Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

Congressman Rages at Don Jr. for Saying Democrats Want Coronavirus to Kill Millions

Don Jr. “should not be near me when he says that. There would be a serious altercation,” said Rep. John Garamendi

Congressman Threatens Donald Trump Jr. Over Coronavirus Comments

Donald Trump Jr. on Fox News.

Fox News/Screencap

Congressman John Garamendi (D-CA) reacted angrily when asked about Donald Trump Jr.’s remarks about Democrats and the coronavirus on Friday.

When Garamendi was told on MSNBC that Don Jr. said the Democrats are “seemingly” hoping the coronavirus “kills millions” of Americans to make the president look bad, the congressman responded with rage, saying, “He should not be near me when he says that. There would be a serious altercation.”

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One of Garamendi’s constituents is the first possible coronavirus case in the United States where health officials have not been able to trace how she contracted the virus, and he spoke about his concerns about the way the Trump administration is handling the crisis.

The congressman was set off by remarks made by the president’s son on Fox News earlier on Friday. Donald Trump Jr. said the Democrats are rooting for the coronavirus to take hold in the U.S. in order to damage his father’s chances of winning re-election.

Don Jr. said, “Anything that they can use to try to hurt Trump, they will… But for them to try to take a pandemic and seemingly hope that it comes here and kills millions of people so that they could end Donald Trump’s streak of winning is a new level of sickness.”

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Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney made a similar outlandish claim during a Q&A at the Conservative Political Action Conference on Friday. But instead of the Democrats, he pointed his finger at the media.

“The reason you’re seeing so much attention to [coronavirus] today is that they think this is what’s going to bring down the president,” Mulvaney said.

Donald Trump Jr. Given Permit To Hunt Alaskan Grizzly Bear

Last lines: Nothing revs my engines like the chance to go shoot wild animals and pose next to them. Just kidding – I’m not a pr*ck.
BY : CAMERON FREW ON : 22 FEB 2020 16:54
Donald Trump Jr. Given Permit To Hunt Alaskan Grizzly BearPexels/Donald Trump Jr./Instagram

Via pure ‘luck of the draw’, Donald Trump Jr. has been granted a permit to hunt wild Alaskan grizzly bears. 

Every year, thousands of hunters flock to apply for the ‘coveted’ opportunity to hunt grizzlies near the Bering Sea town of Nome, in north-west Alaska’s Seward Peninsula.

The demand for licenses in the state is so fierce that periodic drawings for permits to hunt bears, caribou, moose and other animals are held in various regions. With regards to hunting bears, The First Son was one of 27 winners to be given the chance.

Grizzly Bear Pexels

Eddie Grasser, the wildlife conservation director for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, said on Friday, February 21, that officials normally receive ‘thousands of applications’ for such licenses. Whoever wins, it’s only ever by ‘pure chance, luck of the draw’.

While the number of applications generally exceeds the number of spots available for hunts, the grizzly lottery wasn’t as full – in fact, 24 tags for hunting bears in the region reportedly went unclaimed. Trump Jr. is an avid hunter, with hunts in Alaska and Canada scheduled for later this year.

Grizzly Bear Pexels

It’s believed there are around 30,000 grizzly bears in Alaska, and while animal rights campaigners have criticised the hunts, state officials say it is essential to kill predators in the region to open up more game hunting opportunities.

Earlier this month, The Safari Club auctioned off a ‘dream hunt’ with Trump Jr., which is seven days in Alaska hunting Sitka black-tailed deer with the US president’s son, his young son and a guide.

Donald Trump Jr. huntingDonald Trump Jr./Instagram

The Safari Club’s website explained: 

Don Jr and his son will be hosting this year’s hunt along with Keegan in Alaska. Join them aboard Alaska’s premiere luxury hunting vessel for a seven-day Sitka black-tailed deer and sea ducks hunt along with Master Guide Keegan McCarthy. Method of take is hunters’ choice…

Each hunter can harvest two Sika black tailed deer. Come share Keegan’s [the guide] knowledge and Don Jr.’s passion to create a once-in-a-lifetime hunting experience for a new hunter.

It was offered up to keen shooters attending a four-day annual trophy hunting convention in Reno, Nevada – unsurprisingly, it nabbed a pretty neat price. On February 8, organisers confirmed the trip had been sold for a whopping $150,000.

Nothing revs my engines like the chance to go shoot wild animals and pose next to them. Just kidding – I’m not a pr*ck.

Donald Trump Jr granted permit to hunt Alaska grizzly bear

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/feb/22/donald-trump-jr-granted-permit-to-hunt-alaska-grizzly-bear

The president’s son is a keen hunter who has enjoyed several expeditions in Alaska and Canada

Donald Trump Jr and congressman Steve King
 Donald Trump Jr, pictured with congressman Steve King after a pheasant hunt in Iowa in 2017, has been granted a permit to hunt a grizzly bear in Alaska. Photograph: Lucas Jackson/Reuters

Donald Trump Jr has been granted the right to hunt a grizzly bear in north-western Alaska near the Bering Sea town of Nome, a state official says.

The son of US president Donald Trump was one of three people who applied for 27 spots for non-resident hunters targeting grizzlies in a designated region of north-western Alaska’s Seward Peninsula, said Eddie Grasser, the wildlife conservation director for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

The state conducts periodic drawings for permits to hunt bears, caribou, moose and other animals in various regions. Winners are chosen by a lottery, and there are typically many more applications than hunting tags awarded.

“We get thousands of applications,” Grasser said on Friday. Whether anyone won came down to “pure chance, luck of the draw”.

But in the case of the bear-hunt permit the president’s son won, there was little competition. Twenty-four tags for hunting bears in that region went unclaimed, Grasser said.

Winners of the state’s latest hunting-permit drawings were announced on Friday.

To follow through with the Nome-area bear hunt, Trump had to pay a $1,000 non-resident tag fee and buy a $160 non-resident hunting license, Grasser said.

The president’s eldest son is an avid hunter and has made several trips to hunt in Alaska and Canada. He is scheduled to go to Alaska later this year to hunt deer and ducks.

The Safari Club this month raffled off a $150,000 seven-day “dream hunt” expedition with Trump Jr. The raffle winner got the right to accompany the president’s son on a yacht traveling in November along coastal areas of the Tongass National Forest.

Safari Club will probe sale of captive-bred lion hunts

 
This image from video provided by the Humane Society of the United States shows taxidermy at the Safari Club International's 2020 annual convention, that was held Feb. 5-8, 2020, in Reno, Nevada. An undercover video recorded by animal welfare activists shows vendors at a recent trophy-hunting convention promoting trips to shoot captive-bred lions in Africa, despite past public assurances by the event's organizers that so-called canned hunts wouldn't be sold. (Humane Society of the United States via AP)

This image from video provided by the Humane Society of the United States shows taxidermy at the Safari Club International’s 2020 annual convention, that was held Feb. 5-8, 2020, in Reno, Nevada. An undercover video recorded by animal welfare activists shows vendors at a recent trophy-hunting convention promoting trips to shoot captive-bred lions in Africa, despite past public assurances by the event’s organizers that so-called canned hunts wouldn’t be sold. (Humane Society of the United States via AP)

A trophy-hunting group says it has launched an ethics investigation following the release of undercover video showing vendors at its recent convention promoting trips to shoot captive-bred lions in Africa.

Safari Club International CEO W. Laird Hamberlin vowed swift action Friday to ensure exhibitors at the group’s annual convention “operate in full compliance with SCI’s policies.” The group had previously issued public assurances that so-called canned hunts wouldn’t be sold at its events.

“Under my leadership, this organization will take all necessary action to ensure that all of our partners adhere to the policies that are instrumental in making us First for Hunters,” Hamberlin said, referencing his organization’s slogan. “No matter where this investigation may take us, I can guarantee that SCI will identify and follow the right course of action to guarantee the integrity of our show, and adherence to our high standards for ethical hunting.”

Employee of Berea’s historic Boone Tavern accused of
stealing, gambling $66,000-plus

Hamberlin’s statement comes after The Associated Press reported Wednesday on video footage collected last week by investigators for the Humane Society of the United States at SCI’s annual conference in Reno, Nevada. SCI’s yearly gatherings typically draw thousands of attendees and hundreds of vendors selling firearms, overseas safari trips and items made from the skins and bones of rare wildlife.

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In the video, three safari tour operators can be clearly heard confirming the lions to be shot on the trips were bred in captivity. Typically, the lions used in such canned hunts are raised in cages and small pens before being released into a larger fenced enclosure. Once reaching young adulthood, customers pay to shoot them and keep the skins, skulls, claws and other body parts for trophies.

“They’re bred in captivity. They’re born in captivity, and then they’re released,” a salesman for Bush Africa Safaris, a South African tour operator, says on the video. “There’s guys who are going to tell you something different on the floor, they’re going to bulls—t you, that is what it is.”

SCI issued a policy in 2018 opposing the hunting of African lions bred in captivity, which the group said is of doubtful value to the conservation of lions in the wild. After the Humane Society captured video of canned hunts being sold at the SCI convention last year, SCI issued a statement pledging not to accept advertising from any operator selling such hunts, nor allow their sale in the vendor booths rented out at its 2020 convention.

As part of SCI’s statement sent to AP on Friday, Hamberlin suggested without offering any specific evidence that the Humane Society had selectively edited the videos it released. He challenged the animal welfare group to provide SCI with its raw, unedited videos from the Reno convention.

SCI’s statement also said that the vendors caught on video selling canned hunts would also be provided an opportunity to tell their side of the story.

“The vendors who attend SCI’s Convention every year are a crucial component to the organization’s overall role as the leading advocate for hunters and they too have the right to a fair and transparent process with the opportunity to defend their business against allegations that may be entirely baseless,” the group’s statement said.

Anna Frostic, an attorney for The Humane Society, said Friday her group had not received any sort of direct request for video from SCI, but pointed to publicly available links of sound bites and extended footage gathered at the conference.

“The video footage we have that is relevant to what we found at the SCI convention regarding captive lion hunting is freely available online,” Frostic said.

___

Follow Associated Press Investigative Reporter Michael Biesecker at http://twitter.com/mbieseck

This image from video provided by the Humane Society of the United States shows taxidermy at the Safari Club International’s 2020 annual convention, that was held Feb. 5-8, 2020, in Reno, Nevada. An undercover video recorded by animal welfare activists shows vendors at a recent trophy-hunting convention promoting trips to shoot captive-bred lions in Africa, despite past public assurances by the event’s organizers that so-called canned hunts wouldn’t be sold. An avid hunter, Donald Trump Jr. was among the featured speakers at the SCI convention last weekend. (Humane Society of the United States via AP)

At 700 pounds, black bear killed in New Jersey

 sets world record, says national hunting group

At 700 pounds, black bear killed in New Jersey sets world record, says national hunting group

POPE & YOUNG

A 700-pound black bear killed by bow on private land in Morris County, N.J., last year has set a world record for North American black bear, besting a mark set in 1993, according to the Pope and Young Club, a national bowhunting organization.

The bear’s size didn’t surprise at least one hunting advocate, who said the high weight was the result of state restrictions on hunting that allow bears to multiply and get dangerously big.

To determine if the bear was a record, the Pope and Young Club hosted a special panel for judging in Harrisburg on Feb. 8 during the Great American Outdoors Show. Pope and Young, based in Minnesota, says it is recognized as the official repository for records on bow-taken North American big-game animals. It maintains a scoring system and sets standards.

“It has been an inspiring journey, to say the least,” Melillo said in a Pope and Young release. “New Jersey, my home state, has its first-ever world record animal!”

The bear was shot Oct. 14. It surpassed the previous world-record bear, shot by Robert J. Shuttleworth Jr. in Mendocino County, Calif., on Sept. 4, 1993, according to Pope and Young.

“They were spot on, and I never doubted it for one second. I’m very grateful that I get to be a part of all this. Pursuing bears with bow and arrow is a passion of mine,” he said.

“Dedication from our biologists, technicians, and conservation officers make this all possible,” Melillo added.

Rick Mowery, a spokesperson for Pope and Young, said it is the first record archery kill of an animal in New Jersey.

Black bears are a different species from brown bears, which are also known as grizzlies.

Mowery said the size of the bear was a testament to good wildlife management by the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife. But he added that recent hunting bans, such as a partial ban in New Jersey, are unhealthy for residents and bear populations, and are counter to wildlife conservation practices.

The bear, preserved through taxidermy, will be displayed at the Pope and Young Annual Convention in Virginia in March.

Eli Randall, records director for the Pope and Young Club, said the bear’s skull measured more than 23 inches.

Cody McLaughlin, vice president of the New Jersey Outdoor Alliance, a hunting and conservation advocacy group, said he congratulates Melillo and also praises state biologists for bear management.

However, he said the bear’s size is an indicator that a partial ban on bear hunting in New Jersey is allowing the animal populations to grow unchecked, causing increased potential for human contact.

New Jersey’s black bear hunt has become controversial in the last few years since Gov. Phil Murphy pledged to end it. Murphy, who found it hard to ban the hunt, prohibited it on state lands in 2018. Hunters must get permission from private landowners.

McLaughlin said the bear population is growing, and the animals are bigger, because the hunts are so limited.

“It’s important to note that it’s not an accident that the new record bear came out of New Jersey,” McLaughlin said. “And that’s because our bear population has never been thicker, especially when you take away 40% of the land people can hunt on. There’s nothing stopping these bears from growing to enormous sizes. This needs to be a wake-up call.”

“There have been many commitments that Murphy made during his campaign, like ending the N.J. bear hunt … but there hasn’t been much progress,” the Sierra Club said in a recent statement.

This story has been updated to reflect that black bears and brown bears are of different species.

Animal Rights Activists Protest at the NYC Homes of Trophy Hunters Eric Trump and Donald Trump, Jr

Animal Rights Activists Protest at the NYC Homes of Trophy Hunters Eric Trump and Donald Trump, Jr

FEBRUARY 14, 2020 BY  — LEAVE A COMMENT

Throughout the day, hundreds of pedestrians stopped to engage with the activists, and many spoke to TheirTurn about their thoughts on trophy hunting.

During the 2020 Worldwide Rally Against Trophy Hunting, animal rights activists in NYC protest at the homes of Eric Trump and Donald Trump, Jr.

WRATH events are staged each year to coincide with an annual trophy hunting convention organized by Safari Club International, a 50,000 member association “dedicated to protecting the freedom to hunt.”  Donald Trump, Jr. and Kimberly Guilfoyle played prominent roles at the 2020 convention, with Trump Jr. auctioning off a hunting trip with himself and Guilfoyle hosting a fundraising breakfast for the organization.

Donald Trump, Jr. and his fiancé Kimberly Guilfoyle, a Trump advisor, host fundraising events at Safari Club International’s annual trophy hunting convention

“We are grateful to the activists around the world who came together to raise awareness about the ego-driven and senseless murder of countless wild animals by trophy hunters,” said Carrie LeBlanc, the Executive Director of CompassionWorks International, a Nevada-based animal rights organization that created WRATH. “We stand with conservation groups across the world in developing strategies for sustaining and growing populations of wild animals that do not involve their senseless massacre.”

Hunters Donald Trump, Jr. and Eric Trump pose with their elephant and cape buffalo trophies

Opposition to trophy hunting entered the mainstream public when an American trophy hunter, Walter Palmer, killed Cecil, a beloved lion in Zimbabwe who was well known to park rangers and a favorite among tourists on safari. In spite of the outrage and backlash against Palmer, trophy hunters continue to shoot endangered wild animals and pose for photos with their bodies. Through education, lobbying, and other forms of grass-roots activism, CompassionWorks International and several other animal protection groups around the world are working to stigmatize and outlaw trophy hunting.

Walter Palmer, a trophy hunter from Minnesota, killed and beheaded Cecil, a beloved lion in Zimbabwe.

For more information about WRATH and CompassionWorks International’s advocacy to end trophy hunting, please visit CWI’s online and TrumpAnimalHunters on Facebook.

Trophy hunting of lions is unscientific as well as immoral

At SCI convention, trophy hunters rub shoulders with Donald Trump Jr…

At SCI convention, trophy hunters rub shoulders with Donald Trump Jr. and USFWS director; undercover investigation reveals potentially illegal sales of elephant, stingray, hippo skins

By Kitty Block and Sara Amundson

February 12, 2020 0 Comments

At the Safari Club International’s annual convention each year, wealth, privilege and power come together with a revolting goal: mowing down the world’s rarest and most beloved wildlife. This year’s event in Reno was no different. Trophy hunters heard speeches from guest of honor Donald Trump Jr. and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Director Aurelia Skipwith, shelled out tens of thousands of dollars to kill endangered rhinos, lions and polar bears, and kicked back to the music of the Beach Boys.

But, as our undercover investigators who were on site discovered, there were potentially illegal goings-on at the event as well. Exhibitors peddled boots and belts made with elephant, hippo and stingray skins in what appears to be a violation of Nevada’s law on wildlife trafficking. The state forbids trade in the body parts and products of these endangered and threatened animals.

Customers could also get accessories made to order with the animal skins, some dyed in garish colors. The going rate for giraffe skin boots was nearly $1,400 and kangaroo skin boots were nearly $1,100.

It wasn’t just dead animal parts on sale. The lives of 860 animals were auctioned off at the four-day event. As you can see in our undercover footage, vendors glibly offered canned lion hunts, where trophy hunters can pick out and kill defenseless animals bred in captivity with nowhere to run. Also on offer was a $6,000 hunt for any six animals that a customer can choose to kill in South Africa, including zebras, wildebeest, warthogs, impalas, hartebeest, gemsbok, nyala and waterbuck. A polar bear hunt in Canada was offered for $35,000.

Vendors glibly offered canned lion hunts, where trophy hunters can pick out and kill defenseless animals bred in captivity with nowhere to run.

Also on offer: a critically endangered black rhino hunt for $350,000, and an Asiatic black bear hunt in Russia for $15,000, among others. There even was a “Trump special” for $25,000 to kill buffalo, sable, roan and crocodiles. An outfitter peddling a giraffe hunt told our investigator the hunt costs “only” $1,200 because they have “too many giraffes” and need to “get rid of the animals.” This at a time when the United States is considering listing the giraffe under the Endangered Species Act and two giraffe subspecies were recently listed as critically endangered under the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

By the time the convention wrapped up on Saturday, two winners had paid a total of $340,000 for a “dream hunt” on a luxury yacht in Alaska with Trump Jr. to kill back-tailed deer and sea ducks.

The Humane Society of the United States and Humane Society International send undercover investigators to the convention each year so that we can shine a global spotlight on this grisly world. As you can see from our video footage, this is not an event most people would want to frequent. In addition to the vendors carrying out a callous trade in animal lives, everywhere you look are the stuffed carcasses of lions, Cape buffalo, bears, wolves, mountain lions and leopards. This year’s displays included an ibex mountain goat killed by Trump Jr. On the walls are portraits of hunters grinning alongside their kills or posing proudly holding open the mouths of the dead animals.

[Read the full investigation report ]

Many of these species on offer for the killing already face multiple threats from poachers or are falling victim to climate change and habitat loss. But for the SCI and its members, the rarer the animals are, the greater the thrill of killing them.

Fortunately, the tide is turning as Americans lose their patience with the havoc trophy hunters wreak on our planet. Earlier this week we announced that in response to a lawsuit brought by the HSUS and HSI, the Trump administration shut down a sham trophy hunters’ panel that was advising the government on wildlife trade policy. Last month, a Canadian chapter of SCI was forced to shut down its auction for an elephant hunt in Botswana—the first since the country reopened trophy hunting elephants last year. Attendance at the SCI convention itself is dropping each year. And increasingly, Americans and people the world over are sharing their disgust of trophy hunters and their exploits on social media.

We look forward to the day when we won’t have to send our investigators to the SCI convention, because there won’t be one. But until that day comes, our fight to stop industry groups like the SCI will continue. American trophy hunters kill more endangered and threatened animals around the globe than hunters anywhere in the world, and we will hold them to account. We are pushing for Congress to pass two bills, the CECIL Act and ProTECT Act, that would rein in trophy imports of such species from overseas. No one needs to decorate their walls with the heads and hides of endangered or other at-risk animals, and it’s time we, as a nation, stop this unnecessary killing for good.

Sara Amundson is president of the Humane Society Legislative Fund.

Interior Dept. drops trophy hunting council amid court fight


A 2018 investigation by The Associated Press showed the board created by then-Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke was stuffed with big-game hunters, including some with direct ties to President Donald Trump and his family. Photo: C-SPAN / MGN

The Trump administration has disbanded its advisory board created to help boost trophy hunting and relax federal rules for importing the heads and hides of African elephants, lions and rhinos.

An Interior Department official says in a Friday court filing that the two-year charter for the International Wildlife Conservation Council had expired and that there were no plans to renew it.

A 2018 investigation by The Associated Press showed the board created by then-Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke was stuffed with big-game hunters, including some with direct ties to President Donald Trump and his family.

Donald Trump Jr. is headed to Juneau for a hunting trip — and you could join him

Donald Trump Jr. speaks into a microphone at a podium.
Donald Trump Jr. at a campaign rally at Iowa State University, Nov. 1, 2016. (Creative Commons photo by Max Goldberg)

https://www.ktoo.org/2020/02/07/donald-trump-jr-is-headed-to-juneau-for-a-hunting-trip-and-you-could-join-him/

Donald Trump Jr. and his son will be embarking on a weeklong hunt for Sitka black-tailed deer and ducks in Southeast Alaska — and a spot to join them was auctioned off to the highest bidder.

For one Juneau-based guide, it’s a way to teach his guests about the importance of the Tongass National Forest at a crucial time.

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Keegan McCarthy owns Coastal Alaska Adventures, a business that guides visitors on yacht-based hunts.

He’s also developing a new program that will help kids learn the subsistence values he grew up with. A big part of that revolves around Sitka black-tailed deer.

“That’s what my family subsided on,” he said. “Growing up in Juneau, all we ate was Sitka black-tailed deer, and still do to this day. That’s what my family eats. So (I am) sharing that message and the importance of that resource with the young hunters.”

McCarthy is well-connected in the guided hunt scene. In fact, he spoke on a cell phone where he was attending the Safari Club International convention in Reno, Nevada.

McCarthy auctioned off the Alaska hunt there and online. It’ll help fund his new youth program.

And he tapped a famous acquaintance to come along: Donald Trump Jr.

A Sitka black tailed deer in June 2014.
A Sitka black-tailed deer. (Creative Commons photo by Kenneth Cole Schneider)

“As a hunter, I do personally believe that his morals and ethics are excellent in the hunting world,” McCarthy said.

Trump has been criticized by the Humane Society for his hunting practices. Photos of him posing next to a dead elephant in 2012 caused a stir among animal rights groups.

But McCarthy stresses Trump is conservation-minded. And the deer on this hunt aren’t being shot for just trophies. The meat will be served on board the yacht, taken home or donated.

“You know, like farm to table type concepts,” McCarthy said. “We stress the importance of how we eat what we harvest.”

But McCarthy has another thing he wants to teach Donald Trump Jr. and his guests about a subsistence lifestyle in Southeast Alaska: He thinks it’s largely dependent on protecting habitat in the Tongass National Forest.

McCarthy is outspoken in his opposition to changes to the Roadless Rule in the Tongass, which could increase logging. The Trump administration has been pushing for that.

But McCarthy said it’s not a secret that he would like to see an end to massive timber sales in the national forest. He’s spoken to Trump about it before, and that conversation will continue when he visits in November.

“Hopefully, if anything, we can bend a sympathetic ear towards getting somebody potentially as influential as he is out there to really see what we’re doing,” McCarthy said. “And see how important the Tongass National Forest is. So I do think this can be beneficial if done right.”

The auction closed on Saturday — the final day of the Safari Club International convention. It sold for $150,000.

This story has been updated.