Friends of Animals
(FOA)
May 2015
Contact Governor Bill Haslam and tell him to put a moratorium on animal killing contests until the legislature can debate and consider a ban of animal killing contests in Tennessee. (FoA supports similar legislation was introduced in New York.)
“Giggin for Grads” allows participants to go out at night and stab frogs with a sharp, long weapon or pitchfork—a deranged form of hunting called “gigging.” Whoever has the heaviest bag of dead frogs wins the scholarship.
Residents should be able to weigh in on animal cruelty issues in their
state. Please forward to anyone you know who lives in Tennessee.
Governor Bill Haslam
1st Floor, State Capitol
Nashville, TN 37243
phone (615) 741-2001
[email protected]
Because there are no laws in Tennessee protecting amphibians or reptiles
from heinous killing contests, the DeKalb County Young Farmers and Ranchers
are once again encouraging their peers to murder hundreds of frogs in the
name of a fundraiser to create an agricultural scholarship for a DeKalb
County student.
“Giggin for Grads” allows participants to go out at night and stab frogs
with a sharp, long weapon or pitchfork—a deranged form of hunting called
“gigging.” Whoever has the heaviest bag of dead frogs wins the scholarship.
Kirk Miles, the wildlife program manager for Tennessee’s Wildlife Resources
Management Agency in DeKalb County confirmed to Friends of Animals’ Campaign
Director Edita Birnkrant that “there are no laws addressing cruelty specific
to frogs” in Tennessee. The event is perfectly legal and all that’s needed
is a hunting license. That’s the root of the problem, and we want it
changed—so no more frogs have to suffer a slow, agonizing death from being
stabbed.
The only law that exists regarding frogs and killing contests is that
firearms cannot be used to kill the frogs. Apparently, anything else goes
and is considered legal, including actions that would be considered outright
torture. When asked if participants could light frogs on fire with no
consequences, Miles admitted that there would be “no charges we could file
against someone lighting frogs on fire.”
“Apparently the wildlife management agencies in Tennessee don’t understand
the importance of the diversity of animals in an ecosystem,” said Priscilla
Feral, FoA’s president. “Instead, because they are wedded to the hunters
they make money from, they support activities that desensitize youth to
killing animals so they grow up to be licensed hunters in the state of
Tennessee.”
For more about the wonder and importance of frogs, visit Save the Frogs!
Thank you for everything you do for animals!
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