Texarkana Gazette

Wildlife officials failed to capture wild turkeys before attack on Sacramento delivery driver

- CHRISTIAN MARTINEZ LOS ANGELES TIMES (TNS)

Last winter, a mail carrier was making deliveries in the Arden-arcade neighborho­od of Sacramento, California, when he was attacked by a “particular­ly aggressive” and “massive” male turkey.

The carrier, who was armed with some kind of stick, hit the turkey, killing it, California Department of Fish and Wildlife officials said.

There was reason to suspect that someone was feeding the neighborho­od’s wild turkeys, which began attacking drivers and disrupting deliveries from the U.S. Postal Service, Fedex, Amazon, UPS and other carriers.

“I’ve been around about 25 years, so I kind of know turkeys,” Capt. Patrick Foy, a spokesman for the department’s Law Enforcemen­t Division, said in an interview with the Los Angeles Times. “And I just looked at it, and I’m like, ‘Oh, this is the biggest turkey I’ve ever seen.’”

The incident in late February was the culminatio­n of a conflict that had been bubbling for months between the turkeys and delivery drivers. Internal documents and videos obtained by T he Sacramento Bee show that wildlife officials attempted to intervene for months before the incident but were unsuccessf­ul.

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service was called to capture the wild birds. An agent “searched for the birds on at least 2 occasions in early January but could not locate the offenders,” the Fish and Wildlife Department said in internal documents.

Since the incident with the mail carrier, wildlife officials have determined that a neighbor had been providing the turkeys with “copious quantities” of food, Foy told The Times.

“It probably contribute­d to the massive size of the turkey in question, because it was eating just an unlimited amount of food every day from this particular household,” Foy said shortly after the incident. “We are addressing that issue as a major contributi­ng factor to this overall problem.”

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife reportedly began receiving calls about turkey attacks on mail carriers in October 2021. Officials advised against feeding the birds and suggested using tools such as an open umbrella to chase them away, the Bee reported.

“By mid-october, it was evident that the birds were not responding to normal ‘shooing away’ and one of the mail carriers was injured on his hand,” the agency said in a report obtained by the Bee.

The agency sent members of its Human-wildlife Conflict team to the neighborho­od to investigat­e. Investigat­ors, seen in videos shot by Foy, could walk right up to the turkeys, causing them to move away, but the birds were seen chasing a mail truck down the street, the Bee reported. One video obtained by the Bee shows two turkeys pecking and gobbling at a USPS truck while ignoring law enforcemen­t and passersby.

The Human-wildlife Contact team then got permission to conduct an operation: kill up to four of the birds. But the wily birds escaped wildlife personnel. Two “capture operations in late October and early December were unsuccessf­ul as the birds ran away from staff,” the report said. So far, no turkeys have been captured or killed.

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