The Mercury News

Wildlife official resigns after killing family of baboons

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BOISE, IDAHO >> A top Idaho wildlife official has resigned amid outrage over a photo of him posing with a baboon family he killed during a hunting trip in Africa, ending days of turmoil for a state where big game hunting is popular but critics said the photo was seen as unsportsma­nlike by hunting enthusiast­s.

Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter said in a statement that he asked for and accepted Blake Fischer’s resignatio­n on Monday, three days after the Idaho Statesman newspaper published the first report about a photo of Fischer smiling with four dead baboons propped in front of him.

The photo and others of Fischer and his wife shooting at least 14 animals in Namibia were accompanie­d by descriptio­ns in an email that Fischer sent to more than 100 recipients. Fischer has said he did nothing illegal, unethical or immoral.

He didn’t apologize for killing the baboons but said in his resignatio­n to Otter that he “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.”

The baboon family photo showed blood visible on the abdomen of the smallest baboon, its head lolling back to rest on the chest of one of the dead adult baboons. Fischer killed them using a bow and arrows, visible in the bottom of the picture.

It drew condemnati­on from Idaho hunters, including Otter, who is 76.

“I would never have done that, and I would never encourage anybody to do that,” Otter told The Associated Press in an interview.

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