This December 2017 remote camera file photo provided by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife shows the breeding female of the Walla Walla Pack in northern Oregon’s Umatilla County. A Washington state judge rejected efforts Friday to temporarily block the killing of wolves that are preying on livestock in Ferry County. (Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife via AP)

This December 2017 remote camera file photo provided by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife shows the breeding female of the Walla Walla Pack in northern Oregon’s Umatilla County. A Washington state judge rejected efforts Friday to temporarily block the killing of wolves that are preying on livestock in Ferry County. (Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife via AP)

Judge rejects effort to temporarily halt killing of wolves

  • By Nicholas K. Geranois The Associated Press
  • Monday, September 17, 2018 2:49pm
  • News

By Nicholas K. Geranois

The Associated Press

SPOKANE — A Thurston County Superior Court judge has rejected efforts to temporarily block the killing of wolves that are preying on livestock in Ferry County.

Judge Carol Murphy on Friday turned down a request from a conservation group for a temporary restraining order to block the killing.

The Center for Biological Diversity contended that killing wolves ignores science, causes long-term environmental harm and goes against the wishes of the great majority of state residents.

“We’re disappointed this kill order remains in place but we’re hopeful the courts will eventually stop this tragic string of state-sanctioned wolf killings,” said Amaroq Weiss, wolf advocate for the center.

She said Washington state had a “trigger-happy approach to wolf management.”

It was not immediately clear when the wolf hunts would begin.

The state Department of Fish and Wildlife on Wednesday approved killing one or more members of a new wolf pack that had attacked cattle near the Canadian border in northeast Washington. Wolves had killed a calf and injured five others on federal grazing land in Ferry County since Sept. 4, the agency said.

The new wolf pack has been dubbed the Old Profanity Territory Pack because the attacks occurred in an area once occupied by the Profanity Peak pack. The Profanity Peak pack was killed by the state in 2016 for preying on cattle.

Wolves were killed off in Washington early in the last century. But the animals started returning to the state early in this century from Idaho and Canada. There are at least 122 wolves in 22 packs in the state, according to the latest annual survey.

The agency contends that killing off some or all of the new pack will not harm recovery efforts.

Wolves are protected as an endangered species throughout the state. But a protocol developed by the agency and others to reduce conflicts between wolves and livestock allows the state to kill wolves if officials confirm a certain number of livestock attacks within a certain time period.

The state has killed a total of 19 wolves in recent years, including a member of the Togo pack earlier this month.

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