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BUCK FEVER What can happen if preserve owners make the rules

flounder9

Member
Friday, March 28, 2014

BUCK FEVER What can happen if preserve owners make the rules

BUCK FEVER

What can happen if preserve owners make the rules

Damning investigation by Mr. Sabalow et al @ IndyStar, that shows what we have known for decades about, an industry run amuck, an industry that will eventually self regulate itself, if they get their way, an industry that in my opinion, has been spreading cwd to hell and back for decades, i.e. the shooting pen industry. ...tss

BUCK FEVER

What can happen if preserve owners make the rules

What can happen if preserve owners make the rules

At one Indiana high-fence operation, deer — some ill or appearing drugged — were hunted in what prosecutors called 'killing pens.' Today, laws like those that sent the owner to prison are under assault in many states.

Ryan Sabalow, ryan.sabalow@indystar.com

"I think the DNR was so jealous 'cause I was selling deer for hundreds of thousands of dollars, and it would take 10 years for them to make what I was making in one day." — Russ Bellar

Buck Fever

Chapter 4

The nation's deer farmers are aggressively lobbying for regulatory changes that would benefit their industry. One Indiana case serves as a warning of what could happen if the industry is allowed to set its own rules. Robert Scheer/The Star

PERU, Ind. – For seven days in January 2005, a jury in a federal courtroom heard tales from a now-notorious Indiana hunting preserve of deer being drugged and even a sick deer propped up in a 1-acre pen so a hunter could shoot a $15,000 trophy.

Jurors heard testimony from an outdoor television celebrity, a corporate CEO, a country music star and an ex-NFL quarterback, some of whom paid substantial sums to shoot deer in enclosures so small that prosecutors dubbed them "killing pens." One shot his deer only minutes after it was released from a trailer. ...

snip...see full text, videos of interviews and such ;

http://www.indystar.com/longform/news/investigations/2014/03/27/buck-fever-chapter-four/6867811/

Overview: Trophy industry breeds risk disease, costs taxpayers millions

The pursuit of deer bred for enormous antlers and shot in hunting pens is compromising our ethics and laws, and comes with growing risk and costs.

http://www.indystar.com/longform/news/investigations/2014/03/27/buck-fever-intro/6865031/

Chapter 1: A troubling industry is born

Amish farmer unwittingly helped give rise to a booming new business — and ethical and legal quandaries.

"I am the king behind my fence. These are my deer." — Marty Berry, Texas deer breeder

http://www.indystar.com/longform/news/investigations/2014/03/27/buck-fever-chapter-one/6865283/

Chapter 3: How fair is the chase?

http://www.indystar.com/longform/news/investigations/2014/03/27/buck-fever-chapter-three/6865399/

Chapter 4: What can happen if preserve owners make the rules

http://www.indystar.com/longform/news/investigations/2014/03/27/buck-fever-chapter-four/6867811/

Is the rack worth the risk?

The search for the source of a deadly disease often leads to deer farms.

The interstate movement of deer has been linked to the spread of disease. What are we risking for trophies? Robert Scheer/The Star

SEYMOUR, Ind. – In April 2012, a tree fell on a fence in Southern Indiana and 20 white-tailed deer bounded through the gap, their tails raised like stark white flags.

One of the deer in the pen had been shipped from a Pennsylvania herd where two deer tested positive for chronic wasting disease, a neurological disorder that's always fatal to deer and elk and has been found in 22 states — but never in Indiana.

Not yet, anyway.

That buck — which state officials call Yellow 47, for the color and number of the tag in his ear — has never been found. And because there is no reliable way to test for the disease until an animal dies, no one knows whether Yellow 47 had CWD when he arrived in Indiana, or whether he could be spreading it to his wild brethren today. ...

BUCK FEVER

http://www.indystar.com/longform/news/investigations/2014/03/27/buck-fever-chapter-two/6867301/

A MUST READ !!!

BUCK FEVER

http://www.indystar.com/longform/news/investigations/2014/03/27/buck-fever-chapter-two/6867301/


see full text and more ;


Friday, March 28, 2014

BUCK FEVER What can happen if preserve owners make the rules

BUCK FEVER

http://chronic-wasting-disease.blogspot.com/2014/03/buck-fever-what-can-happen-if-preserve.html


TSS
 
The search for the source of a deadly disease often leads to deer farms.

Hunh unh! Hunh unh! No it doesn't! Ask the Brakkes!!!!

Or ask this guy!

Perhaps the prion theory DOES lie !!!!!!!!

I suggest reading the book DEADLY FEASTS: by Richard Rhodes. This book discusse in depth the CWD phenomen.The ENTIRE prion theory of CWD is based upon ONE study by ONE Dr. that has not been replicated or proven. The Dr. was not given much credibility at the time. His theory was quite suspect.

The human form of CWD, Cruetzfeldt Jacobs disease was FIRST identified in New Guinea headhunters. The New Guinea women ate the poorest quality meat on a human carcass, ie the brains.

A man in Wilton, Iowa died of human CWD this winter. The obituary named cause of death as Cruetzfeld-Jacobs disease. I do NOT believe he ate human brains. Therefore there was another way to contract the disease.

CWD occurs in a whole bunch of mammals. I strongly suggest heading to the library and getting Dr. Rhodes book before convicting anyone or anything as being the cause of CWD. As of now we do NOT know the cause of the disease in spite of what the DNR says.
 
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