iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Pete The Moose Dead Since September, Park Owner Admits Covering Up Death

Pete The Moose

10/15/11 05:29 PM ET   AP

IRASBURG, Vt. -- The owner of the game park where Pete the Moose lived has taken responsibility for covering up the death of Vermont's favorite animal, the state's fish and wildlife commissioner said Saturday.

Pete, whose life in captivity helped prompt the state to pass new wildlife laws and who received a gubernatorial pardon last winter, died in early September at the Big Rack Ridge in Irasburg while being tranquilized during hoof trimming. But state officials insisted he was alive until Friday, even issuing a photo taken Thursday of a moose it identified as Pete.

The moose in the picture turned out to be a different animal, prompting Pete's Facebook fans to start accusing the state of a cover-up. But Commissioner Patrick Berry said park owner Doug Nelson has since admitted that he delayed telling state officials about Pete's death.

"I did talk to the Nelsons yesterday evening and expressed my frustration with what had happened, and I was happy that they decided to take ownership of the issue," Berry told The Associated Press. "The whole issue of Pete the Moose has been such a lightning rod, my guess is they were just concerned about what would happen (if word got out about the death)."

Nelson didn't return a call seeking comment Saturday. But his son, Richard Nelson, told WCAX-TV that the family misled the state.

"The blame goes to us," he said. "We're the ones that didn't say Pete died."

"We said we would take care of Pete, and then a few weeks later, geez, Pete died," he said. "And so we were mortified, and we said, `Oh, we'll just sit on this one.'"

Pete, who was adopted as a calf after dogs attacked his mother and a sibling, rose to fame in 2009, when state officials said they didn't want native wild animals mixing with the elk at the game preserve, out of fear that chronic wasting disease could spread to the native animals. Animals other than elk on the preserve were ordered hunted and killed, but after a public outcry, lawmakers crafted a compromise.

In it, the animals at the Big Rack Ridge preserve were designated a "special purpose herd," oversight of which was transferred from Fish and Wildlife to the state Agency of Agriculture. That meant that preserve owner Doug Nelson owned the animals.

But lawmakers reversed themselves earlier this year, saying wild animals in the state can't be privately owned and are legally a public trust, owned by all Vermonters. Under that legislation, the native deer were ordered removed within three years, but Pete was allowed to stay.

Berry said it was "tremendously frustrating" to have been accused by Pete's fans of causing or covering up Pete's death.

"Most of the people who have been fans of Pete the Moose have never fully understood the story," he said. "It's not a good idea to trap wildlife behind a fence and feed them beer and doughnuts. This is a good example of what happens when you don't keep wildlife wild."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

IRASBURG, Vt. -- The owner of the game park where Pete the Moose lived has taken responsibility for covering up the death of Vermont's favorite animal, the state's fish and wildlife commissioner said ...
IRASBURG, Vt. -- The owner of the game park where Pete the Moose lived has taken responsibility for covering up the death of Vermont's favorite animal, the state's fish and wildlife commissioner said ...
Filed by Joanna Zelman  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 192
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (6 total)
04:56 PM on 10/19/2011
The reality of this case is that the F&W people were clearly focused on killing Pete, and now they are exasperated by our efforts to save Pete and now get answers. They didn't think we would stick up for a moose. Just a "silly" moose. But Pete was special. So the F&W, without basis, claimed he had Chronic Wasting Disease. Want to hear a good part of this story? No body has been recovered to test Pete for the disease - conveniently! Pete did not drink beer, as has been reported, but he did love his Snicker bars, his homemade jelly donuts and listening to Bob Dylan. His best friend was a retired hunter named Dave who is devastated by this loss. This is not a political statement, nor is it about politics. It is about doing what is right and sticking up for an underdog who cannot stick up for himself. Even if it is a "silly" moose. There was no place for Pete to go when he was abandoned by his mother just HOURS old. The F&W commissioner told some friends of mine, who found him crying, for food and his mother, in their back yard, "Let him be (die)". They did the right thing. Pete's 15k FB fans did the right thing in saving his life and getting policy changed. National news organizations all did the right thing about reporting on a few of us doing the right thing for a moose named Pete.
04:55 PM on 10/19/2011
I am deeply familiar with this case. And yes, Pete had had to have his hooves clipped, and it wasn't the first time. Apparently, when a moose eats corn the hooves can become a problem and the moose will have trouble walking. That being said, Doug did not have a vet do this and if not trained you can either a. give too much medication (like we suspect in this case), b. and or, if you don't have the head of the moose in a certain way the moose can essentially crush its own esophagus.
photo
IrieMoon
Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos.
12:47 PM on 10/18/2011
http://albany.kval.com/

Apparently the dog is on death row because the bite required stitches. It doesn't say if the child was annoying the dog (chances are great that this is the case) but apparently even if the dog was only defending itself it would still be put to death because the wound required stitches.

I'm with most of you on this.....run Blue...RUN!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Fodder-wing
Perspective is everything.....
03:12 PM on 10/18/2011
Tread lightly. You have slipped the surly bonds and quietly awakened in an alternative HuffPost. Peace
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cailleach Echo
12:04 PM on 10/17/2011
Sounds like Arizona. Their Game & Fish keep snaring leopards to "study" them but every single one has died while in their "care". Not surprisingly, they've hung it on environmentalists but the truth got out anyway.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chad Wheeler
02:00 PM on 10/17/2011
Leopards? Arizona leopards?
03:52 PM on 10/17/2011
Probably mean cougars.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EmpressT
11:07 AM on 10/17/2011
Hoof Trimming??????? Since when does a wild animal need hoof trimming? You know when I read the head line I knew that people murdered this animal. Hoof Trimming sounds like its made up BS to me.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chad Wheeler
02:02 PM on 10/17/2011
How do you think the animal died? And why is it so odd that a wild animal that is technically cared for by people would receive veterinary care that a truly wild animal wouldn't?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EmpressT
06:36 PM on 10/17/2011
Well since you did asked so sweetly.... I suspect the animal was over tranquilized. Also I have done some research since my earlier post and not one of these professional hoof trimmers have ever heard of a Moose needing their hooves trimmed. They suggest possibly this moose had an injury that needed medical attention. The article states that this moose was having a hoof trimming NOT an injury that needed medical treatment.
The point is this reserve covered up the death of this animal... why cover up anything if it was an innocent accident.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hillary Wentz
11:02 AM on 10/17/2011
Way to not take responsibility. And why did a wild animal need hoof trimmings?
10:35 AM on 10/17/2011
Has anybody invited Rocky to the Barbacue !!!~~~~
photo
phdpamela
Make it a great day!
09:34 AM on 10/17/2011
If he was kept properly, he wouldn't have needed a "hoof trimming". You people make me sick.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
10:41 AM on 10/17/2011
I have to ask, and I am not trying to be a smarty, but what is proper care?
photo
phdpamela
Make it a great day!
10:33 PM on 10/17/2011
The hoof is a toe nail. Like horses, normally kept in small stall or pasture without rocks etc., always need their hooves trimmed. Where as wild horses never do. Horses are used to having their hooves trimmed. Moose obviously are not. So, I am saying, if the Moose had his "normal" terrain, he wouldn't have needed a trim/tranquilizer.
05:10 AM on 10/17/2011
did they have moose burgers and a big party?
04:54 AM on 10/17/2011
R I P Pete.
01:35 AM on 10/17/2011
Oh dear! I mean moose. Is this for real? Can we eat this thing so it doesn't go to waste?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
01:25 AM on 10/17/2011
This isn't a feel good story. Both moose and elk are biological diversity, the creators and guardians of Earth or Earth's physical, life giving body, ecosystems. That man so terrorizes, brutalizes and abuses the wild species, in the eco-nomics of all life, speaks of man's ignorance and cruelty of the animals no humane society protects. The animals in the eco-nomics of oxygen, fresh water, man's foods, the atmosphere and the life zone of Earth, her biosphere, the animals that spell life on Earth.

The tragedy is, so few, comprehend, that moose and elk are man's best friends because they are in the economics of the existence of Earth.

Farewell, dear Pete, and thank you.
10:20 PM on 10/16/2011
If you seriously found a way to turn a story about a dead moose into an excuse to spew political garbage, please seek the help you need now.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
05:03 PM on 10/16/2011
what do elk who don't have healthcare for tranquilized foot trimmings do?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan Legge
10:23 PM on 10/16/2011
They would have been covered by Obama care if those gosh darn tea partyers didn't mess it up.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
blurredmolly
Ipswich, Mass. 1641
10:43 AM on 10/17/2011
maybe you could qualify for a brain transplant, or maybe a swap.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rcarol
04:41 PM on 10/16/2011
I wonder if Dr. Conrad Murray administered the tranquilizer.