From Kierán Suckling, Center for Biological Diversity <[email protected]>
Subject Wyoming greenlights running over wolves with snowmobiles
Date October 2, 2024 11:33 AM
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Hi John,

Wyoming has doubled down on its cruelty to wolves.

It wants a new law protecting the right to chase them down in snowmobiles — and run them over and kill them.

That sick, heartbreaking mindset is why we're in court to secure federal protection for wolves in Wyoming and throughout the northern Rockies.

Please help today with a gift to the Saving Life on Earth Fund.

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Across most of Wyoming, wolves can be killed without a license in nearly any way, anytime.

It's shameless, and it's wrong.

And the law that's now moving through the state legislature — which would let wolves be run over by snowmobiles — has just one condition: that each wolf be killed immediately.

That's Wyoming's version of preventing animal cruelty.

The mean-spirited, vicious attitude that allows running over an endangered species with a snowmobile shows how desperately wolves in Wyoming, and elsewhere in the northern Rockies, need the shelter of the Endangered Species Act.

In Montana a single hunter can kill up to 20 wolves. Residents pay only $12 for a wolf-hunting license.

Idaho hires private contractors to kill wolves and lets hunters chase them down with hounds and all-terrain vehicles.

What Wyoming allows is a devastating attack on a beloved icon of wild America. Clearly the state can't be trusted to do right by its wildlife.

Its bloodthirstiness is proof that federal protection of this keystone species is critical.

We're in court to save wolves in the northern Rockies and keep them protected elsewhere across the lower 48.

These loyal, family-oriented creatures can fully recover in so many of the places they once called home — if only we give them the chance.

Please help now by giving to the Saving Life on Earth Fund.

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For the wild,

Kierán Suckling
Executive Director
Center for Biological Diversity

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