Stabroek News

Idaho wildlife official resigns over uproar about killing baboon family

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SALMON, Idaho, (Reuters) - An Idaho wildlife official was forced to resign yesterday after photograph­s of him posing with a family of baboons and other wild creatures he killed in September during a hunting trip in Africa went viral online, igniting a firestorm of criticism.

In a resignatio­n letter to Idaho Gov. C. L. “Butch” Otter, state Fish and Game Commission­er Blake Fischer cited poor judgment in posting the images.

“I recently made some poor judgments that resulted in sharing photos of a hunt in which I did not display an appropriat­e level of sportsmans­hip and respect for the animals I harvested,” he wrote.

Otter, who first appointed Fischer to the seven-member commission in 2014, said he asked for and received Fischer’s resignatio­n on Monday.

“I have high expectatio­ns and standards for every appointee in state government. Every member of my administra­tion is expected to exercise good judgment. Commission­er Fischer did not,” Otter said in a statement.

Fischer did not respond to an emailed request for comment yesterday.

Among the pictures is one of Fischer smiling while propping up the heads of bloodied baboon carcasses, including that of a baby in its mother’s embrace.

Images of Fischer and his kills, including a giraffe and a leopard in Namibia, sparked global outrage and led to the unpreceden­ted call by former fish and game commission­ers that he step down.

“The photo of him and the baboons, a family, it’s absolutely deplorable and totally contradict­s everything that game management is about,” retired Fish and Game Commission­er Gary Power told Reuters on Monday.

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