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- <text id=91TT1294>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Shooting Leopards in a Barrel
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ETHICS, Page 61
- Shooting Leopards in a Barrel
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In a perversion of sport, canned hunts offer helpless exotic
- animals for slaughter in exchange for big bucks
- </p>
- <p>By EMILY MITCHELL--Reported by Kathy Shocket/Phoenix and Don
- Winbush/Atlanta
- </p>
- <p> They are called "canned hunts," but by any name they are
- slaughter, not sport, with no vestige of a fair contest between
- man and beast. In pursuit of a trophy to hang on the wall or a
- videotape of their exploits, well-to-do hunters in the U.S. are
- paying thousands of dollars to shoot defenseless exotic animals
- at point-blank range. There is no accurate count of the number
- of such killings, but authorities are finally beginning to
- crack down on them.
- </p>
- <p> Floyd Lester Patterson III, a rancher in Monterey County,
- Calif., was charged in April with 27 misdemeanors involving
- illegal possession and transportation of animals and parts of
- animals on the endangered-species list. When drought forced him
- to sell off most of his cattle, Patterson began conducting legal
- hunts of boar and other game. Then he allegedly obtained nine
- large cats that are on the endangered-species list, including
- a spotted leopard and a Bengal tiger. Some of them were probably
- purchased from zoos. According to the charges, hunters paid
- around $3,500 each to blast away at the animals; several may
- have been killed a few feet from their cages.
- </p>
- <p> Similar grisly rites apparently took place at the 160-acre
- Texoma Hunting Wilderness owned by Charles B. ("Bart")
- Bartholomew, in Bryan County, Okla., about 100 miles northeast
- of Dallas. For roughly $8,000 each, hunters could stand in a
- fenced field where mountain lions, grizzly bears and other
- beasts were prodded out of cages into their gunsights. State and
- federal agents raided the multimillion-dollar operation and
- arrested Bartholomew. His trial ended last week in a plea
- bargain; he will spend six months in jail, do 400 hours of
- community service and forfeit his "preserve" to the state.
- County district attorney Theresa McGehee says, "I think we've
- made our statement: we as a society are not going to tolerate
- this."
- </p>
- <p> In Texas, says federal fish and wildlife agent Jim
- Stinebaugh, canned hunts are quick and dirty, most of them the
- work of "fly-by-night promoters who find a cat at an
- exotic-animal auction and then put a deal together." Two hunting
- guides, Daniel Lee Moody and Ronald Terrell McCloud, were
- indicted in San Antonio last April for unlawfully conspiring to
- sell and transport a black leopard; McCloud has pleaded guilty
- to a lesser charge. A sickening videotape shows the leopard
- being released from a cage and running under a nearby pickup
- truck. A pack of dogs flushed it out of hiding, and for $3,000,
- a "hunter" from Louisiana had the privilege of shooting the
- panic-stricken animal.
- </p>
- <p> Increasingly, breeders are raising exotic animals
- specifically for hunting. Investigations of canned hunts and
- wildlife-trafficking operations are under way in Texas and
- elsewhere, but weak and conflicting laws make officials' jobs
- harder. An animal may have federal protection as a member of an
- endangered species, for example, yet no statute prevents a zoo
- from selling it to private owners within the same state.
- Additional legal pressure will be needed to give current
- restrictions more teeth. True hunters should be delighted to
- join in bringing an end to a perverted bloodlust.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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