I am way behind CNN, the AP,
Huffington Post, the New York Daily News, and the Daily Mail on this but I
thought the Wisconsin DNR's raid on the Society of St Francis no kill animal
shelter to corral and euthanize Giggles the fawn was worth a post. Unlike the Daily Mail, I'm not approaching
this on the 'Bambi tack', the anthropomorphic, isn't it cute, 'deer are people
too' style of moral outrage. Nope, what
this incident illustrates is an insane over reaction and over the top use of
the powers of the state to resolve a piddling incident that would have gone
away on it's own the very next day. With
all the budget cuts and understaffing, including cutting 32 more DNR jobs just
three months ago, an operation such as this just points out the lack of intelligent
prioritization in an increasing politicized state agency.
The short story on this incident
is that after receiving an anonymous tip that the St Francis animal shelter in
the Kenosha area had an illegal wild animal at it's facility, a combination of
aerial and ground surveillance determined that there was indeed a whitetail
deer fawn at the facility, a clear violation of state law. This evidence was presented to a judge who
issued a search warrant and this is when the fun began. A heavily armed contingent of 13 officers,
nine DNR and four deputies, raided the facility and detained the staff for a
couple hours. Drawers were rifled, cell
phones confiscated, and of course Giggles was located, tranquilized, tossed in
a body bag that one of the officers then tossed over his shoulder, to be offed
at a remote location. You can read the AP story or the Huffington Post for more details.
Several things leap out to a
person who is able to devote 60-90 seconds of thought to the problem. Why not call the shelter and see what they
have to say? Why use aerial assets when
a warden slinking along the fence actually saw the fawn, plenty of probably
cause for a search warrant? Why bother
with a search warrant in the first place when a DNR agent could just stroll up
to the office and say, "Hey, we have a report that you have a whitetail
fawn here. Is that true? Do you know its
a violation of Wisconsin law?" Another tactic would have been to wait 24
hours and the problem would have gone away.
The fawn was scheduled to be shipped to an animal rehab shelter in
Illinois the very next day, a state where possession of a wild animal is not
illegal. And finally, why show up with thirteen armed agents? It's an animal shelter for God's sake, not a
Taliban stronghold. We are in the
process of adopting a new pup from the rescue shelter and none of the employees
look like ex members of the Crips of Bloods and none appeared to be
carrying. They actually seemed to be
mild mannered, caring people that were interested in animal welfare.
Once this whole international
shitstorm erupted, the really smart thing for the DNR to have done would have
been to put out a statement saying that they had screwed up, screwed up badly,
apologize, and state that they were looking at methods and policies to prevent
a reoccurrence. Instead they put out two
press releases on their Facebook page that attempt to justify the raid in one
of the lamest fashions imaginable.
Shortly after the second one was issued the FB page was taken down. It has since been restored.
The Department of Natural
Resources in Wisconsin has had an image problem for years, some of it deserved
and much of it not. I just received my
Wisconsin Natural Resources magazine which had great articles on restoring
rivers and harbors, bringing back the sturgeon, and stories on a couple of our
outstanding state parks. We have plenty
of cops, how about focusing the agency on the real threats to our state? My friend from England, a police officer, was taken aback when I pointed out that we could be pulled over by a State
Trooper, county sheriff, city cop, park police, or even the tribal police. It
befuddled him how they could keep the jurisdictions straight. I am personally a hell of a lot more
concerned about them hauling all the sand in Chippewa County out to the Bakken
Field, GTAC leveling the Penokees, or even more closely monitoring the crap
that fouled the rivers and harbors described in the WNR mag article than I am
whether some animal shelter is a transit stop for a fawn. I would much rather have wardens monitoring
those areas, documenting violations that actually impact the public good, than
this stupid waste of resources, including court time, in Kenosha. Heck, they even wasted Gov. Walker and all of his cabinet secretary's time when he needs to stay focused on his nationally renowned job creation efforts. We had a conversation last week as we patched
up the BadHatter, who was attacked by a rogue kayak rudder on Miner's Beach. A
retired DNR professional in the group commented that he had a lot more training
on how to shoot people over the years than he did on patching them up. They hit the range far more frequently than
the CPR/First Aid classes, even though he had rendered first aid to a
significantly larger number of people than he had shot. When I worked in the DA's office in Eau
Claire about 40 years ago, the wardens were always the most interesting guys
that came by the office. Even though I
knew a few renegade game law violators that looked askance at the wardens, the
general perception was that they were there to help out. Even my buddy, SilenceOfTheLambChop up in Minocqua, is questioning his volunteer work for the loon project since it serves the same knuckleheads that bring you wolf hunting, bear hunting with dogs, and other shaky activities. We need to get back to that image of the DNR
warden and put an end to the stupidity and incredible waste of resources that
occurred in mid July down in Kenosha. Stop worrying about form and get dialed in on functional policies. The Giggles incident did not border on the ridiculous, it was well beyond the border.
Disclaimer: That is not Giggles
at the top of the post, it's a fawn that stopped and dropped on Lake O'Brien Rd
one evening as I was heading to camp. It
was motionless, accepted fawn procedure when encountering potential threats,
and I spotted mom about 30 yards in the woods watching anxiously. My guess is
that whoever picked up the 'abandoned' fawn had a freaked out mom watching
somewhere. Leave nature alone
people! If the fawn was abandoned it
would likely make a nutritious meal for a bear, coyote, or some other
predator. That's how nature works and
its worked pretty well over the millennia.
Also the heavily armed gentleman
in the images is not a member of the DNR or the Kenosha Sheriffs Dept.
either. It's No2 son on his all expenses
paid government sponsored trip to iraq in 2004.
Just wanted to clear that up.
The frac sand image was heisted off the web and shot by Jim Tittle for Midwest Energy News
1 comment:
That raid was the inevitable consequence of militarizing any and all law enforcement agencies. Law enforcement gets so many military-type goodies that sooner or later they feel compelled to use them.
You're right -- it was a problem that could have been resolved with a phone call, or, even simpler, procrastination.
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