
It sounds like Indiana is almost as bad as New Jersey.
And not only is a family better off with $29,000 in ‘benefits’ from welfare, there is the equivalent of one full-time government welfare worker for each family.
So,... $100,000 a year to pay a government worker $70,000 to give a welfare recipient %30,000 to sit on his ass.
Now THAT’s good government!
Just more proof that the legislative overburden spread on legislation by regulatory bureaucrats stifles new ideas and unjustly enriches the maggots and termites of our society.
Drug Warriors should feel so proud:
"'When the Brown County, Wis., Drug Task Force arrested her son Joel last February, Beverly Greer started piecing together his bail. She used part of her disability payment and her tax return. Joel Greers wife also chipped in, as did his brother and two sisters. On Feb. 29, a judge set Greers bail at $7,500, and his mother called the Brown County jail to see where and how she could get him out. The police specifically told us to bring cash, Greer says. Not a cashiers check or a credit card. They said cash. So Greer and her family visited a series of ATMs, and on March 1, she brought the money to the jail, thinking shed be taking Joel Greer home. But she left without her money, or her son. Instead jail officials called in the same Drug Task Force that arrested Greer. A drug-sniffing dog inspected the Greers cash, and about a half-hour later, Beverly Greer said, a police officer told her the dog had alerted to the presence of narcotics on the bills and that the police department would be confiscating the bail money.'
"You probably can figure out the rest of the story. Radleys column has a lot of additional details, but here are a couple of passages to whet your appetite.
"'The Greers had been subjected to civil asset forfeiture, a policy that lets police confiscate money and property even if they can only loosely connect them to drug activity. The cash, or revenue from the property seized, often goes back to the coffers of the police department that confiscated it. Its a policy critics say is often abused, but experts told The HuffPost that the way the law is applied to bail money in Brown County is exceptionally unfair. It took four months for Beverly Greer to get her familys money back, and then only after attorney Andy Williams agreed to take their case. The family produced the ATM receipts proving that had recently withdrawn the money, Williams says. Beverly Greer had documentation for her disability check and her tax return. Even then, the police tried to keep their money.'"
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