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   Message 4,449 of 4,517   
   abc to All   
   RCMP can't confirm moose calf was chased   
   12 Aug 09 20:03:04   
   
   XPost: can.atlantic.general, can.general, can.rec.hunting   
   From: abc@123.cl   
      
   RCMP can't confirm moose calf was chased, beaten   
      
      
   August 12, 2009   
      
      
   Police and other unidentified men try to help a baby moose in   
   Newfoundland earlier this week, reportedly after it was chased and   
   beaten with sticks by a group of boys. The moose had to be destroyed.   
      
   More Images »   
      
   Police and other unidentified men try to help a baby moose in   
   Newfoundland earlier this week, reportedly after it was chased and   
   beaten with sticks by a group of boys. The moose had to be destroyed.   
   Photograph by: Valerie Thorne   
      
   DEER LAKE, N.L. — Police are having trouble finding witnesses to an   
   incident in which a moose was allegedly chased by three young boys and   
   beaten with sticks Monday in this western Newfoundland community.   
      
   A day after giving that version of the incident to police, RCMP said   
   Wednesday the same witnesses have apparently changed their story.   
      
   "If that moose was harassed, we would like to know," Sgt. Jacques   
   Morneau said. "If it wasn't, we would like to know that, too. I don't   
   know why people would come up with stories initially and then, all of a   
   sudden, backtrack a bit."   
      
   That's not to say the police have ruled out the moose was chased,   
   Morneau said.   
      
   He said RCMP interviewed the boys and several witnesses on Tuesday.   
   They still have two or three more that they want to speak to.   
      
   "We are still looking at the witnesses that put these kids at the scene   
   and if, in fact, (the boys) were there and if it was chased by them or   
   not," he said.   
      
   "But we still have nobody telling us how the moose got there, so we   
   still have some issues with the exact story and how it unfolded."   
      
   Morneau said it is unusual for a moose to end up in a yard and near   
   death because it is exhausted.   
      
   "I'm not a wildlife specialist, but I don't know if it happens in   
   nature that an animal gets so rattled and out of its element that it   
   can get exhausted like that."   
      
   Valerie Thorne said the moose wound up in her yard, but she didn't see   
   it enter her property and she didn't see marks or blood to show it had   
   been beaten.   
      
   If it was chased into her yard, Thorne said, that would be   
   unacceptable.   
      
   Thorne described how onlookers, including police and conservation   
   officers, watched helplessly for two hours as the animal made several   
   attempts to get up, only to fall back down.   
      
   "It was pretty tense," she said. "You wanted to help, but there was   
   nothing you could do."   
      
   She said the crowd was trying to encourage the moose to get up.   
      
   "Some were upset nothing was being done to help it, but doing anything   
   might have only done more damage than good. I knew what was going to   
   happen because you could see its eyes turning red and it was foaming at   
   the mouth."   
      
   When it was decided the moose was beyond recovery, it was put down by a   
   conservation officer.   
      
   The boys may still face charges under the Wildlife Act if witnesses   
   corroborate the original version of the events.   
      
   The incident comes the same week that a British Columbia sport fishing   
   company disciplined an employee after an online video surfaced showing   
   him smacking a dogfish on a ship's deck and throwing it overboard.   
      
   In another case this week, three Saskatchewan men were charged after a   
   video was posted online showing them illegally shooting ducks and   
   ducklings.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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