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slaughter of sled dogs in Canada
#1
what a horror. i have read some detailed reports that would choke you.
how could they?? i hope they are punished to the fullest extent possible.

Report: 100 sled dogs killed after business slows

Associated Press Reporting
An organization that fights animal abuse is calling the slaughter of 100 sled dogs by an outdoor adventure company in British Columbia a bloodbath and police are investigating.

The British Columbia SPCA's manager of animal cruelty investigations said Monday an Outdoor Adventures Whistler employee was told to cull the dogs.

Marcie Moriarty says some dogs were shot, while others' throats were slit before their bodies were pitched into a mass grave.

Vancouver radio station CKNW radio is reporting that the company expected more sledding business in an anticipated post-Olympics tourism boom. But the boom never materialized and the Associated Press now reports that the sled dogs were killed last April.

Outdoor Adventures Whistler couldn't be reached for comment.


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#2
their website:
http://www.adventureswhistler.com/dogsled-tours

21

AP
VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- An organization that fights animal abuse called the slaughter of about 100 sled dogs, some badly maimed and writhing in pain, by an outdoor adventure company in British Columbia a bloodbath, and police are investigating.

The gruesome event was described in documents awarding compensation to a worker who claimed post-traumatic stress disorder for having to shoot the dogs after bookings dropped sharply for a tour operator following the 2010 Winter Olympics.

Marcie Moriarty, general manager of cruelty investigations for the B.C. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said the incident left her sickened and said it is the worst investigation she's ever done.

Both the British Columbia SPCA and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are investigating the slaughter.

Moriarty said some of the dogs were shot in the head, but others clearly suffered and did not die instantly. Moriarty said documents describe the man not killing a dog with one shot and the animal running away "with a face blown off and an eye hanging out."
"He had to chase her down and finish her off," Moriarty said.
Moriarty said all the other dogs would have seen it.

"There aren't words to really describe some of the ways these dogs died," she said. "We don't put cows down like that. Slaughterhouses have very strict rules for how supposed culling takes place. This violated every one of them."
An employee of Outdoor Adventures Whistler was awarded compensation in a ruling by WorkSafe BC, the provincial body that manages workers' compensation claims. Outdoor Adventures did not contest the man's compensation claims.

The WorkSafe documents are confidential, but Moriarty has read them as part of the society's investigation.

The WorkSafe documents were obtained by radio station CKNW. The station reported the man was attacked at least twice by nearby dogs as the shootings occurred. He was forced to slit the throat of one animal who jumped on top of him.

The name of the man who killed the dogs has not been released, but his lawyer, Cory Steinberg, told CKNW that it was "the worst experience (the man) could ever have imagined."

The documents reveal bookings for dog sled tours collapsed after the Olympics, and when the company could not find homes for its animals, it ordered the cull. The dogs, which were part of a pack of 300, were shot over two days last April.

"He was essentially told to figure out a way to make (the business) more cost-effective. They just had to have less dogs. So he did everything he could finding homes for them, having them adopted, every which way that he could," Steinberg said Monday.

















































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#3


So many people would have loved to give them a home.

I wouldn't be opposed to some groups of people being "culled".
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#4
my Dad had 2 malamutes, Fritz and Brandy. they were so beautiful and loving. god how they loved my kids to throw snowballs for them, they reveled in the snow and played like children.

this is a horror story indeed.


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#5
Growing up, I had a husky/wolf hybrid named Czar Ivan the Terrible. He had been part of a sled dog team when he was young. Other than the difficulty walking a dog bred to pull, he was a wonderful dog. Why didn't this company go to the media with their problem of too many dogs ??? I would bet people would've been lined up to adopt these wonderful animals. Yes Duchess, a lot of people deserve to be culled, starting with people who slaughter dogs !!!
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