| For  Immediate Release, August 20, 2018 Lawsuit Seeks Emergency  Halt of Washington's Kill Order for Wolf Pack OLYMPIA, Wash.— Two conservation groups filed an  emergency lawsuit today seeking a temporary restraining order to stop  Washington wildlife officials from carrying out a kill order for the Togo wolf pack  in Ferry County. The decision, issued today, orders the death of the collared,  black-male adult from the pack and holds open the possibility for killing  additional pack members. The Togo pack consists of only two confirmed adults  plus an unknown number of pups. Today’s  suit was filed on behalf of the Center for Biological Diversity and Cascadia  Wildlands. It asserts that the agency’s order to kill wolves from the Togo pack  in northeastern Washington relied upon a faulty protocol and failed to undergo  required environmental analysis. The suit was filed in Superior Court of  Washington for Thurston County.  “It’s  outrageous that Washington wildlife officials want to kill more wolves from the  state’s small and recovering wolf population,” said Amaroq Weiss, the Center’s West  Coast wolf advocate. “Washingtonians overwhelmingly want wolves recovered, and  current science says that killing wolves to prevent conflict is  counterproductive. This isn’t the Old West anymore.” Since  2012 the state has killed 18 state-endangered wolves, nearly 15 percent of the  state’s current confirmed population of 122. Of those 15 were killed on behalf  of the same livestock owner. Those kills have now led to the eradication of  three entire wolf packs, including the Sherman pack last year, Profanity Peak  pack in 2016 and Wedge pack in 2012.  “The  state should not take actions against the public’s wildlife that are counter to  best available science nor should it be violating state laws to craft protocols  giving itself permission to take these ill-advised actions,” said Nick Cady,  legal director at Cascadia Wildlands. “Wolves are part of Washington’s wildlife  heritage, and agency management of these magnificent animals should be based on  science, follow the law and allow for full public input.” BackgroundIn June 2017  state Fish and Wildlife officials adopted a revised “wolf-livestock interaction  protocol” for determining when to kill wolves in response to livestock  conflicts. The protocol allowed the state to kill wolves more quickly than in  prior years. It was adopted without any public input or environmental review,  in violation of the state’s Environmental Policy and Administrative Procedure acts.  That summer and fall, the department issued kill orders on the Smackout and  Sherman packs and killed wolves from both packs. The Center and Cascadia  Wildlands sued the state in September over its kill operation on the Sherman  pack.
 A May  2018 court ruling held that the 2017 lawsuit was moot because the court had  already destroyed the Sherman pack, so the court could not provide plaintiffs  with a remedy. However, in its ruling, the court also noted that the plaintiffs’  issues were of significant public interest and required the department to  provide eight hours’ public notice of the intention to start any new kill  operation. This notice requirement was meant to allow plaintiffs or any other  members of the public sufficient time to seek a temporary restraining order to  prevent future kill operations. Washington’s wolves were driven to  extinction in the early 1900s by a government-sponsored eradication program on  behalf of the livestock industry. The animals began to return from neighboring  Idaho and British Columbia in the early 2000s, and their population had grown  to 22 confirmed packs by the end of 2017.  But wolf recovery in Washington is still  a work in progress. Wolves remain absent from large areas of the state, and  although the population has been growing, it remains small and vulnerable.  Plaintiffs are represented in the case by attorneys from  the law firm Lane Powell.  The Center for Biological Diversity  is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.6 million  members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species  and wild places. Recognizing  the ecological importance of wolves, bears and other carnivores, the Center  uses science-based advocacy to defend these magnificent animals from  persecution, exploitation and extinction. Find out more about our Carnivore  Conservation campaign. Cascadia Wildlands educates, agitates, and  inspires a movement to protect and restore Cascadia's wild ecosystems. We  envision vast old-growth forests, rivers full of wild salmon, wolves howling in the backcountry, and vibrant communities sustained by the unique  landscapes of the Cascadia bioregion.						   |