Los Angeles Times

Reward offered in killings of 42 burros in the Mojave

- By Louis Sahagun

More than 40 wild burros have been found shot and killed along Interstate 15 near the Nevada state line, federal officials said Friday, and they’ve offered a reward of up to $18,000 for informatio­n leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsibl­e.

It is one of the largest killings of its kind on public land managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in Southern California, officials said.

A total of 42 wild burro carcasses with gunshot wounds have been found near the freeway through the Clark Mountain Herd Area managed by the Needles field office of the BLM.

“We will pursue every lead until we’ve arrested and prosecuted those responsibl­e for these cruel, savage deaths,” said William Perry Pendley, the BLM’s deputy director for policy and programs, “and we welcome the public’s help to bring the perpetrato­r or perpetrato­rs to justice.”

Details about the investigat­ion were scarce. BLM officials said the burros, including several juveniles, were shot in the neck with a rifle. Some were brought down while drinking water in the Halloran Springs area.

Animal protection organizati­ons said they were outraged and have contribute­d thousands of dollars to the reward.

“It’s a travesty that these animals would be gunned down,” said Grace Kuhn, spokeswoma­n for the nonprofit American Wild Horse Campaign.

Neda DeMayo, president of the nonprofit Return to Freedom, said: “I’ve been told that at least one of the burros was still alive when it was discovered by a passerby. But it succumbed to its injuries by the time BLM investigat­ors arrived on the scene.”

“It’s all so unbelievab­le,” she added. “Crazy. Hostile. Cruel.”

Burros were never native to the West’s deserts, but they became some its most valued resources: surefooted in rugged terrain, capable of carrying heavy loads long distances, and withstandi­ng extremes in temperatur­es of cold and heat.

In the 1920s and ’30s, they were turned loose and replaced by Model-A Fords and other vehicles. They have multiplied without restraint and with few predators to check their numbers.

With population­s that doubled every four to five years, survived by feeding on the sage and wild growth of the Mojave Desert.

By the 1950s, wanton slaughter of wild burros in California’s desert and mountains had reached such proportion­s that the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals pressed for legislatio­n to protect the creatures from triggerhap­py hunters.

One killing ground was Homewood Canyon, near Trona, about 240 miles northeast of Los Angeles, where SPCA officials in 1953 reported a shocking scene: In a 50-acre area, they found 50 burro carcasses. Only a few had bullet holes in the head, indicating that most had been left wounded where they fell.

Today, the animals are protected from capture, branding, harassment or death under the Wild FreeRoamin­g Horses and Burros Act of 1971, which considers them an integral part of the natural system of public lands managed by the BLM.

Violations of the act are subject to a fine of up to $2,000 or imprisonme­nt for up to one year, or both, for each count charged.

Anyone with informatio­n about this incident is asked to call the WeTip hotline at (800) 782-7463 or visit wetip.com.

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