deaths

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Wrongfully convicted N.B man dies four months after exoneration
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Hina Alam
Published Apr 20, 2024 • Last updated 14 hours ago • 4 minute read

FREDERICTON — A New Brunswick man who spent decades fighting a wrongful murder conviction that landed him and a friend behind bars had only a few months to relish his victory, the organization that helped in his legal battle said Saturday as it announced his death.


Innocence Canada, which led the legal fight to exonerate Walter Gillespie and his friend Robert Mailman of their 1984 murder convictions, said Gillespie died Friday in his home in Saint John, N.B., at the age of 80.

Founding director James Lockyer lamented the fact that Gillespie had such a brief time to enjoy the fruits of his decades-long fight.

“It’s very sad,” Lockyer said. “I’m just glad that he managed to have his name cleared before he died. That was so important to him.”

Details about Gillespie’s cause of death were not immediately known.

In January, New Brunswick Court of King’s Bench Chief Justice Tracey DeWare acquitted Gillespie and Mailman, 76, of the 1983 murder of Saint John resident George Leeman and apologized for the “miscarriage of justice.”


Her ruling came after federal Justice Minister Arif Virani ordered a new trial on Dec. 22, saying evidence had surfaced that called into question “the overall fairness of the process.”

Ron Dalton, now co-president of Innocence Canada, took up the men’s case when he was fighting for freedom from his own wrongful conviction.

He called Gillespie a “study in strength of character and friendship.”

“For 40 years (Gillespie) refused to falsely implicate his friend, Robert Mailman, and paid dearly with his freedom,” Dalton said. “A sad end to a difficult but honourable life.”

In an interview in January, about a week after he was formally exonerated, Gillespie recounted the offer of freedom dangled before him a year after Leeman’s murder.


He said he was told by Saint John police that if he signed a statement against Mailman, he would be charged with aiding and abetting and only face three years in prison.

“I said I was not going to do that,” he said. “(The officer) said, ’if you’re going to protect (Mailman), you’re going down with him.”’

He spent 21 years in prison.

Gillespie was born on Aug. 31, 1943, in Saint John and had a Grade 6 education. Most of his immediate family died in a house fire when he was about 20.

His friendship with Mailman predated their shared legal ordeal. The men previously told The Canadian Press they met in 1961, with Gillespie joking Mailman was checking out his then-girlfriend during one of their first encounters.

They became inseparable after their wrongful convictions, speaking to each other every day for decades.


“We’ve been joined at the hip for over 40 years through this. And he’s like a brother,” Mailman said of his friend.

Mailman was not available for comment on Gillespie’s death on Saturday, but said through Dalton that he hadn’t been able to sleep well after learning the news.

In an earlier interview, Mailman described the friend he called Wally as a man of few words.

“You never bother a sleeping junkyard dog,” he said with a laugh.

Gillespie is survived by a daughter with whom he only recently began to reconnect.

“We haven’t connected for almost the last 40 years,” he said shortly after having his name cleared. “… I’m hoping I can help her out if we can get any money or anything like that. I talked quite a bit with her over the last couple days or so. Oh, it feels great.”


The New Brunswick government reached a settlement with the two men on March 1 for an undisclosed sum.

While on parole, Gillespie lived at a halfway house where he also worked as a cleaner for 15 hours a week.

After being declared innocent, he moved to an apartment in Saint John for which he paid $800 a month. The former hotel room he described as a jail cell was cramped even with his minimal belongings, brightened only by his own colourful paintings and the set of white towels and a white tea kettle Mailman gave him as housewarming gifts.

“Wally shouldn’t have to come out of the prison … and to a halfway house all them years, only to go into a place that’s even worse than he left behind,” Mailman said of his friend’s spartan quarters.


When Mailman was diagnosed with terminal cancer last November, Gillespie was the first person he called.

Gillespie signed out of the halfway house for a day and spent it with his friend as he learned of the life-changing diagnosis.

Apart from his quiet conviction and strength of character, Dalton recalled Gillespie’s love of American author Zane Grey’s westerns and his voracious reading habits. He also remembered Gillespie’s flashy fashion sense, noting his penchant for bright colours and the black patent shoes he saved for a special occasion and finally wore to court on the day his name was cleared.

But he said Gillespie’s most enduring impact stems from his efforts to uphold justice in Canada’s correctional system.

“Mr. Gillespie helped raise awareness of wrongful convictions in this country and that will be a part of his legacy.”
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
A rare bird was spotted in Ottawa for the very first time. Then it hit a window
 

Attachments

  • A rare bird was spotted in Ottawa for the very first time. Then it hit a window.txt
    10.9 KB · Views: 0

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
South Korean sentenced to 14 months in jail for killing 76 cats
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Hyung-jin Kim
Published Apr 23, 2024 • 1 minute read

SEOUL, South Korea — A South Korean man has been sentenced to 14 months in prison for killing 76 cats in one of the country’s most gruesome cases of animal cruelty in recent years.


The man, who is in his 20s, was convicted of violating South Korea’s animal protection law last week, the Changwon District Court in southeastern South Korea said Tuesday. The court did not identify the man.


The man went on a cat-killing spree between December 2022 and September 2023 due to a deep hatred of the animal that he began harbouring after other cats scratched his car, according to a court verdict seen by The Associated Press.

He had caught stray cats and adopted others from online sites before strangling some to death and killing others with scissors, the court order said. He killed one cat by running it over with a car, the court said.

The court ruled that the prison sentence was unavoidable because he repeatedly committed “indescribably cruel” crimes in a premeditated manner.


It stressed that the sentence still reflected the fact that the man had no criminal records and repented his crimes, adding that the man’s unspecified mental health status was found to be a motive for his crimes.

The man appealed the ruling.

“The sentence reflects Korean society’s increasing concern for animal welfare and intolerance for senseless cruelty such as this,” said Borami Seo, a director of the South Korea office of the Humane Society International.

“This cruelty case also emphasizes the importance of passing the Civil Act amendment that will legally recognize animals as living beings and further strengthen their protection in law,” Seo added.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
South Korean sentenced to 14 months in jail for killing 76 cats
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Hyung-jin Kim
Published Apr 23, 2024 • 1 minute read

SEOUL, South Korea — A South Korean man has been sentenced to 14 months in prison for killing 76 cats in one of the country’s most gruesome cases of animal cruelty in recent years.


The man, who is in his 20s, was convicted of violating South Korea’s animal protection law last week, the Changwon District Court in southeastern South Korea said Tuesday. The court did not identify the man.


The man went on a cat-killing spree between December 2022 and September 2023 due to a deep hatred of the animal that he began harbouring after other cats scratched his car, according to a court verdict seen by The Associated Press.

He had caught stray cats and adopted others from online sites before strangling some to death and killing others with scissors, the court order said. He killed one cat by running it over with a car, the court said.

The court ruled that the prison sentence was unavoidable because he repeatedly committed “indescribably cruel” crimes in a premeditated manner.


It stressed that the sentence still reflected the fact that the man had no criminal records and repented his crimes, adding that the man’s unspecified mental health status was found to be a motive for his crimes.

The man appealed the ruling.

“The sentence reflects Korean society’s increasing concern for animal welfare and intolerance for senseless cruelty such as this,” said Borami Seo, a director of the South Korea office of the Humane Society International.

“This cruelty case also emphasizes the importance of passing the Civil Act amendment that will legally recognize animals as living beings and further strengthen their protection in law,” Seo added.
he could have at least donated the cats to the homeless. ;)
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Tourist dies after falling into active volcano while posing for photos
Author of the article:Denette Wilford
Published Apr 23, 2024 • Last updated 2 days ago • 1 minute read

A tourist died after falling 75 metres into the crater of an active volcano in Indonesia.


The woman, identified as Huang Lihong, 31, from China, was “posing for sunrise pictures” when the tragic accident occurred, according to local media outlet, Hongxing News.


Lihong and her husband, Zhang Yong, had reportedly climbed to the top of Mount Ijen, known for its popular “blue fire” phenomenon, with a local tour guide so they could watch the sunrise from the volcano’s rim.

But the woman’s skirt reportedly got caught on something, causing her to stumble and tumble backwards over the edge, while her husband watched helplessly.

The guide later told authorities that the woman had initially kept a safe distance from the edge of the crater after being repeatedly warned of the dangers while posing for photos.


One image released after her fall shows Lihong posing on what appears to be the rim of the volcano with one leg raised, and clouds of steam and sulphur gas rising behind her.

It reportedly took rescuers more than two hours to retrieve her body, which was to be flown back to China, local media reported.

Her death has since been ruled an accident. Mount Ijen is part of a group of volcanoes in East Java.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Zoo ostrich known for her zany dances dies after swallowing keys
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Kyle Melnick, The Washington Post
Published Apr 24, 2024 • 2 minute read

Karen was a beloved ostrich at the Topeka Zoo & Conservation Center in Kansas. MUST CREDIT: Wrylie Guffey/Topeka Zoo & Conservation Center
Karen was a beloved ostrich at the Topeka Zoo & Conservation Center in Kansas. MUST CREDIT: Wrylie Guffey/Topeka Zoo & Conservation Center jpg
Employees at a Kansas zoo stood around a beloved ostrich on Thursday as they cried, hugged and shared their favourite memories of Karen.


About a week earlier, Karen, a five-year-old ostrich who became well-known to staff and visitors for her goofy personality, stuck her head outside her exhibit at the Topeka Zoo & Conservation Center, grabbed an employee’s keys from their hand and swallowed them. Veterinarians tried to keep Karen alive, but they couldn’t remove the keys from her stomach.

Karen, who had loved to dance in her exhibit and run under sprinklers, became lethargic and uncomfortable moving around in her final days. So on Thursday, employees euthanized her in a barn connected to her exhibit.

When the zoo shared the news on social media on Friday, fans shared their condolences and memories of Karen.

“We’re still dealing with grief,” Wrylie Guffey, an animal curator at the zoo, told The Washington Post.


Karen came to Kansas in March 2023 from a Minnesota zoo. Guffey hoped the Topeka Zoo’s lone ostrich would help change some people’s view of those named Karen.

Karen, who was over 6 feet tall, seemed to enjoy people immediately, eating out of their hands and running toward employees who entered her exhibit. She quickly became one of the zoo’s most popular animals.

She started many mornings by spinning and dancing around her exhibit. She enjoyed swimming in her exhibit’s pool and rolling in a sandpit. When she was lonely, Karen visited giraffes in their exhibit next door. She disliked most of the food her keepers gave her, but she loved eating strawberries and leaves.

“It’s hard not to be drawn in by her,” Guffey said.


About two weeks ago, an animal keeper was holding a ring of keys in their hand outside Karen’s exhibit while taking a picture of her, Guffey said. Karen extended her three-foot neck, grabbed the keys with her beak and swallowed them.

After the employee reported the incident to zoo staff, Guffey said she was shocked and frustrated but started wondering how they could save her. Karen, meanwhile, carried on like normal for a few days.

Employees spoke with animal experts from across the United States, who suggested trying to remove the keys via surgery. Veterinarians took X-rays but could not reach the part of Karen’s stomach where the keys had traveled, Guffey said.

Nearly a week after eating the keys, Guffey said, Karen spent most of her days lying in her exhibit. She couldn’t walk or run normally, Guffey said, so staff euthanized her.

Ostriches can normally live for nearly 70 years under human care.

Guffey said the zoo hasn’t been the same since Karen’s death. Some people have visited Karen’s exhibit to honor her, Guffey said. Karen laid eggs for the last time about a week ago, and Guffey has considered building a memorial around one of them in Karen’s exhibit.

While the zoo is seeking more ostriches, Guffey said, employees and visitors won’t forget Karen anytime soon.

“Karen will stick with us forever,” she said.
ostrich[1].jpg
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
U.K. woman pleads guilty to sharing images of tortured and killed baby monkeys
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published May 07, 2024 • 1 minute read

A woman in Britain has pleaded guilty to sharing more than 150 sickening photos and videos of baby monkeys being tortured and killed on the internet.


Holly LeGresley, 37, admitted her role in a global online network that paid people in Indonesia to record the killing and torture of monkeys, reports the BBC.


LeGresley told the Worcester Magistrates’ Court during her trial that she uploaded 22 images and 132 videos in total between March 25 and May 8, 2022. Court was told that she did not torture or kill the monkeys herself.

The prosecution accused the woman, who was part of a Telegram group that created the idea and crowdfunded the vile images, of hatred towards pregnant women and children as well.

She will be sentenced next month and could be jailed for publishing obscene articles and intentionally encouraging animal cruelty.

Another British woman, Adriana Orme, 55, is also accused in the case but has not entered a plea in court.


The conviction follows a BBC investigation that found 20 individuals worldwide were investigated for the trading of images and videos of the harmed monkeys. Some of vulnerable creatures were set on fire, while others were injured with tools.

LeGresley, who went by the username “The Immolator,” was among the most active participants in the global monkey torture network run by Mike Macartney, an American man.

Macartney, known as “Torture King” online, was a former motorcycle gang member who spent time in prison. He is facing up to five years in prison at his sentencing after pleading guilty this month to animal abuse charges.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
First person to receive genetically modified pig kidney transplant dies nearly 2 months later
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published May 11, 2024 • 1 minute read

Rick Slayman, who was the first recipient of a genetically modified pig kidney, died two months after the procedure was performed in Boston.
Rick Slayman, who was the first recipient of a genetically modified pig kidney, died two months after the procedure was performed in Boston.
BOSTON — The first recipient of a genetically modified pig kidney transplant has died nearly two months after he underwent the procedure, his family and the hospital that performed the surgery said Saturday.


Richard “Rick” Slayman had the transplant at Massachusetts General Hospital in March at the age of 62. Surgeons said they believed the pig kidney would last for at least two years.


The transplant team at Massachusetts General Hospital said in a statement it was deeply saddened by Slayman’s passing and offered condolences to his family. They said they didn’t have any indication that he died as a result of the transplant.

The Weymouth, Massachusetts, man was the first living person to have the procedure. Previously, pig kidneys had been temporarily transplanted into brain-dead donors. Two men received heart transplants from pigs, although both died within months.

Slayman had a kidney transplant at the hospital in 2018, but he had to go back on dialysis last year when it showed signs of failure. When dialysis complications arose requiring frequent procedures, his doctors suggested a pig kidney transplant.


In a statement, Slayman’s family thanked his doctors.

“Their enormous efforts leading the xenotransplant gave our family seven more weeks with Rick, and our memories made during that time will remain in our minds and hearts,” the statement said.

They said Slayman underwent the surgery in part to provide hope for the thousands of people who need a transplant to survive.

“Rick accomplished that goal and his hope and optimism will endure forever,” the statement said.

Xenotransplantation refers to healing human patients with cells, tissues or organs from animals. Such efforts long failed because the human immune system immediately destroyed foreign animal tissue. Recent attempts have involved pigs that have been modified so their organs are more humanlike.

More than 100,000 people are on the national waiting list for a transplant, most of them kidney patients, and thousands die every year before their turn comes.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Dominicans accused of smuggling wildlife and throwing 113 birds overboard to their deaths
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published May 13, 2024 • 1 minute read

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Four men from the Dominican Republic were indicted in Puerto Rico on charges of smuggling wildlife in a case involving more than 100 dead birds, officials said Monday.

The men were detained after the U.S. Coast Guard spotted them earlier this month aboard a flagless boat north of Puerto Rico and saw them throw overboard wooden cages holding tropical birds as authorities approached, the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.


Some 113 birds were retrieved from the ocean, officials said, adding that the men had traveled to the U.S. territory to smuggle back exotic birds to the neighboring Dominican Republic.

The suspects appeared in court Monday. A judge ordered three of them held in prison and a fourth under house arrest pending an upcoming trial.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Animal-loving sisters struck, killed while helping turtle cross rural Ontario road
Two women killed in a crash in south Chatham-Kent were trying to rescue a turtle, police say.

Author of the article:Ellwood Shreve • Chatham Daily News
Published May 23, 2024 • Last updated 3 days ago • 2 minute read

CHATHAM – Two women killed in a crash on a rural road in Chatham-Kent were trying to rescue a turtle when they were struck, police say.


Teresa Suliga of Blenheim and her sister Elizabeth Seremak of Cambridge were struck by a vehicle in the early evening of May 18 while walking near Charing Cross, a rural community about 10 minutes south of Chatham. Police say the victims were 66 and 68.


The women were known for their love of animals.

Suliga’s neighbour, Shelley Webster, said when she heard her close friend was trying to rescue a turtle when she died, “I thought, ‘That’s just like Teresa.’ ”

If Suliga saw any “animal in distress, she was there right away, quick,” Webster said.

Suliga’s love for animals could also be seen in her dog Kaya, she said.

“You can tell Kaya’s been looking for her ever since, it’s hard to watch,” Webster said.

She and Suliga would often go for walks and Suliga loved to see the deer, rabbits and even coyotes, Webster recalled.


“Teresa’s greatest love was her family and taking care of animals,” Suliga’s obituary said.

“Elizabeth’s extended family and friends will miss her sense of humour and love of animals and nature,” Seremak’s obituary said.


Seremak often travelled to Blenheim to visit her sister, Webster said.

“They were like best friends . . . the two of them were like two peas on a pod,” she said. “They were very close.”

Suliga also loved to experience new things, travel and garden, her obituary said.

“Elizabeth was known for her generous heart and helping spirit,” Seremak’s obituary read. “She loved to spend time with her family and especially her treasured grandchildren.”

A funeral mass for Suliga will be held at Blessed Sacrament Roman Catholic Church, 145 Victoria Ave. in Chatham, at noon Saturday. A private family celebration of life for Seremak will be held later, her obituary stated.

The police traffic management section is investigating the crash. Anyone with information should contact Const. Joel Rehill at 519-355-1092 or joelr@chatham-kent.ca.

eshreve@postmedia.com
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Ottawa man, 68, charged with causing pain and suffering in trampling death of gosling
Witnesses said some Canada geese had nested in a planter and the gosling got out

Author of the article:Norman Provencher
Published May 24, 2024 • Last updated 2 days ago • 1 minute read

A 68-year-old Ottawa man has been charged with animal cruelty in connection with the trampling death of a gosling on Hazeldean Road in Kanata.


Police were called to the 400 block of Hazeldean Road, in the Hazeldean Mall area, on Wednesday morning.


Witnesses said some Canada geese had nested in a planter.

The gosling managed to get out of the planter and the suspect deliberately trampled the animal.

The man was charged with causing unnecessary pain and suffering to an animal.

He was scheduled to appear in court at a later date, an Ottawa Police Service news release said Friday.

Safe Wings Ottawa has relocated both adult birds and two surviving goslings to a nearby pond for safety reasons.

The Ottawa Police Service launched an animal cruelty investigation on Thursday.

Police did not name the suspect, nor did they explain how the suspect was located.
 
  • Like
Reactions: petros

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Person sucked into plane's engine dies at Amsterdam airport
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published May 29, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 1 minute read

An unidentified person was killed Wednesday after being sucked into the engine of a plane at Amsterdam's main airport.
An unidentified person was killed Wednesday after being sucked into the engine of a plane at Amsterdam's main airport.
An unidentified person was killed Wednesday after being sucked into the engine of a plane at Amsterdam’s main airport.


The victim, who as of Wednesday afternoon had not been publicly identified, was drawn into the engine of a departing KLM Cityhopper Embraer E190 at the Amsterdam Schiphol airport, the U.K. Sun reported.

The plane was bound for Billund, Denmark, and was set to depart at 2:25 p.m. local time, according to FlightAware.

It wasn’t immediately clear if the victim was a passenger or a crew member.

“Today there was a horrible incident where a person ended up in an airplane engine,” the airport said in a statement to the New York Post.

“Our thoughts go out to the relatives, and we care for the passengers and colleagues who witnessed this. The Royal Military Police is currently conducting an investigation,” the update read.


Passengers and crew onboard the flight at the time of the incident were disembarked and receiving assistance, authorities said.



A ground-handling agent at Montgomery Regional Airport died in January 2023 after being sucked into the engine of a plane despite being warned to keep her distance. The Alabama mother of three, 34-year-old Courtney Edwards, was pulled in so violently that it shook the entire aircraft, according to reports.

She had been working for Piedmont Airlines, a subsidiary of American Airlines, according to a preliminary report from the National Transportation Safety Board.

In July 2023, another airport worker was sucked into a jet engine and died at San Antonio International Airport.
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

The End of the Dog is Coming!
Mar 19, 2006
11,508
702
113
59
Alberta
U.K. woman pleads guilty to sharing images of tortured and killed baby monkeys
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published May 07, 2024 • 1 minute read

A woman in Britain has pleaded guilty to sharing more than 150 sickening photos and videos of baby monkeys being tortured and killed on the internet.


Holly LeGresley, 37, admitted her role in a global online network that paid people in Indonesia to record the killing and torture of monkeys, reports the BBC.


LeGresley told the Worcester Magistrates’ Court during her trial that she uploaded 22 images and 132 videos in total between March 25 and May 8, 2022. Court was told that she did not torture or kill the monkeys herself.

The prosecution accused the woman, who was part of a Telegram group that created the idea and crowdfunded the vile images, of hatred towards pregnant women and children as well.

She will be sentenced next month and could be jailed for publishing obscene articles and intentionally encouraging animal cruelty.

Another British woman, Adriana Orme, 55, is also accused in the case but has not entered a plea in court.


The conviction follows a BBC investigation that found 20 individuals worldwide were investigated for the trading of images and videos of the harmed monkeys. Some of vulnerable creatures were set on fire, while others were injured with tools.

LeGresley, who went by the username “The Immolator,” was among the most active participants in the global monkey torture network run by Mike Macartney, an American man.

Macartney, known as “Torture King” online, was a former motorcycle gang member who spent time in prison. He is facing up to five years in prison at his sentencing after pleading guilty this month to animal abuse charges.
We have so evolved.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Grizzlies slaughter 22 sheep in rare attack in Alberta
A sow and a larger cub believed to have been responsible for the 'killing spree' were trapped in the area

Author of the article:Bill Kaufmann
Published May 30, 2024 • Last updated 3 days ago • 3 minute read

Members of a southern Alberta Hutterite colony are still in shock after grizzly bears killed 22 of their sheep in an attack they call extremely rare in its severity.


Sometime Monday night or early Tuesday morning, the bears gained access to a corral containing about 50 sheep on the Spring Point Colony 40 kilometres west of Fort Macleod and went on a rampage, said George Walter, the group’s financial secretary.

“In a small corral, they jumped in and went on a killing spree,” he said. “It was devastating, we’ve never seen anything like it.”

Very little of the sheep — which included five lambs — were eaten by the grizzlies, said Walter, whose colony counts about 700 head of sheep.

“They just ripped out their stomachs and left them,” he said.

A border collie that oversees the sheep was clearly traumatized by the attack, said Walter.

“He had a heck of a time getting out of his kennel, he was so frightened.”


On Thursday morning, a sow and a larger cub believed to have been responsible were trapped by Alberta Fish and Game officers about a kilometre from the colony, said Walter, while another cub was still being sought.

After the attack, he said he learned a neighbour had lost a few head of livestock to bears in recent weeks.

The bears likely wandered up a nearby creek where the colony is located at the foot of the Porcupine Hills, a spot where children often frequent.

“Kids are often playing down there, it’s a scary thing,” said Walter.

Grizzlies protected by hunting moratorium
His brother, Mike Walter said he had to put down several badly injured sheep attacked by bears who had climbed over a 4-foot fence to access the corral.


The livestock loss, he said, was nearly $10,000, though he noted such costs are covered by the province.

Ranchers and bears have co-existed, often uneasily, in southern Alberta and communities have adopted programs to improve that balance.

Some livestock producers say they favour having the right to shoot grizzlies, which have been protected by a hunting moratorium in Alberta since 2006 in an effort to resurrect their numbers.

Wildlife experts say that appears to have worked, with their population growing from between 700 and 800 in 2010 to between 900 and 1,150 now.

The presence of grizzlies in the colony’s area has increased significantly, said Mike Walter, who favours a limited hunt there.

“There’s enough of them around here — 20 years ago, you could hardly see one, we’re even cautious enough to take a rifle along,” he said.


“We should take out a few, (the province) should put out a certain amount of hunting tags.”

High-casualty attacks ‘rare and isolated’
Former fish and game officer John Clarke said such high-casualty incidents are “rare and isolated.”

“This will rattle everybody who’ll think we need to kill more bears, but we have a black bear season and that hasn’t stopped black bear attacks,” said Clarke, who now operates a bear safety consulting business in the Crowsnest Pass.

“Some bears will walk right through herds of cows and sheep and don’t touch them.”


From his experience as a wildlife officer for more than 30 years, he said the sow will be relocated while it’s likely any male cub will be destroyed.

Investigators need to determine which animals were actually directly killed by the bears, adding he’s seen some instances where cowering sheep suffocated each other in a bid to escape.

Individual problem bears can easily be identified by their pattern of behaviour, said Clarke.

And he said ranchers need to take precautions to eliminate incidents of opportunity for predators.

“You can do things like electrify fences, have corrals closer to your house, keep animals in your barn,” he said.

Walter said they’re looking at some of those measures.

“We’ve got a lot of stuff to think about,” he said.

BKaufmann@postmedia.com

X: @BillKaufmannjrn
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Family sues butcher who slaughtered pet pigs when he went to wrong house
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Kyle Melnick
Published Jun 03, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 5 minute read

Kunekune pigs Betty and Patty were adopted by a family in Washington state in March 2022. MUST CREDIT: Natalie Gray
Kunekune pigs Betty and Patty were adopted by a family in Washington state in March 2022. MUST CREDIT: Natalie Gray jpg
Natalie Gray recalled arriving home to a shocking sight last month. A large truck and a stranger were in her backyard. Nearby, her family’s pet pigs, Betty and Patty, were lying dead.


When Gray confronted the stranger, they both realized a fatal mistake had occurred.

A nearby butcher shop had received a request from a man hoping to turn his two pigs into meat. The customer was away, so he asked butcher Jonathan Hines to enter his gate and slaughter the pigs behind his barn, Hines told The Washington Post.

So Hines and a friend drove to a house in Port Orchard, Wash., on May 1, when he located two pigs on a farm and shot them with a rifle, he said. Only when Gray and Hines spoke a few minutes later, he said, did he realize he had taken a wrong turn during the short drive – a right instead of a left. He was at someone else’s house.

The pigs he killed weren’t meant for slaughter; Gray and her husband, Nathan, were raising them as pets.


The Grays alleged in a lawsuit filed Thursday that Hines, 29, and his friend “recklessly inflicted serious and severe emotional distress” on their family, and they’re requesting damages “representing the intrinsic value of Betty and Patty.” The complaint also lists the butcher shop Hines works for, Farmer George Meats, and his friend, Dillon Baker, as defendants.

An incident report by the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office said there was no “maliciousness” in Hines’s actions and that he didn’t intend to shoot the Grays’s pigs.

Nonetheless, the incident left the Grays – and Hines – devastated.

“Coming around the corner and seeing these animals that are supposed to live out their lives with you … it was very emotional,” Natalie, 38, told The Post last month.


When Hines realized his mistake around that same time, he said his “heart dropped.” He recalled apologizing to Gray.

“I didn’t know what to do,” Hines said. “I was just kind of sitting there in shock.”

Joseph Keehn, who runs Farmer George Meats with his wife, said he also apologized to the Grays, calling the incident “a perfect storm of a mistake” but that there was “no maliciousness.”

Baker, 30, said he didn’t shoot the pigs, a report Hines also made. The sheriff’s office report didn’t list Baker as a suspect and said he was only there to “assist” Hines.

Hines, Keehn and Baker spoke with The Post in mid-May. Reached after the lawsuit was filed, Hines said in a text message that he’s still employed by Farmer George Meats but didn’t comment further. Keehn and Baker didn’t respond to requests for further comment Sunday.


This isn’t the first time an animal has been killed after someone visited the wrong place. In Waco, Tex., last year, and in Faulkner County, Ark., in 2020, a law-enforcement officer shot a dog after reporting to the wrong address. In February, a woman in Birmingham, Ala., told WBRC that a delivery truck driver who had “no reason” to be on her property shot her dog.


Natalie and Nathan have run a seven-acre farm for nearly a decade, but use it only to raise pets. They have dogs, cats, ducks and chickens, and when Natalie saw a picture of two Kunekune piglets a local breeder posted on social media in 2022, she wanted them, too.

Natalie said she and her daughters liked tickling Betty and Patty’s bellies until they rolled onto their sides. Natalie sang them “You Are My Sunshine” and fed the piglet sisters sweets for their birthdays on Jan. 3 – Betty and Patty loved when Natalie sprayed whipped cream into their mouths, she said.


Every morning before taking her 12- and 9-year-old daughters to school, Natalie said she visited Betty and Patty, rubbing them and feeding them. After Natalie returned home in the afternoon, Betty and Patty would squeal in excitement when they heard Natalie’s voice.

Nathan said he left the house’s gate open on May 1 while he ran an errand. About 30 minutes later, he said, his home’s security system sent him a phone alert that showed a white box truck on his property. Natalie said she saw in the footage someone near the pigs’ pen, which they shared with eight ducks.

Natalie said she rushed home from the nearby elementary school where she works.

“Who are you?” Natalie recalled asking Hines, who said he initially thought Natalie’s question was a joke.


After Natalie saw Betty and Patty had been killed, she called 911 around 1:30 p.m. “I was sick to my stomach,” Natalie said.

Kunekune pigs usually live between 15 and 20 years, according to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute. Betty and Patty were both 2 years old when they died.

When a sheriff’s deputy arrived later that afternoon, Hines told him that he didn’t put the correct address into his GPS system and didn’t verify the address when he arrived, according to the office’s incident report.

The Grays list their street number on their house, mailbox and gate, according to their lawsuit, which was filed in the Washington Superior Court in Kitsap County. Hines said if the Grays had closed their gate, he wouldn’t have mistaken the house.


Nathan asked Hines to clean up the scene. Hines said he and Baker dragged both pigs, which each weighed about 400 pounds, on a tarp to the woods behind the Grays’s house and shoveled the dirt covered in blood into a garage bin. Hines said they then left to slaughter the two pigs he was meant to kill across the street.

Before he left, Hines said, he offered to butcher the pigs for free, which the Grays declined.

When Natalie and Nathan told their daughters after school that Betty and Patty were dead, the kids stood in shock for a few seconds, Natalie said, before the group hugged. Then, their 12-year-old ran to her room and cried.

Nathan, who owns a construction company, said he used his excavator that afternoon to bury Betty and Patty in their backyard.


The reality of Betty and Patty’s deaths set in the next morning, when Natalie fed her other animals but skipped the pigs’ food. Since May 1, Nathan said their 9-year-old has been scared to leave the family’s animals outside in fear that someone will kill them. Their daughters designed a makeshift gravestone they placed above where Betty and Patty were buried.

Natalie said she distracts herself from the pain of losing Betty and Patty with work. But she said her friend recently bought her a necklace designed with a flying pig – a memento that brought her grief rushing back.

“It gets easier to manage,” Natalie said about her pain. “But it’s always going to be there when you lose someone you love.”
1717606320246.png
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
5,791
3,638
113
Edmonton
Family sues butcher who slaughtered pet pigs when he went to wrong house
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Kyle Melnick
Published Jun 03, 2024 • Last updated 1 day ago • 5 minute read

Kunekune pigs Betty and Patty were adopted by a family in Washington state in March 2022. MUST CREDIT: Natalie Gray
Kunekune pigs Betty and Patty were adopted by a family in Washington state in March 2022. MUST CREDIT: Natalie Gray jpg
Natalie Gray recalled arriving home to a shocking sight last month. A large truck and a stranger were in her backyard. Nearby, her family’s pet pigs, Betty and Patty, were lying dead.


When Gray confronted the stranger, they both realized a fatal mistake had occurred.

A nearby butcher shop had received a request from a man hoping to turn his two pigs into meat. The customer was away, so he asked butcher Jonathan Hines to enter his gate and slaughter the pigs behind his barn, Hines told The Washington Post.

So Hines and a friend drove to a house in Port Orchard, Wash., on May 1, when he located two pigs on a farm and shot them with a rifle, he said. Only when Gray and Hines spoke a few minutes later, he said, did he realize he had taken a wrong turn during the short drive – a right instead of a left. He was at someone else’s house.

The pigs he killed weren’t meant for slaughter; Gray and her husband, Nathan, were raising them as pets.


The Grays alleged in a lawsuit filed Thursday that Hines, 29, and his friend “recklessly inflicted serious and severe emotional distress” on their family, and they’re requesting damages “representing the intrinsic value of Betty and Patty.” The complaint also lists the butcher shop Hines works for, Farmer George Meats, and his friend, Dillon Baker, as defendants.

An incident report by the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office said there was no “maliciousness” in Hines’s actions and that he didn’t intend to shoot the Grays’s pigs.

Nonetheless, the incident left the Grays – and Hines – devastated.

“Coming around the corner and seeing these animals that are supposed to live out their lives with you … it was very emotional,” Natalie, 38, told The Post last month.


When Hines realized his mistake around that same time, he said his “heart dropped.” He recalled apologizing to Gray.

“I didn’t know what to do,” Hines said. “I was just kind of sitting there in shock.”

Joseph Keehn, who runs Farmer George Meats with his wife, said he also apologized to the Grays, calling the incident “a perfect storm of a mistake” but that there was “no maliciousness.”

Baker, 30, said he didn’t shoot the pigs, a report Hines also made. The sheriff’s office report didn’t list Baker as a suspect and said he was only there to “assist” Hines.

Hines, Keehn and Baker spoke with The Post in mid-May. Reached after the lawsuit was filed, Hines said in a text message that he’s still employed by Farmer George Meats but didn’t comment further. Keehn and Baker didn’t respond to requests for further comment Sunday.


This isn’t the first time an animal has been killed after someone visited the wrong place. In Waco, Tex., last year, and in Faulkner County, Ark., in 2020, a law-enforcement officer shot a dog after reporting to the wrong address. In February, a woman in Birmingham, Ala., told WBRC that a delivery truck driver who had “no reason” to be on her property shot her dog.


Natalie and Nathan have run a seven-acre farm for nearly a decade, but use it only to raise pets. They have dogs, cats, ducks and chickens, and when Natalie saw a picture of two Kunekune piglets a local breeder posted on social media in 2022, she wanted them, too.

Natalie said she and her daughters liked tickling Betty and Patty’s bellies until they rolled onto their sides. Natalie sang them “You Are My Sunshine” and fed the piglet sisters sweets for their birthdays on Jan. 3 – Betty and Patty loved when Natalie sprayed whipped cream into their mouths, she said.


Every morning before taking her 12- and 9-year-old daughters to school, Natalie said she visited Betty and Patty, rubbing them and feeding them. After Natalie returned home in the afternoon, Betty and Patty would squeal in excitement when they heard Natalie’s voice.

Nathan said he left the house’s gate open on May 1 while he ran an errand. About 30 minutes later, he said, his home’s security system sent him a phone alert that showed a white box truck on his property. Natalie said she saw in the footage someone near the pigs’ pen, which they shared with eight ducks.

Natalie said she rushed home from the nearby elementary school where she works.

“Who are you?” Natalie recalled asking Hines, who said he initially thought Natalie’s question was a joke.


After Natalie saw Betty and Patty had been killed, she called 911 around 1:30 p.m. “I was sick to my stomach,” Natalie said.

Kunekune pigs usually live between 15 and 20 years, according to the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute. Betty and Patty were both 2 years old when they died.

When a sheriff’s deputy arrived later that afternoon, Hines told him that he didn’t put the correct address into his GPS system and didn’t verify the address when he arrived, according to the office’s incident report.

The Grays list their street number on their house, mailbox and gate, according to their lawsuit, which was filed in the Washington Superior Court in Kitsap County. Hines said if the Grays had closed their gate, he wouldn’t have mistaken the house.


Nathan asked Hines to clean up the scene. Hines said he and Baker dragged both pigs, which each weighed about 400 pounds, on a tarp to the woods behind the Grays’s house and shoveled the dirt covered in blood into a garage bin. Hines said they then left to slaughter the two pigs he was meant to kill across the street.

Before he left, Hines said, he offered to butcher the pigs for free, which the Grays declined.

When Natalie and Nathan told their daughters after school that Betty and Patty were dead, the kids stood in shock for a few seconds, Natalie said, before the group hugged. Then, their 12-year-old ran to her room and cried.

Nathan, who owns a construction company, said he used his excavator that afternoon to bury Betty and Patty in their backyard.


The reality of Betty and Patty’s deaths set in the next morning, when Natalie fed her other animals but skipped the pigs’ food. Since May 1, Nathan said their 9-year-old has been scared to leave the family’s animals outside in fear that someone will kill them. Their daughters designed a makeshift gravestone they placed above where Betty and Patty were buried.

Natalie said she distracts herself from the pain of losing Betty and Patty with work. But she said her friend recently bought her a necklace designed with a flying pig – a memento that brought her grief rushing back.

“It gets easier to manage,” Natalie said about her pain. “But it’s always going to be there when you lose someone you love.”
View attachment 22357
What a horrible mistake but that's what it was - a mistake! Crap happens...even tho' it doesn't make it better. I feel bad for all involved.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Woman eaten alive by massive python in Indonesia
Author of the article:Denette Wilford
Published Jun 10, 2024 • 1 minute read

A woman who had been missing was found inside a giant python in Indonesia.


The search for the 45-year-old woman, identified only as Farida, began on June 6 after she failed to return home, her village chief Suardi Rosi told AFP.

The woman’s husband, identified only as Noni, became “suspicious” when he “found her belongings,” Rosi said.

He and other locals from Kalempang village in South Sulawesi province began searching for her and came across the python sporting a “large belly.”

Rosi recounted how the group, including Farida’s husband, “agreed to cut open the python’s stomach,” to discover what was inside.

“As soon as they did, Farida’s head was immediately visible,” he said.


The victim was found fully clothed inside the massive snake, which was reported to be at least 16 feet long.

“If I had been with her that day, the snake would not have dared to touch her,” the woman’s husband said, according to ViralPress.

“I feel sorry for the suffering she went through,” Noni continued. “I am sorry for our family.”

According to Newsweek, pythons can grow to be 20 feet long and are native to Southeast Asia.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
36,285
3,097
113
Rare white grizzly bear Nakoda and her cubs die in separate crashes in B.C. park
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Jun 10, 2024 • Last updated 23 hours ago • 2 minute read

Parks Canada says a rare white grizzly bear and her cubs have died after separate car crashes in Yoho National Park, B.C., on June 6, 2024. The bear, designated GB178 and known as "Nakoda," is seen with her cubs in an undated handout photo.
Parks Canada says a rare white grizzly bear and her cubs have died after separate car crashes in Yoho National Park, B.C., on June 6, 2024. The bear, designated GB178 and known as "Nakoda," is seen with her cubs in an undated handout photo. PHOTO BY HO /THE CANADIAN PRESS
FIELD, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA — Parks Canada staff who spent hundreds of hours tracking a rare white grizzly bear known as Nakoda had recently celebrated her emergence from hibernation with two new cubs in British Columbia’s Yoho National Park, said parks wildlife management specialist Saudi Stevens.


Now all three animals are dead, after two separate crashes on the same day on the Trans-Canada Highway in southeast British Columbia.

Parks Canada announced Nakoda’s death on Monday, four days after the crashes that ultimately claimed her life and those of her cubs.

“It’s actually devastated the team that was so deeply invested in really trying to prevent this outcome,” Stevens told a news briefing.

She called for better highway awareness in parks.

“So many staff are actually working hard to make roads safer for wildlife (and) we really want to emphasize to visitors the importance of not stopping and lingering to view wildlife, to drive cautiously and to obey the speed limits.”

Stevens said that on Thursday morning, Nakoda’s two cubs were struck by a vehicle and killed on the highway.


About 12 hours later, Nakoda was struck, too, between the Lake O’Hara access road and Wapta Lake.

Parks Canada said in a statement that wildlife management staff had been repairing fencing along the road when the adult bear, designated GB178, was startled by a train and ran in front of two vehicles.

One vehicle was able to swerve and avoid the bear, but the driver of the second vehicle was unable to react in time and struck her, the statement said.

Stevens said staff were “optimistic” the bear would survive as they watched her climb over the fence and head toward the forest with “no apparent injuries other than a limp.”

But she said the animal was confirmed dead on Saturday when a “mortality signal” was sent from the bear’s GPS tracking collar.


Stevens said the deaths were “devastating” for the team, who had been tracking Nakoda for about two years.

“Since 2022, our Parks Canada wildlife management team has actually spent a significant amount of time, and I mean hundreds upon hundreds of hours, managing Bear 178,” she said.

“Just weeks ago, everyone in our office were actually celebrating her emergence from the den with two new cubs.”

She said such incidents can be an “unfortunate reality” when bears become habituated to people.

“If it was internal injuries (that killed the bear) our vet said there really is no veterinary care that would have been able to prevent her death,” Stevens said.

“Grizzly bears are considered a species of special concern. They’re a very slow-reproducing animal, so every female grizzly bear that’s killed in the park is a significant loss.”

Yoho National Park is about 60 kilometres northwest of Banff, Alta.
grizzly-deaths-20240610[1].jpg