Horse News

Appeal Filed Immediately Following Judge’s Denial of Motions to Stop CA Roundup

by Laura Allan of Animal Law Coalition

Update August 6, 2010: U.S. District Court Judge Morrison C. England Jr. ruled from the bench yesterday, denying motions for a stay, temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction brought by Plaintiffs In Defense of Animals, Dreamcatcher Wild Horse and Burro Sanctuary; Barbara Clarke; Chad Hanson; and Linda Hay to stop the Twin Peaks roundup.

Plaintiffs’ motions are more fully discussed in Animal Law Coalition’s earlier report below.  In allowing the roundup to proceed August 9, the judge said he was satisfied with precautions he believes BLM will take to protect the horses. BLM has said the horses will walk slowly, not run, and water and nutrients will be available. It is not clear how the helicopter typically used to terrify and stampede the horses during a roundup, will instead now encourage the animals to walk toward the holding facilities.

Regardless, plaintiffs wasted no time in filing an appeal to the 9th  Circuit Court of Appeals.

Safari Club International and Safari Club International Foundation were permitted to join the lawsuit in support of the Twin Peaks roundups. There are reports the roundup was scheduled now during the heat of summer so as not to interfere with hunting season later.

Original report: A lawsuit has been filed to challenge the “stampede, round-up and removal of over two thousand wild and free-roaming horses and burros … from the Twin Peaks Herd Management Area … in northeast California and northwest Nevada” and the BLM’s plan to “warehouse[e]” these horses in “zoo-like conditions” in the Midwest.

Plaintiffs In Defense of Animals; Dreamcatcher Wild Horse and Burro Sanctuary; Barbara Clarke; Chad Hanson; and Linda Hay say that the “stampede, round-up, removal, and warehousing of these wild horses is dangerous, inhumane, unnecessary, ill-conceived, inadequately explained or justified, and is in direct contradiction of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act (“WFHBA”), 16 U.S.C. §§ 1331 et seq., the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. §§ 501 et seq., and the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321, et seq.”

The case was filed in the federal court for the Eastern District of California against Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Bureau of Land Management Director Bob Abbey, and Dayne Barron, Field Manager for the Eagle Lake Field Office for BLM.

The Twin Peaks HMA consists of about 789,852 acres. BLM plans to capture 2,300 wild horses and 210 burros and release only about 180 of those captured horses back to the range after most have been sterilized. It is not clear how many horses and burros will ultimately remain in Twin Peaks.  The roundup is set to begin August 9, 2010.

According to the Complaint, “BLM has engaged in a classic example of crafting a solution and then searching for a problem…. Driven by a singular focus of eliminating wild horses from the public lands …, the BLM has turned the requirements of the WFHBA and NEPA on their heads. WFHBA requires that the BLM manage HMAs principally to protect the health and welfare of the wild horse herds living [on public lands]… and maintain a thriving natural ecological balance on these lands, of which the continued existence of native wild horse herds is an integral part….

NEPA requires that an agency properly define the purpose and need of a proposed action, take a hard look at the various options available for achieving that proper purpose, in particular, its effects on the human environment, consider the comments and concerns submitted by interested parties, and make a decision that is justifiable … and fully explained by the agency. The BLM…ignores the mandates and instructions of both laws in a manner that is both arbitrary and capricious.”

Roundups are inhumane

Plaintiffs allege, “Roundups conducted [with helicopters that stampede wild horses into corrals] are dangerous and inhumane”.  A 2008 report from the Government Accountability Office states that from 2005 to 2007 six of the ten states having Herd Management Areas indicate that at least 1.2 percent of the horses removed from these states were euthanized or died during the gather process. As a result of the Calico roundup last winter, 153 horses including aborted foals have died. Just this past week more than 5% of the wild horses rounded up in Nevada died.

Other WFRHBA violations

As in the lawsuit brought to challenge the Calico roundup, Plaintiffs claim BLM’s policy of rounding up and transporting wild horses “by tractor trailer to long-term holding facilities in the [Midwest], where they will live out their lives in zoo-like conditions far from their home ranges” violates WFRHBA.

Federal District Court Judge Paul L. Friedman warned BLM in the Calico case that its policy of rounding up wild horses and burros and placing them in long term holding facilities may well be illegal.

U.S. District Court Judge Rosemary Collyer ruled last year in the case, Colorado Wild Horse and Burro Coalition, Inc. v. Salazar, No. 06-1609 (D.D.C 2009):

“It would be anomalous to infer that by authorizing the custodian of the wild free roaming horses and burros to “manage” them, Congress intended to permit the animals’ custodian to subvert the primary policy of the statute by capturing and removing from the wild the very animals that Congress sought to protect from being captured and removed from the wild. Defendants argue that the horses will not be “eradicated” or “eliminated” inasmuch as BLM intends to continue to manage the horses not in the wild but through private adoption or long-term care.

…But BLM’s directive is ‘to protect and manage wild free-roaming horses and burros as components of the public lands . . . ‘ 16 U.S.C. § 1333(a) (emphasis added). Congress did not authorize BLM to ‘manage’ the wild horses by corralling them for private maintenance or long-term care as non-wild free-roaming animals off of the public lands. Upon removal for private adoption and/or long-term care, the West Douglas Herd would forever cease to be ‘wild free-roaming’ horses ‘as components of the public lands’ contrary to Congress’s intent to protect the horses from capture. Moreover, the statute expressly provides that BLM’s ‘management activities shall be at the minimal feasible level . . . .’

It is difficult to think of a ‘management activity’ that is farther from a ‘minimal feasible level’ than removal.”

As plaintiffs point out, holding wild horses in long term facilities as planned is not managing them to maintain free-roaming behavior or at the “minimal feasible level“. Also, WFRHBA is clear that ranges such as the Twin Peaks HMA that are designated for wild horses and burros are to be “devoted principally” to their welfare.

Plaintiffs then claim, “The roundup is illegal because it indiscriminately removes all horses, some of which will not be excess“. Under WFRHBA only “excess” horses are to be removed from the range. Plaintiffs say horses must be identified as “excess” while on the range. “It was Congress’ intention that the herds should be culled where the horses are found and only adoptable horses to be rounded up” . In the Calico case, the judge rejected a similar argument.

Relief requested

Plaintiffs ask the Court to enjoin BLM from moving the wild horses to facilities on land where they are not presently found such as in the midwest or East and from gelding stallions or administering anti-fertility drugs. Plaintiffs also ask the Court to enjoin the BLM from rounding up the Twin Peaks herd “until it has completed an Environmental Impact Statement and record of decision that is in accordance with the requirements of NEPA and the WFHBA”.

NEPA claims

One of plaintiffs’ complaints is that the assessment done by BLM is simply “incomprehensible”. Plaintiffs also say BLM has failed to:

analyze the direct, indirect and cumulative environmental impacts and adverse effects of the roundup on the captured horses, including, but not limited to, the health effects from the round-up; the physical and psychological effects of long distance transport and placement in an unnatural environment (i.e. Kansas plains v. Northern California high country) and being placed in captivity separated by sex and age; the physical, psychological and behavioral effects of utilizing anti-fertility drugs on the female horses to be released back onto the range, given that wild horses function in family bands with a Stallion, mare(s) and foals, and that under normal circumstances mares come into season and are bred only once per year with offspring being born in the spring; the physical, psychological and behavioral effects of returning a group of horses to the range which has an unnatural sex ratio (i.e., more stallions (108) than mares (72)) given that wild horses function in small family bands with one Stallion being paired with one or more mares; and the future direct and cumulative effects of immuno contraceptive application of the population’s immune system and viability.”

BLM’s “failure to take a hard look at the impacts and effects of the proposed action on the wild horses and burros, which are components of the range ecosystem and naturally function within that ecosystem in a particular way is arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion“.

Plaintiffs say BLM has also violated NEPA by failing to take a “hard look” at alternatives to a roundup, failing to disclose methodology, present hard data and ensure the “scientific accuracy and integrity” of its Environmental Assessment with regard to the appropriate management levels or AMLs necessary to maintain a thriving ecological balance in the Twin Peaks HMA, the alleged damage to the range and water sources, foaling rates and the effectiveness of fertility control treatments.

Plaintiffs say BLM has failed to respond to dissenting scientific opinion with regard to (a) foaling rates; (b) the adverse impacts of fertility control; (c) the actual effectiveness of fertility control drugs; and (d) killing or removal of mountain lions for cattle or sheep.

Indeed. BLM’s Environmental Assessments used to justify roundups of wild horses are typically cookie cutter based on long outdated data, if any. These EA’s typically point to unsubstantiated claims of “range degradation” and “lack of water” to eliminate wild horses and burros from the range, yet ignore the impact of the thousands of cattle and sheep that also graze there.

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34 replies »

  1. “Indeed. BLM’s Environmental Assessments used to justify roundups of wild horses are typically cookie cutter based on long outdated data, if any.” Ain’t that the truth, I don’t even bother to read over their listed excuses to terrorize and strip the range of horses, it’s just yada,yada, yada. I almost fell out of my chair sardonically laughing when I read that the judge believes (oh sorry I can’t even type it without laughing hysterically) that the horses are going to stroll on into those traps. One of these judges needs to make a road trip and see reality unfold before them. Of course it would have to be unannounced so that our favorite players in this continuing suspense story don’t stage the “gather”. Still looking for that honest judge, hmmm wonder what’s under this rock.

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  2. Click on to Laura’s website, ART AND HORSES, and watch the video. This is a real good example of our government at work.

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  3. The judge was satisfied with BLM’s precautions — and the round up horses will walk not run. Walk not run?! Uhmmm … that never happens.
    Any judge that is going to make any kind of decision about round ups needs to at least watch a video of how they work. It should be a prerequisite.

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    • Any judge that is going to make any kind of decision about round ups needs to at least watch a video of how they work. It should be a prerequisite.

      And isn’t there a way to select a judge that has SOME animal or horse experience. Its like asking a shot put-ter to judge a dressage test.

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  4. Honestly, does anyone really give a flying fig what the “Safari” anything thinks? They exist to kill things…not preserve them. It’s all about them! Hey ASSHATS…those equines have been there for hundreds of years peacefully coexisting in that ecosystem WITHOUT ANY HELP FOR YOU! Why are they are problem NOW?

    Once again, DOI/USDA are failing to meet the minimum standards of multiple use.

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  5. So the horses are to going to be walked into the traps? What if they decide that isn’t in their best interest, bolt, and scatter when they’re supposed to be to walking. I’d like to know who’s going to call that meeting to explain the procedure to the horses. Don’t think there’d be many in attendence.

    Will the Judas horse be walking?

    I can hear the herd buzz now, “Who’s that horse up ahead and why is he running? Is that Ol’ Fred? Kinda looks like Ol’ Fred. Wait a minute! Ol’ Fred told us when we saw one of those scary birds we should turn quick and run away. THAT’S NOT OL’ FRED! Come on gang, we’re gettin’ outta here!”

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  6. Yet another player. The canned hunters themselves the Safari Club. Unless it is to protect their hunting season, I cannot imagine any other interest they would have in the roundups. What a distinguished group of expert sportmen who heroically shoot tame elephants. I believe the going price is 35,000. This gets worse by the day. It will be interesting to see if the special interests of a few politically powerful so called hunters’ interests are given more weight than the wishes of so many Americans to protect our horses. How slow can a helicopter fly? I somehow cannot imagine it flying slowly behind a group opf gingerly walking horses. I wonder will it be a leaisurely walk or a working walk. Unfortunately, federal judges are political appointees and Presidents stack the courts. Perhaps even more unfortunate we seem to have an inept President ( I voted for him) who is either unwilling or unable to rid the country of past influences such as Dick Chenney a card carrying member of the Safari Club. The layers of corruption and judicial influence are amazing. Safari Club member Pa ex-governor Ridge. Homeand Security under Bush has resurfaced again. His public relations firm has been hired by Marcellus Shale people for a mere 75,000 a month to help with their promotion of fracking (extract natural gas) because the people of Pennsylvania have started to demand regulation of an industry that threatens our water supply. Ridge quit Homeliand security because he was not making enough money his words. I guess canned hunting is expensive. So as Winston Churchill once said : “We have established that you are a prostitute the only question that remains is your price.” Now we know how hopelessness the Native Americans must have felt in the face of the government backed steamroller that rolled over them through the subversion of justice and the law to take what the politically powerful wanted: their lives and their land. Unfortunately our wild horses are the current victim of greed based politics. They too are being driven from their land to die on their trail of tears and the survivors will be confined to reservations to suffer the same government imposed hardships experienced by the Native Americans. Just as Wounded Knee and the photo of Big Foot dead in the snow haunt our memories and forever challenge America’s claim to be a just society, so will the photos of the dead horses and little hoofless foals serve to remind of us of the unjust nature of a government that endorses greed over justice. This is very sad and disheartening. The BLM is as corrput as the Bureau of Indians Affairs.

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    • “…The canned hunters themselves the Safari Club…”

      PRICELESS!!! I forgot to employ the term “canned”. Well said Faith.

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  7. I think our Native Peoples should fall under Department of State. It is obscene that they are still under DOI like so much wildlife and natural resources. They should be respected as the independent Nations that they are. Anyone follow the Lacrosse debacle, passports for I believe it was for peoples of the Iroqouis a couple of weeks ago? It was insulting.

    I frankly think the equines should fall under Department of Justice, in the Federal Corrections system. I know it’s a stretch, but anything would be better than DOI or USDA. Create a jobs training program for certain felons with education opportunites, in the field experience, etc. and let them protect and manage the herds.

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    • We’re getting off-topic here, but I’m putting my two cents in anyway.

      I think the ENTIRE reservation system should be disbanded, the First Peoples should be GIVEN their rightful, treatied lands now held in “trust” by the feds.and the opportunity to expand those lands through whatever legal means available, including purchase. The Nations should be given the option of joining the states where their reservations are located or applying for fast-tracked statehood.

      The entire system is an open invitation to massive corruption. The transition would be painful at first (like Russia’s transition to so-called “democracy”), but don’t think it would take too long once the Nations realize the potential benefits of becoming a full partner in a country that has held them in limbo for so long.

      Right now the Navajo tribal council system is extremely corrupt and government payments (welfare) that are supposed to be distributed to the people literally disappear. Navajo young people are getting college educations and trying to bring their Nation into the modern age, but are being stifled because the tribe still bases it’s decisions on the traditional deference to the opinions of the “grandmothers and grandfathers”. MANY of the elders don’t speak or understand much English and are being manipulated not only by their tribal government, but also by their own families.

      The BIA records are so screwed up that nobody knows what legitimate extraction royalties have been lost over many years. The BIA website was shut down “for review and repair” a couple of years ago and the Nations had no access to monitor anything regarding their records for several months. Retroactive emergency payments were finally issued based on past records, but even so they were delayed to people who mainly live on “paycheck-to-paycheck” welfare.

      I came to these conclusions after research on the progression of treaties with the Navajo and I coud go on and on. FYI – while the tribes may have “soverign nation” status over their internal affairs, I found documents that continue to refer to them as “dependent states” on many issues.

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      • Okay, my three cents. In my opinion the Navajos or most Southwestern tribes would not currently be good candidates for managing wild horses (or any animals except sheep, goats and possibly cattle). Take a trip across the reseravation or the “checkerboards”. More skinny horses, dogs and cats than you can count. And that’s just by the roadsides and in towns – who knows what’s happening elsewhere.

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      • My point was I wouldn’t let DOI manage equines much more people. We’ve all seen how they manage oil wells. IOW, they aren’t very competent at nonliving things, much more living.

        Maybe I misunderstand, but I didn’t recommend that the Native Peoples manage wild equines. I suggested that they (the Natioons) should fall under Dept of State. I was grasping at some federal entity (Department of Justice) with regard to equines….anybody but DOI and USDA.

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    • These contractors also round-up wild horses on reservations. There they run FULL GALLOP and they even have loud speakers blasting war woops.

      Here is a youtube of a helicoptor stunt flyer named “Jason” (you can hear the radio) chasing wild horses on a reservation. prob. sent to slaughter these horses…note the man knocked down by the paniced herds.

      THIS IS THE WAY THE CONTRACTORS REALLY WORK WHEN NOT ON PUBLIC LANDS, NOT IN VIEW. horse lovers they say? BS, no horse lover does this to horses or humans

      http://il.youtube.com/watch?v=yrtIfcg-MTM&playnext=1&videos=SlyXUyZBaFI

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      • Laura, that video is one nasty piece of business. “No horses were harmed?” I find that nearly impossible to believe, especially with the babies. And I think those horses running along the cliff knew it was there. They tried to turn away when the helicopter drove them too close. I also thought I heard a gunshot toward the end when the black horse was leading the band away. Abuse with a capital “A”!!!

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  8. Safara…..geez don’t want it to interfere with hunting season. Run 2,000 Mustangs in this heat so not to interfere with the hunting season. Let’s see, I guess this division of Safari isn’t in it……got this from Wiki.:Safari Club International Foundation, the 501 (c) 3 branch of SCI, funds and manages worldwide programs dedicated to wildlife conservation, outdoor education and humanitarian services..Give me a break.

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  9. We need to get a list going of these judges, start going back over their decisions and looking for a pattern of decisions..turn that list over to a group of young hungry law students to pursue..Our courts are still full of political appointees from the bush administration, and last I heard repubs were holding up approval on appointing new federal judges…there was a big stink about that in the closing days of bush.

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    • Laura:

      With the current “balance” of the SC….I’m not sure we would want to go there. However, with the next appeal going to the Ninth Circuit (depending on results)…we very well might wind up there.

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  10. 35,000 DOLLARS??? No wonder the Safari Club is so interested in our public lands!
    I have an idea. How about they hunt each other. Now that would be sport.

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  11. Too funny, Louie!!
    Now just imagine using those bucks for something ethical and worthwhile. Money is wasted on the stupid sometimes.

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  12. Also, make note of Safari Club INTERNATIONAL. This is about U.S. public lands and our American Mustangs. U.S. stands for US, the AMERICAN, taxpaying citizens. “Internation anything” has no business in this decision.

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    • they just want to make sure people know they will kill anything anywhere on the planet..they are a world wide killing machine…perhaps we could suggest a tour of duty in Afganistan, and then they could try to shoot something that would shoot back..up the ante so to speak…I would pay just to watch those pantywaists

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      • I say get the contractors along the border and they can ‘work’ at the fence and fly around ‘hunting’ the poor people desperate to get out of mexico, along with all the non gov. public milita marching around there hunting humans.

        A lot of the horses shipped over the border into mexico could be a cover for gun running, money into mexico too. The slaughterhouses are right there, the human murder capitial in the entire world. Horse slaughter- right there in the center of the Drug Lords stronghold!

        How do we know some of these employees of the USA are not under control of some drug lord and made to ship guns/money along with groups of horses to wild to inspect?

        The horses are one of the largest ‘routine’ long term shipments over the mexican border.

        For our National security and to uncover how the hell mexico got 100 million american guns across the borders. I think theuy should take a good look at the blm, employees and the contractor and employees (and their private contacts)

        self regulated is NEVER good.

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  13. When are the mustangs going to catch a break in the court system? Wouldn’t it be great to get a judge who actually researches current public/political aspects of the matter being decided rather than accept into evidence the testimony of people with inherent interests like the Sierra group? How about a judge who doesn’t appreciate being lied to and has the courage to act, or one that would even charge BLM with perjury and obstructing justice. But no, we’re living in an age when it’s acceptable for the Secy of DOI to forge court documents in an attempt to gain the oil moratorium. No one batted an eye! Had it worked, Obama would have declared another “win.” WHAT can America expect from the bureaus under Salazar’s direction but to follow this direction? WHAT can America expect when we have presidents who behave in this manner? I keep hoping we will get an old school judge that “has a set” but are there any left?

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    • It is not up to a judge to do research. It is up to good lawyers to put everything in front of him he needs to make an informed decision.

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      • Just a thought. No matter how well you put your case together–if the judge doesn’t read ALL the material and digest it BEFORE he makes a ruling–he’s always gonna rule on the side of the government!

        He could lose his job. Yikes!

        If roundups HAVE to be done (and by God I don’t believe they do) BLM should work out some kind of rotation deal. Only round up between 3rd week of Sept to mid Nov. Hunting season that year will just have to wait til the following year. Hunters can wait. They’ll know in advance that they won’t be able to hunt like Tuscarora (example) in which years.

        If a VALID emergency arises (Tuscarora was NOT an emergency) then BLM can cheerfully and without lying about it say so. They would be so truthful that they would even let HUMANE OBSERVERS OUT THERE! Egads

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  14. I am going to assume that when they filed this case to begin with, they pulled these roundup videos off of y-tube took a monitor and allowed the judge to view them whilst describing to him what was happening..show him the calico video and how those horses were heaving and sweating in the dead of winter, drawn up and dehydrated and suffered greatly from the after effects, and do to the very nature of animals and the way the helicopter pressures them they are not going to walk or trot unless they are at deaths door already.

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