Thank you for recently signing our MoveOn petition asking the Obama administration to reconsider its "McKittrick Policy" and to fully prosecute those that kill endangered species.
We learned just days ago that another endangered wolf may have been killed by a coyote hunter, this time in Colorado. DNA tests are currently being conducted by the USFWS to determine if an animal killed was a wolf.
With gray wolves from the Northern Rockies and Great Lakes regions striving to expand into their historic range, it is crucial that the protections afforded by the Endangered Species Act are carried out. The Act's protections against killing still-recovering species are only effective if violators can't later claim ignorance of the the species they targeted.
Please help amplify this message by emailing Attorney General Loretta Lynch and the White House to ask that this policy be revised.
If you have already emailed, please share this petition on social media or by email.
Thank you for taking action for endangered and threatened species.
Sincerely,
Mitch Merry
Denver and the West
DNA test on slain wolf-like canine may prompt probe of Colorado hunter
If so, this would be the first confirmed wolf killed in Colorado since 2009. One was hit by a vehicle that year. Another was poisoned.
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials said a DNA analysis hasn't been completed.
The hunter, who has not been identified, thought the animal he shot April 29 was a coyote, Colorado Parks and Wildlife spokesman Matt Robbins said.
"He did everything right" in swiftly reporting the killing on federal land near Wolford Mountain Reservoir to CPW officials at Hot Sulphur Springs, Robbins said.
But under the Endangered Species Act, a hunter can be prosecuted for killing a protected species without a permit.
The Obama administration in 2013 proposed removing gray wolves from the endangered species list. USFWS wolf recovery coordinator Mike Jimenez said wolves in the northern Rocky Mountains are stable and may be spreading.
"By all biological criteria, wolves are recovered and there are no threats to the population," Jimenez said.
Mature males leave their packs, often migrating 60 miles, Jimenez said. USFWS biologists have recorded wolves dispersing over 500 miles.
In December, a man in Utah killed a wolf known widely among schoolchildren as Echo, saying he thought he was shooting at a coyote. The feds are investigating and weighing whether to file charges.
Wildlife advocates urged aggressive enforcement. Colorado officials must protect wolves, not just tolerate them, and notify residents they may be present, said Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity.
http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_28141198/dna-test-slain-wolf-like-canine-may-prompt
Tell the Obama Administration to Prosecute Endangered Species Killers
A little known and decades old Department of Justice policy is protecting the killers of endangered grizzly bears, whooping cranes, California condors and wolves.
The so-called "McKittrick Policy" was enacted after a Montana man gunned down a wolf and later claimed he had thought he was firing on a dog. He was prosecuted, though the Department of Justice (DOJ) later decided to accept his self-exoneration by claimed ignorance and has clung to that policy of inaction for years.
Endangered species need to be protected from hunters that can simply claim they did not know what they were shooting at.
Tell President Obama and Attorney General Loretta Lynch to drop the McKittrick Policy and treat the killing of endangered species like the crime that it is.
*If asked to enter a subject after submitting your email, please select "Environment".
http://action.endangered.org/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=19052
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