It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources charged Deyo in January with two counts of possessing wild animals — a count for the two deer and another count for the raccoons. It’s a fourth-degree misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail and a $250 fine on each count.
“I’ll go to jail,” Deyo said. “I’ll pay the fines. Just don’t destroy these animals.”
But if she’s convicted, that’s the likely outcome. The deer aren’t able to live on their own in the wild; all they’ve known is human care.
Link
“The law is crystal clear, and this is a clear violation. Period,” said Mount Vernon Law Director Chip McConville, who is prosecuting the case. “If we start letting people take animals out of the wild, it would set a terrible precedent.”
Originally posted by iunlimited491
Carol Deyo, a former veterinary technician - cares for rescued 'wild' animals on her farm in Ohio. Along with your average barnyard horses and pigs, you'll find two adult deer and four racoons.
Former vet tech faces fine, jail for saving raccoons, deer
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources charged Deyo in January with two counts of possessing wild animals — a count for the two deer and another count for the raccoons. It’s a fourth-degree misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail and a $250 fine on each count.
But here's what gets me, and I couldn't agree more with her sentiment:
“I’ll go to jail,” Deyo said. “I’ll pay the fines. Just don’t destroy these animals.”
But if she’s convicted, that’s the likely outcome. The deer aren’t able to live on their own in the wild; all they’ve known is human care.
Brought on by an anonymous complaint; (some whiny scumbag)
The Division of Wildlife appeared at Deyo’s door in November.
Link
“The law is crystal clear, and this is a clear violation. Period,” said Mount Vernon Law Director Chip McConville, who is prosecuting the case. “If we start letting people take animals out of the wild, it would set a terrible precedent.”
It pisses me off when people can't mind their own business, and always need something to complain about. Now, these innocent animals are the ones who have to pay the price. If this women is forced to forfeit them and do jailtime, I hope an agreement can be made to guarantee their future. - and I hope the 'anonymous' complainant gets hit by a bus.
I wish Carol Deyo and her pets, all the Best.
Originally posted by Hushabye
Why hasn't some one pointed out the fact that these "wild animals" are not, in fact, '"wild" at all? They've only known human companionship...therefore they're 'tame,' and not 'wild.'
What a bunch of scum. My heart breaks more and more every day. I'm amazed I've got anything left.
Originally posted by TheIceQueen
As for the woman, I don't really think that a sane person would live in their house with a 300 pound deer and a band of racoons that are destined to be in the wild.. So, in my opinion that's a bit err, nutty, unless this woman rescued them at birth and was helping them rehabilitate and so on.. No sane person would live with an undomesticated 300 pound deer and pack of racoons unless it is due to those circumstances, point blank.
Deyo’s collection began with a raccoon, found by a neighbor, barely days old beside its dead mother. Deyo bottle-fed it to health. Another followed shortly thereafter.
The first deer came in April 2011. Deyo’s boyfriend was cutting hay, and a doe leapt out of the mower’s path. Deyo later found a fawn, just a couple of days old, where the doe had flushed. The mower had sliced off the fawn’s right hind leg and splayed open its stomach.
“Our first inclination was to put him down,” Deyo said. “But we couldn’t pull the trigger. He had a will to live. You could see it. He was licking our hands, sucking our fingers.”
Deyo stitched the wound with a thread of horse tail. “Within two days he was up chasing the cats,” she said. She named him Trooper.
--
Fifteen months later, two men brought Deyo a fawn they had found under a car in a parking lot in Mount Vernon. “He was severely dehydrated and started seizing when he got here,” she said. “It was obvious he’d been hit.”
She named him Patch.