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Author Topic: Man poisons 5 bald eagles  (Read 901 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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 Colorado man who wanted to kill coyotes poisons 5 bald eagles :bonk:

 :coffee: ....
A 77-year-old man who lives in the San Luis Valley has pleaded guilty to 10 misdemeanors after Colorado Parks and Wildlife said he put out poison that claimed the lives of five bald eagles, a coyote, a fox, magpies, crows and ravens.
Local rancher John Divine told wildfire officers that he put out the poison because coyotes were killing his sheep.

  :police: .....
This is the culmination of a more-than-year-long investigation that began in January 2017, when a Colorado Parks and Wildlife officer got a call from a man who found parts of a sheep in culvert that appeared to be slathered with poison.
Seven dead magpies were found nearby. When the officer came back the next day, he noticed tire tracks,
 
 :popcorn: ...
more dead sheep and another dead magpie.  :banghead:
This prompted him to set up a game camera, according to the news release.
That game camera would capture a truck later revealed to be Divine’s coming to the area. When wildfire officers came to his house, he told them he was putting antifreeze on the sheep to stop coyotes.
 
Divine is also accused of telling officers he had only baited one spot, and taking them to a different one. :tut:
than the one where the game camera had been set up. :doah:
When he was confronted about his, Divine admitted to lying and paid a $362.50 fine.
A few days later, a sick bald eagle was found a mile away from one of the bait sites. So where the carcasses of two more eagles, a coyote and a red fox. Another dead eagle was also found.

Two other dead eagles were found later that month.
An autopsy revealed those eagles were killed by a pesticide that had apparently been put out by Divine.
A few months later, Divine was served with a citation and new charges.

FILE - In this May 10, 2012 file photo, A bald eagle takes flight on a rainy morning in Friendship, Maine. In March 2018, Maine wildlife officials began conducting the largest statewide survey of bald eagles in the state in several years

 :Photography:

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« Last Edit: September 09/01/18, 09:51:29 AM by Lee Borgersen »
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