Posted on 10/05/2015 11:58:54 AM PDT by SJackson
Gray wolves are killing cattle and family pets in Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, and all residents can do is stand by and watch thanks to a federal judges ruling.
In December, US District Judge Beryl Howell overturned the Obama administrations decision to take the gray wolf in the Great Lakes states off the endangered species list, The Detroit Free Press reported. Howells action effectively banned hunting and trapping of wolves in those states.
Farmer Miles Kuschel watched a pack of six wolves surround his cattle on Easter, but decided not to shoot because of the ruling. When he came back, a calf was dead.
They came, they killed and they left, but theyre still around. They just move on to the neighbors place, Kuschel told Watchdog.org.
Others have had similar experiences.
There was a big gray timber wolf, Laurie Anderson told Minnesota Public Radio (MPR). The wolf grabbed Curly by the neck, and headed down toward what we call the West Branch of the Knife River. And Ive never seen my little dog again.
Andersons poodle, Curly Moe, was one of several dogs carried away by wolves in the region around Duluth in April, MPR reported. The wolf attacked when Anderson and Curly went outside to get the mail.
Howells ruling keeps wolves on the endangered species list, which means they only can be killed in defense of human life. That means Anderson and Kuschel could have been prosecuted for a federal crime if they shot the wolves to defend their animals.
Farmers Are Helpless
You could be watching your pasture and you could see a wolf killing your cattle, which is like watching someone at the ATM taking money out of your bank account, and you can do nothing to stop it, Charlie Poster, the assistant commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Agriculture, told Watchdog.org.
The US Fish and Wildlife Service took the gray wolf in the Great Lakes Region (Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan) off the Endangered Species List three years ago. Animal rights groups and environmentalists appealed, and Howell reversed that decision.
That means farmers and ranchers need to get federal permission to shoot wolves they see killing their cattle. It also effectively ended wolf hunting seasons in the three states and wolf trapping in Minnesota and Wisconsin. It also means that property owners have no way to protect their pets from wolves.
Farmers can get compensation for livestock killed if they take pictures of slaughtered animals and send them to the Fish and Wildlife Service. Unfortunately, that process can take months and it is getting longer. Poster said his agency is dealing with a back log of claims for compensation for wolf attacks.
Supporters of the judges ruling defended the decision.
The wolves needed to go back under federal protection, Jill Fitz, the director of the Michigan Humane Society, told The Free Press. The courts recognized the basis of the delisting was flawed.
Wildlife officials estimate that there are currently around 2,400 wolves living in 470 packs in Minnesota, and 636 wolves on Michigans Upper Peninsula. More could be crossing the border from neighboring Ontario. The wolves are getting more aggressive, according to wildlife officials.
Within the last half a year, weve had I would say probably a spike of wolves that are coming in and going after some domestic animals, Kipp Duncan, a Minnesota conservation officer, told MPR. Duncan knows of at least five dogs that were attacked and eaten by wolves. He knows of at least one case in which a wolf killed a dog chained to a house.
On average, around 100 farm animals and five dogs a year are killed by wolves in Minnesota. Duncan thinks the wolves are getting more aggressive because the population of their favorite food deer has decreased.
I think its a function of wolves being hungry and not finding as much food as they normally do in the areas they normally forage in, John Hart of the U.S. Department of Agricultures Wildlife Service Program told MPR. So theyre moving to where the deer are, which happens to be where the people are.
3 S’es rule applies here.
And went to law school.
Your Honor, I went to see why my cattle were making a bunch of noise. Then I found myself surrounded by these menacing wolves. I was in fear for my life so I shot them.
What dog breed can stand up to a pack of 150lb wolves.
The way I see it, shooting a wolf that is attacking personal property is neither hunting nor trapping.
Use the Hillary approach: Do it, conceal it, and deny, deny, deny.
Shoot the things and bury ‘em.
Deep.
And on a liberal’s land.
There was a sound reason our ancestors wiped out wolves, mountain lions, coyotes, and prairie dogs. I personally HATE having to hike with the threat of mountain lion attack.
Where is this dead wolf of which you speak, Your Honor?
“A” dog may chase off “A” wolf.
You’ll need a lot of dogs, though, to thwart a pack of wolves.
Me too, but you can’t shoot or even harass an endangered specie unless unless your live is in danger. I recall an incident about 20 years ago near Big Bend where an individual bit by a rattler shot the snake to take to the hospital with him for id. Needless to say it was an endangered variety, and he was convicted. Since the antivenom for vipers is the same, identification beyond rattlesnake was unnecessary. I think I read about it after a successful appeal, but imagine the legal bills.
Stand off and chase off 3-6 wolves. Need more than one dog.
Donkeys can guard? Cool. I had no idea.
SHOOT, SHOVEL, SHUT UP.
When I got back, there would have been 6 dead wolves and my backhoe.
Shoot the killer, then go shoot the judge, bury him and shut up. Or something like that.
Probably won’t be too long before it’s illegal to defend your life with deadly force.
Already, it’s illegal, for all intents and purposes, to defend yourself from a beatdown by a group of “minorities”.
This was addressed a long time ago:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nt6kKhlX8vU
It’s hard to believe anyone would stand there and watch their livestock killed by wolves.
Backed up by an armed man I think the wolves can be deterred.
Jill Fitz needs to be staked out in the woods so that she can experience up close and personal the consequences of her ideas.
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