| For Immediate Release,  August 1, 2018  
                            
                              | Contacts: | Tanya Sanerib, Center  for Biological Diversity, (206) 379-7363, [email protected] Charisma Troiano, Democracy  Forward, (202) 701-1781, [email protected]
 Kirsten Peek, Humane  Society of the United States and Humane Society International, (202) 744-3875, [email protected]
 Lisa Caruso, Natural  Resources Defense Council, (202) 717-8286, [email protected]
 |  Lawsuit Challenges Trump Administration's Trophy  Hunting Council Interior  Secretary Zinke Illegally Stacked Panel With Insiders Who Profit From Hunting  Imperiled Animals  WASHINGTON— Conservation  and animal protection groups sued the Trump administration today for illegally  establishing the “International Wildlife Conservation Council,” an advisory  panel stacked with people who have personal or financial interests in killing  or importing rare or endangered animals from overseas. Federal law requires  government advisory panels to be balanced and not improperly influenced by  special interests.  Today’s lawsuit was  filed in U.S. District Court by Democracy Forward on behalf of the Natural  Resources Defense Council, the Center for Biological Diversity, the Humane  Society of the United States and Humane Society International. It asserts that  Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service flagrantly  violated federal law by appointing a council packed with trophy hunters,  firearm executives and representatives of businesses with close ties to the  Trump administration. “Elephants, rhinos, and  lions face enough threats without the U.S. government giving the cover of  credibility to trophy hunters peddling the self-serving notion that killing  endangered species constitutes a legitimate strategy for conserving them,” said  Natural Resources Defense Council senior attorney Zak Smith. “If we have to sue  to get our government to listen to wildlife conservation experts, we’re happy  to do so.” Smith is also director of NRDC’s Wildlife Trade Initiative.  The IWCC is designed to  promote the “removal of  barriers” to trophy imports. Zinke has refused to include conservation  experts on the council, instead selecting trophy hunters and representatives of  financially conflicted business interests. Four of the 17 council members had signed on to host a “Camouflage and Cufflinks” inaugural ball last year, soliciting millions  of dollars in campaign contributions.   “Zinke’s thrill-kill  council is unethical and illegal, and apparently that’s just fine with him,”  said Tanya Sanerib, international  program legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “These  people kill imperiled animals for fun. They have no business making policy  decisions about wildlife imports and we’re hopeful that the courts will agree.”  Trump called big game  hunting a “horror show” in 2017, just weeks after his Fish and Wildlife  Service abandoned an Obama-era ban on importing elephant trophies and sanctioned  the hunting of lions in several countries. According to a Humane Society International report, trophy hunting has caused the slaughter of  hundreds of thousands of animals since 2005.  “The public’s interest  is not served by using taxpayer dollars to host meetings of wealthy trophy  hunters to hatch plans to minimize governmental oversight of their unethical  hobby,” said Anna Frostic, managing wildlife attorney for the Humane Society of  the United States. “The Department of the Interior has failed to provide a  rational justification for establishing the IWCC, and we are asking the federal  court to revoke the council’s charter.”  “By establishing a  council with the sole purpose of promoting the overseas  hobby of trophy hunting,  Secretary Zinke is breaking the law,” said Democracy Forward executive director  Anne Harkavy. “Contrary to the committee’s own name, Secretary Zinke has failed  to include any conservation biologists or others with expertise in advising on  wildlife conservation policy.” |