Tag Archives: Gray Wolves

Montana crying Wolf again after Hunters slaughtered 31,000 Elk in 2017

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Montana is at it again, crying wolf and not taking into account their total Hunter slaughter numbers.

Montana Hunters killed nearly 31,000 Elk in 2017, its certainly not wolves, Wyoming and Idaho both 26,000 each. Hunters really need to learn how to read harvest reports 😉 they will wipe out every single species if we do not put them in check.

Sportsmen from western Montana will be holding their second meeting regarding the declining elk, deer, moose and sheep populations in Region 1. The increasing wolf populations have far exceeded recovery objectives and have consequently declined the big game wildlife numbers in this area. These big game wildlife populations are at risk with some areas being completely void of elk! We need to promote and regulate the population of big game wildlife in these areas.

To illustrate this drastic decline, as an example from Idaho, the elk populations in the Lolo region stood at 16,000 elk in 1995 and have plummeted to less than 1,000 in 2016. Each wolf kills approximately 20 big game animals per year. Wolf populations have continued to grow at 28 percent annually despite trapping and management efforts. Idaho and Wyoming have taken a more aggressive approach in wolf management by making it easier to hunt and trap the wolves.

The objectives of the group are to work with legislators to educate the public on the decreased wildlife populations and to work with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks to change regulations in order to be able to harvest more wolves with extended trapping seasons and less expensive wolf permits, etc.

The next meeting will be held on Nov. 28 at 6:30 p.m. in the Lakeside Motel Conference Center in Trout Creek. Guest speakers and attendees will include Justin Webb from the Foundations For Wildlife Management, a representative from the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks biologist Neil Anderson from Region 1, legislative Rep. Bob Brown, and area sportsmen who have witnesses firsthand the declining populations of wildlife in this area. All are welcome.

Glenn Schenavar
Thompson Falls

Source: Big Game Populations Are at Risk – Flathead Beacon

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ODFW  hosts meeting with wolf plan stakeholders

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PENDLETON — The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced it will host another wolf plan meeting on Tuesday in Pendleton.

The meeting is from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Oxford Inn and Suites, 2400 S.W. Court Place, and professional facilitator Deb Nudelman will lead the meeting, which is about the wolf plan review and update. The state’s Fish and Wildlife Commission earlier this year postponed the final adoption of the plan to conduct more outreach to get more consensus from stakeholders.

The meeting’s top objective is to “strive for alignment on non-lethal deterrence plan proposals,” according to the agenda.

ODFW invited stakeholders “deeply involved” with the update to attend. The meeting also will be open to the public, though seating is limited. And the state is holding the public comment period at the meeting to 10 minutes, according to the announcement, from 3:30-3:40 p.m.

“No formal decisions or rule modifications will be made during the facilitated meeting,” according to the announcement, but the state will incorporate information from this and future meetings into the wolf plan update for the wildlife commission to adopt at a future date.

To see the meeting agenda, visit https://bit.ly/2Boj3hi.

Source: State wildlife hosts meeting with wolf plan stakeholders – Local News – East Oregonian

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Calf killed by wolves in Jackson County 

 

JACKSON COUNTY, Ore. – Wildlife officials are reporting another calf has been killed by wolves in Jackson County.

The latest kill comes on the heels of numerous depredations attributed to the Rogue Pack, which roams the area between Klamath and Jackson Counties.

According to the Oregon Department of Forestry, on November 18 a rancher found a dead calf on a private pasture in the Boundary Butte area. It’s a property where the Rogue Pack has killed cattle before.

In this latest case, physical evidence led ODFW to conclude the calf was killed and eaten by wolves within a day of when the carcass was found.

Source: Calf killed by wolves in Jackson County – KOBI-TV NBC5 / KOTI-TV NBC2

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Man pleads guilty in Mexican Gray wolf shooting

 

Man pleads guilty in Mexican Gray wolf shooting

A Peoria man who was accused of killing a female Mexican gray wolf in December, 2017, pleaded guilty last Friday to violating the Endangered Species Act.

Jason William Kunkel was sentenced to five years of unsupervised probation, was banned from “any hunting activities” and ordered to stay out of all Arizona National Forests (except to travel through on a federal, state or local highway). Kunkel was also required to forfeit the rifle and scope used to kill the wolf. Kunkel was also ordered to pay $7,500 in restitution to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The rifle, a Remington Model 770, sells for around $400.

On the original charges, Williams faced a possible sentence of up to a $50,000 fine and imprisonment of up to a year.

Also charged in the case is Donald Justin Davis from Phoenix. His next court hearing is set for December 20.

The incident occurred December 5, 2017, at an elk hunting camp near Dipping Vat Spring, northwest of the intersection of highways 273 and 261.

The incident was initially reported to an Arizona Game and Fish officer by a hunter who said he saw cellphone pictures of Williams posing with a dead wolf.

The informant also reported that he and other members of his hunting party had observed a wolf that “appeared to be stalking” children on the day of the killing. Another informant told investigators that he saw the wolf crouched behind a log, about 30 yards from children who were playing in Kunkel’s camp and he drove into the camp and yelled at the wolf, scaring it away.

The hunters who reported the incident told investigators that they had advised Kunkel and Davis to report the wolf killing to Arizona Game and Fish. But Kunkel and Davis chose not to report the incident and instead broke camp and left early the next morning.

On December 28, a USFWS agent went to Kunkel’s residence in Peoria and interviewed him about the wolf killing. Davis told the investigator that a wolf had come into his camp three times but he denied killing it. But when the agent asked Kunkel to see the cell phone photos of the wolf, he changed his story and admitted to the killing. He told the agent he initially lied because he was afraid of the consequences.

Kunkel told the agent, that after he killed the wolf, he and Davis decided to not report the killing “and further agreed to not talk about it with each other nor to anyone else in future,” according to the complaint prepared by the USFWS agent.

On Kunkel’s cell phone, the agent reported seeing five photos of the dead wolf, three of them with Kunkel posing with the dead animal.

Also on December 28, the agent interviewed Davis at his home in Phoenix. Davis, a self-described outdoorsman, said he was able to identify wolves and distinguish them from coyotes. Davis further reported that he did not have any safety concerns about the wolves he saw near their campsite.

Davis reported that he had used Kunkel’s cell phone to take the trophy pictures of Kunkel with the dead wolf.

During a second interview with the agent, on January 8, 2018, Davis reported that Kunkel asked if he should shoot the approaching wolf. Davis said he told Kunkel that whether or not to shoot was up to Kunkel.

After Kunkel shot the wolf, “Davis said he congratulated Kunkel by shaking his hand…,” according to the complaint.

 

Source: Man pleads guilty in wolf shooting | Latest News | wmicentral.com

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 Taking Sheep to the Wolves door isn’t an Intelligent decision

When you Take Sheep or cows to the wild, You yourself, not the wildlife need to take responsibility for your decision to endanger your own lively hood, as well as that of the lives of your stock. Lets face it, Elk didnt ask you to bring your cows to eat all of their winter food stores or import noxious weeds into the forests.

  FRANCE: He sleeps fully dressed, dreading a midnight wolf attack on the flock of sheep penned in close by his hut, high up in the French Alps.

“The fears of last year came back,” says Gaetan Meme, after his third season of transhumance, the timeless tradition of guiding livestock up into the rich alpine pastures to graze and staying with them.

The green velvet mountains dotted with rocky outcrops between the Belledonne massif and the Maurienne valley, an idyllic playground for hikers, are his kingdom from June to October.

It’s a magnificent backdrop that can quickly reveal a dark side when you have to look after 1,300 vulnerable animals.

“When my first sheep was killed I immediately felt that I had failed, that I had not carried out my duty,” Meme says gravely of the 2016 attack, which has haunted him ever since.

“I quickly found the body, there was a huge red stain. Bite marks on the neck, the rib cage ripped open… the heart, lungs and liver had been eaten.”

From the start of his first season, the 24-year-old shepherd found himself face to face with the wolf, trying to fight it off.

“He was there on the end of my staff every evening for a week,” he recalls.

“The sheep were so disturbed they broke out of the pen in panic.”

Sleepless nights took a toll and fatigue convinced him another sheep had been savaged. In the end, he’s not sure if barking dogs woke him or a nightmare.

To beat the wolves, you have to throw them off the track, he says. Move the penned area, make plenty of noise, light a fire, make scarecrows — all can help.

“I put some fur from the female dog on that one (a nearby scarecrow), to give it a smell,” he explains, standing outside the picturesque wooden hut, white curtains on the windows.

There are about 1,000 shepherds left in France today.

The solitary life still attracts plenty of youngsters seeking a change, but few stay on beyond a couple of seasons.

“Everywhere you go, you are an outsider. You are a curiosity, often attracting a mixture of fear and fascination,” Meme, who is single, says.

– Waking up to Jimi Hendrix –

For him, the job is a lifetime vocation. “I can’t remember ever wanting to do anything else,” he says.

As a young boy he would spend “hours looking out of the window” but was afraid of animals, until he got a cat.

“Today I have more contact with animals than humans,” he admits.

At 6:30 a.m., Jimi Hendrix guitar riffs wake Meme. Black hair and green eyes, dressed in thick corduroy trousers, a sleeveless jacket and lumberjack shirt, he looks every inch a shepherd.

Every other morning, before releasing the sheep, he spreads salt over the rocks. The ewes love it, “like we do crisps with a drink, it makes them thirsty and hungry,” he says.

The flock charges after the salt, making a thunderous noise full of bells and bleating. The shepherd answers with a very good imitation.

He looks for limps, pulls up a hind leg and trims a damaged hoof.

– ‘A nomad who goes nowhere’ –

The flock grazes all day. The ewes are either pregnant or have lambed recently.

Up at 2,000 metres (almost 6,600 feet) above the little village of Saint-Colomban-des-Villards in the Savoy region, the shepherd’s biggest concern is fog when “the ewes spread out” and become lost.

And they do not like rain. They get cold and their fleece soaks up the water. If there’s no shelter, they halt and “stand with their rear facing the wind” until it’s over.

The days are long as the clouds float over the peaks. “You should not worry about doing nothing for hours,” smiles the young man, who listens to a small transistor radio all the time.

He follows the sheep where they like to graze, helped by three dogs.

It involves a lot of walking without really going anywhere. “I’m a nomad who goes nowhere,” he laughs. “I know only the pasture. Not what lies above or round the side.”

When he was 15 and at agricultural college, Meme followed a shepherd in the Pyrenees for work experience. “I did not want to go back down the mountain,” he says.

Today, it takes him a month to re-adjust to city life when he moves back to Angers, in western France, in October.

But he admits it only takes a couple of days to acclimatise when he climbs the meadows in spring. “Being with yourself, which many people run from, is exactly what I look for,” says Meme.

Source: Wolves at the door, Alpine shepherd can’t imagine any other life

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Can we learn to live with wolves again?

The above graphic pretty much lays to rest the fairy tales spread by Ranchers that We didnt have Large Wolves in the Lower 48 in its earlier years.

In Colorado, we have 12 streams named Wolf Creek, yet officially, we have no wolves in our state.

A reprint of a rare book helps to explain the loss of Colorado’s wolves, and the Durango Wolf Symposium at Fort Lewis College will provide diverse perspectives on wolf ecology. Join us on campus Nov. 29 for the two-day event.

If you go

The Durango Wolf Symposium will be held Nov. 29-30 at Fort Lewis College, 1000 Rim Drive.
The symposium aims to improve public understanding of gray wolf behavior, ecology and options for re-establishing the species in Colorado. The goal is to share facts, ideas and thoughts about what Colorado might look like with wolves again roaming the wilderness.
For more information and a complete schedule of events, visit bit.ly/co-wolf.

[image5:mugshot]Arthur Carhart’s book, “The Last Stand of the Pack” (1929), describes in grim detail the struggle to pursue and kill the last Colorado wolves ranging in the wild in the 1920s. Across the West, the same predator mania continued. The frontier had officially ended in 1890, and the last vestiges of wilderness had to be cleansed of their large predators, especially the feared, gray timber wolves, which may once have numbered in the thousands in Colorado.

“The Last Stand of the Pack” is now back in print, published by the University Press of Colorado in a critical edition edited by me and Tom Wolf. All of Carhart’s original words are there, and we added new essays on the eco-possibilities of wolf re-introduction.

The Bureau of Biological Survey claimed to have killed Colorado’s last wolf in 1935. Scholar Michael Robinson believed the date was 1945 in Conejos County. Either way, it has been decades since Colorado’s mountains have heard the full-throated howls of a wolf pack on a moonlit night, but that may be changing. Single wolves are returning to their former habitat and a breeding pair may meet in the next decade.

With raw words, sparing no blood, Carhart described the last wolves killed in Colorado. This was nature writing at its best. Carhart made clear the economic losses suffered by ranchers and their visceral animosity toward wolves. Always on the run, harassing livestock because of the depletion in game, the last wolves had names like Old Lefty from Eagle County, the Phantom Wolf near Fruita, the Greenhorn Wolf south of Pueblo, the Unaweep Wolf from Unaweep Canyon, Big Foot at DeBeque, Old Whitey near Trinidad and Rags the Digger at Cathedral Bluffs in Rio Blanco County.

James Shaw holds a dead wolf killed near Thatcher in Las Animas County. This was one of the last wolves killed on Colorado’s eastern plains.

Wolves harassed livestock because wild game populations had dramatically dropped. Most of Colorado’s elk had been shot and killed by market hunters, who were paid 10 cents a pound for elk, deer and antelope. Today’s elk herds evolved from elk transplanted from Montana and Wyoming. The state’s elk herds are doing fine, but there are rising fears of chronic wasting disease. How to combat the disease? Introduce gray wolves to cull the weak, the young and the sick. Wolves can help restore our Colorado ecosystems. As a deer and elk hunter, I want wolves back.

Source: Can we learn to live with wolves again?

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Relocated gray wolf dies on Isle Royale National Park

A gray wolf relocated from Minnesota to Michigan’s Isle Royale National Park has died, the National Park Service said Tuesday.

There was no obvious cause of death, according to a release, and the wolf has been transferred to U.S. Geological Services wildlife health lab in Madison, Wisconsin, for an autopsy. Results are expected back in December.

The animal originated in Grand Portage Reservation in northeastern Minnesota, where it was captured alongside 15 other wolves earlier this fall. Four of those 16 were brought to Isle Royale after it was determined they fit the criteria for relocation determined by wildlife professionals, the agency said.

More:

Canadian wolves will be relocated to Michigan’s Isle Royale

Cougar spotted on DNR camera in the Upper Peninsula

Before coming to Isle Royale, the wolves were examined, tagged and given tracking collars. The federal agency used GPS technology to follow the wolves, but the deceased wolf’s collar malfunctioned from the beginning of the project, showing a mortality signal when it was clear from cameras it was still alive.

That changed late last month, when park staff noticed another mortality signal from the wolf’s collar and set out to find it. They located the body through telemetry.

Another wolf died during the capture and sedation process in September, causing the park service to change its procedures for holding times and the use of sedatives.

The other three wolves are healthy and well, the agency said. The park’s relocation program will continue with the receipt of more wolves from Ontario this January.

Source: Relocated gray wolf dies on Isle Royale National Park

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Update for Rancher or Ranchers in Violation of Grazing Allotment limits in Washington State

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Profanity Peak mother no longer with us.

Good Evening Everyone,

While we are preparing Our complaint, We will begin by requesting that the Rancher or Ranchers that were in Violation of Grazing Allotment season closure by leaving their cows out past the close of their Allotment or Allotments, be cited by USFS Law Enforcement per Administrative Policy’s and Procedures Act. If they Refuse to cite the Rancher or Ranchers (plural possibly) in Violation it will lend credibility to our Complaint.

We already have them once refusing to cancel McIrvins Allotments on Record by Adam Carlesco that represented Dr. Robert Wielgus, even with supporting documentation. So this time we will use a different approach in the beginning and request that USFS Law Enforcement do their Job under the mandates upon them under the Public Trust as well as administrative Policy’s and Procedures Act.

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23 Possible Yellowstone Wolves for a total of 57 now Slaughtered in Wyoming by Nov 2, 2018

Will Yellowstone Wolves be available for your Grandchildren to view?

With your help we can work towards insuring that they are! Help us to put The Indian and Public Trusts to work Today

before they wipe out the rest of our wolves, grizzlies, wild horses. https://continuetogive.com/protectthewolves

Everyday Possible Yellowstone Wolves are being needlessly slaughtered in Wyoming, and need our Proposed “Sacred Resource Protection Zone”, along with proposed regulation changes.

  Help us to put The Indian and Public Trusts to work Today, before they wipe out the rest of Your Yellowstone wolves, grizzlies, wild horses.

Please Consider Joining Our Voice to establish a “Sacred Resource Protection Zone” Surrounding National Parks in Blood thirsty states of Wyoming, Idaho and Montana to begin with.

A total of it appears 23 possible park wolves have already been slaughtered in 2018 altogether 57 thus far in 2018 with 22 from the Trophy Zones  27 from the general Slaughter Zone in this Bloodthirsty State! Keep in mind that  these are just Wolves that have been reported killed! Does not take into account all that people chose not to report as they are required!!
Please consider becoming a Paid Member so We are able to call these crooked states out in COURT. We have the Research, the tools, the Attorneys, only missing Ingredient is 58,000 plus followers.

Take Back the Power that You as the public hold!

What will it take for the Government to Realize that Wyoming has once again proven they are incapable of managing The Public’s Federal Resources?

YELLOWSTONE WOLVES ARE DYING

At an Alarming Rate!!!!

 

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Senator Cory Booker Shows Support for the Gray Wolf and Tribes in Defense of the Sacred 

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While Bookers support appears promising, it is time for 58,000 followers to Join Us to get Our Research into the courts with just $1.00 each for 6 months. https://continuetogive.com/protectthewolves  Further it is time for Our People in Indian Country to realize that there are in fact more animals that Traditional Native Americans hold as sacred not just the Grizzly.

Among the species of particular concern identified by Senator Booker are the grizzly, gray wolf, salmon, the lesser prairie chicken, and the sage-grouse, all of which have prominent places within tribal cultures.

WASHINGTON  —  In the wake of wide-ranging testimony submitted on behalf of thirty-plus tribes to the US Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works (EPW), Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) has reaffirmed his commitment to tribal rights and the issues raised by the Rocky Mountain Tribal Leaders Council (RMTLC), the Great Plains Tribal Chairman’s Association (GPTCA), and the Blackfoot Confederacy in the consequential testimony.

Senator Booker described the intertribal declaration as “important testimony from tribal leaders” and confirmed that he “is opposed to any efforts to weaken the Endangered Species Act, including any attempts to interfere with the court decision in Crow Tribe et al v. Zinke.” The tribes’ testimony rebuked the stated intent of Republican members, including former Chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, Senator John Barrasso (R-WY), to legislatively overturn the federal court ruling that returned the grizzly bear in Greater Yellowstone to Endangered Species Act (ESA) protections and halted trophy hunts of the bear revered by a multitude of tribes as sacred.

Tribal Nations across North America have supported the positions raised in the testimony, and condemned Senator Barrasso, who now chairs the EPW Committee, and Representative Liz Cheney (R-WY), for leading Congressional efforts to nullify Judge Dana Christensen’s ruling, which is seen as a landmark victory for tribes.

“I introduced the Grizzly Bear State Management Act, which directs the Department of the Interior to re-issue the rule delisting grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, and prohibits any judicial review of this decision,” said Congresswoman Cheney. Her bill, if enacted, “would decimate what remains of the fewer than 700 grizzlies in Greater Yellowstone,” countered Chief Stan Grier, President of the Blackfoot Confederacy Chiefs. Human-caused grizzly mortalities for 2018 are on pace for a record high, with approximately 10% of the population projected to be lost.

Cheney’s bill favors trophy hunting, undermines conservation, and is a veritable giveaway to extractive industry and livestock operations on the ancestral and sacred lands of impacted tribes. The tribal testimony highlighted existing violations of the National Historic Preservation Act in the region, where, due to federal agencies failing to authorize a single Section 106 Review, hundreds of sacred and historic sites are already threatened by incursions and development.

“Attempting to overturn a court ruling with a legislative provision that will deny due process to tribes and citizens alike is not reflective of the tenets of a democracy,” asserted the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs in a recent statement, representing one-hundred-plus First Nations.

Among the species of particular concern identified by Senator Booker are the grizzly, gray wolf, salmon, the lesser prairie chicken, and the sage-grouse, all of which have prominent places within tribal cultures. The prospective Democratic Party 2020 presidential candidate insists that ESA listing and delisting decisions must be “based upon science” and not “cherry-picking certain species” for “life and death decisions.” A newly-acquired Trump Administration memo directs US Fish and Wildlife Service staff to suppress public records that show how ESA decisions are reached, and to conceal scientific data. The directive is consistent with agency actions in its push for the Keystone-XL Pipeline and grizzly delisting.

The joint-RMTLC, GPTCA and Blackfoot testimony cataloged the multiple connections between high-ranking Republicans and extractive industry giants who are seeking to gut the ESA and tribal rights, including Anadarko, Halliburton and Amec Foster Wheeler. “It is clear from Chairman Barrasso’s proposed amendments to the ESA that a far greater emphasis would be placed upon the input of energy companies, with considerable influence being accorded extractive industry executives in ESA listing and delisting decisions,” testified tribal leaders, who cited the Trump Administration’s approval of Jonah Energy’s 3,500 gas wells in critical greater sage grouse habitat on the boundary of Greater Yellowstone, 96% of which will be established on public lands. “In reality, that 96% of public lands is 100% tribal land,” clarified Chief Counselor Brandon Sazue, head of the Global Indigenous Council.

Tribes warned that should Barrasso’s “proposed amendments to the ESA become law” this scenario “is likely to become the norm. If such circumstances had prevailed in prior decades, it is highly unlikely that species recovered by the ESA that are integral to tribal cultures, such as the bald eagle, gray wolf, humpback whale, green sea turtle and California condor, would now exist anywhere outside of zoos or taxidermy displays. The same can be said of the grizzly bear if Crow Tribe et al v. Zinke is legislatively reversed.”

The tribes’ position is echoed by Senator Booker and some thirty prominent Democratic Senators, including potential 2020 presidential candidates Bernie Sanders, Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren and Kirsten Gillibrand, in a letter to Senator Richard Shelby and Senator Patrick Leahy of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, in which the senators ask the chair and vice chair respectively to, “reject any and all riders that would undermine the Endangered Species Act.”

The Democratic leaders continue, “As a result of human impacts on our environment, we are facing a global extinction crisis on par with the events that drove dinosaurs to extinction 65 million years ago. Species today are going extinct at a rate thousands of times faster than natural extinction rates. Scientists estimate that one in six species are threatened with extinction this century. We need the Endangered Species Act now more than ever.”

Senator Tom Udall (D-NM), Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, also expressed his support for the tribes’ testimony and positions. Senator Udall’s staff confirmed that they have followed-up with the EPW Committee on “the tribes’ interests.”

Senators Udall, Booker and Sanders actively supported Tribal Nations throughout the grizzly bear delisting struggle, and in a letter to Interior Secretary Zinke emphasized that “the federal government has a trust and treaty responsibility to engage in meaningful government-to-government consultation with tribes” but feared that Interior had “abandoned that responsibility in its delisting process.” They reminded Zinke that, “any federal action to delist grizzly bears must take into consideration tribal input on any impacts to tribal sovereignty, treaty rights, and spiritual and religious freedoms.” Zinke, who has consistently claimed to be pro-Indian rights, ignored the appeal and infamously perjured himself on the issue before the House Natural Resources Committee.

“We know It does not take many words to tell the truth. So we say to our trustee, do not speak the hollow word ‘consultation’ that comes to nothing. Rather, like Senator Booker and Senator Udall, speak good words and act so that we may heal with our brother, the grizzly,” commented Tom Rodgers, a spokesman for the RMTLC who is best-known for exposing the “Indian lobbying scandal” that led to the demise of Jack Abramoff.

Source: Senator Cory Booker Leads Support for Tribes in Defense of the Sacred – Native News Online

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