HomeMy WebLinkAboutMINUTES - 09262000 - C87 4C.rrl
70: B 0; A D ofor o'x"iso
upennaer§S
rviser
Contra
FROW
Costa
September 26,2000
OATS: Refer to the Animal Services Director, Mike Ross the issue of Body imal Y
Traps.
StJSdtCT;
S"CtFiC REOUE>y(S)OR RECOMMtNDAnON(E)A SAC1MOt1ND AND JUSInFICATtON
RECOMMENDATION:
Refer to the Animal Services Director, Mike Ross the issue of Body Crushing Animal Traps. I
have received several letters from my district with concerns about these traps. I am asking Mr.
Ross to prepare a report to inform the board on all issues concerning these traps and present a
recommendation.
COKnXUKD ON ATTACNMENTt YRS StONATtJRE:
RECOMMCNDATtON Of COVNTY ADMtN1ETRATOR RECOtMMENDATiON Of SOARD CCMiMtTTtE
...,�AtM�ltOVE OTMER
ACTION Of&OAR*ON Seem b e r 26 . 2 0 Q O AMMNO AS RtCOMMtNDED X OTHER
Von Of SUPS"tSORS
!MtftnT CYRTICT THAT TMtS 4 A TRUII
ML UNANIMOUS(ASS[NI AND CORRECT 0001 Of AN ACnON TAKtN
AYR$: NORM ANO RWMID ON TMt M1NVM Of TMt&OA"
A"tNT: ASSTAlK Of SUPtRYISORS ON TME DATt SHOWIN.
+ �
Ali tt{TCD Sebtember 26 . 2000
►Fitt OATCMBLOR.CLERK Of TME SSOAAO OF
SUPERVISORS AN COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR
Sy DEPVT`!
1n1n2 (t0/btlt
+On
G 1 T Y O F
WALNUT 1LNUT
.EEK
August 7, 2000
Hon. Donna Gerber
Board of Supervisors
309 Diablo Rd.
Manville, CA 94526
Dear Donna:
Enclosed is a note I received from a resident of Walnut Creek expressing her great distress over
the use of crushing traps in the County of Contra Costa. She believes that they are a cruel way of
torture and killing and that they should be illegal.
Personally, I agree with her assessment of the use of these traps and with her opinion that the
traps should be banned in Contra Costa County. It seems to me there must be a better way.
Please give her concerns your full consideration. Thank you.
Sincerely,
CHARLIE ABRAMS
Mayor
cc: Michael Ross
Director of Animal Services
Contra Costa County
4849 Imhoff Place
Martinez,CA 94553-4393
Ms. Mary L. Brown
3380 Buskirk Av.
Walnut Creek,CA 94596
Post Office Box 8039, 1666 North Main Street,Walnut Creek,CA 94596
tel 925.943.58 00 wwwd.walnut-creek.ca.us
puinircl on reryi trif paper
July 31, 2000
Dear Mayor Abrams:
I would like to see our town ban steel jawed leghold traps that kill or injure wildlife.
These traps also kill or injure domestic pets. It is just a matter of time that a child is
injured or killed.
I sincerely hope you will ban these disgusting items.
Thank you.
Sincerely, J
Mary L. Brown
3380 Buskirk Ave.
Walnut Creek, CA 94596
C i T Y o F
WALNUT
CREEK
June 1, 2000
Hon. Donna Gerber
Board of Supervisors
309 Diablo Road
Danville, CA 94526
Dear Donna.
Enclosed is a note I received from a resident of Walnut Creek expressing her great distress over
the use of crushing traps in the County of Contra Costa. She believes that they are a cruel way
of torture and killing and that they should be illegal.
Personally, I agree with her assessment of the use of these traps and with her opinion that the
traps should be banned in Contra Costa County. It seems to me there must be a better way.
Please give her concerns your full consideration. Thank you.
Sincerely,
I&W
GWEN REGALIA
City Council Councilrnember
cc: Michael G. Ross
Director of Animal Services
Contra Costa County
4849 Imhoff Place
Martinez,CA 94553-4393
Ms. Marian Steinburgh
1545 Arbutus Dr.
Walnut Creek,CA 94595
Past Office Box 8039, 1666 North Main Street,Walnut Creek,CA 94596
tel 925.9+3.5800 www.ci.walnut-creek.ca.us
printers on rrcycled paper
:. .y .r:;,f,,.:..9�,k'rY`, `r'�e*'•!,r`."t„�r�.�'P..�,/"� � $'r,�"__�.'`'�rF",�`'''`J'�i�'�« f,X
t /
t _ _
�t
i
a,
•�Y
-- �c-44jvqol-
wt
aa
L
J
.,;:.,,. _, � �'ty��rr:�,lJ�►/may�.' �.,+y
' ..r�..:.,` -.� '.., ✓�:'. _.,r. r: ..�:_ '+.-.a�,..» .:..- ^'.�Z y.Y"s« .:YY"+� .tY1F}a.,"'; %{.t"'^ .. ..._tee.,._ -��r�f�
t
r..
Y1` �'
August 23, 2000
Donna Gerber
Chair
Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors
County Administration Building
651. Pine Street, Room 106
Martinez, CA 94553
Dear Chairperson Gerber:
Enclosed please find material on body-crushing traps which is in
addition to the packet we sent to you on July 18th.
Thank you so very much for your effort in having these body-crushing
traps banned. If we are successful countywide, it will in large part be
due to your spirit and efforts. Please let us know if there is anything we
can do to assist your efforts.
Sincerely,
Leroy Moyer
Director
Voices For Pets
P.O. Box 30836
Walnut Creep, CA 94598
(925) 685-5388
www.voicesforpets.org
Enclosure
July 31, 2000
Dear Donna Gerber:
I would like to see our county ban steel-jawed leghold traps that kill or injure
wildlife.
These traps also kill or injure domestic pets. It is just a matter of time that a child is
injured or killed.
I sincerely hope you will ban these disgusting items.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Mary L. Brown
3380 Buskirk Ave.
Walnut Creek, CA 94591:
THURSDAY. AUGUST 3, 2000
hthtMdder Newspaper
Editorials
dangerow 4a s , ' ' =ti
o YEARS AGO,California voters overwhe�y
roposition 4,which bannelx. ot `rb,
w, ing animal traps The Tawas an
4 because the traps were being used m urban.. s
ban areas of Contra Costas andAlaimeda oountres.
With passage of Prop.4,Californians, no doubt,believed that the
problem of traps that maimed and killed pets as well as pests was
solved. Unfortunately,that is not the case.The proposit on'had left
loopholes big enough for trappers to:continue their pp�"ns.
They still set traps along county roads and city streets;in parks and
open fields,between residential homes and in public storm drains.
The purpose of the taps is to capture troublesome and dis-
eased animals. However,the traps do not discriminate between a
bothersome raccoon and a family pet ora child.As a result many
cats and dogs in East Bay residential areas have been injure_d and
killed by the body-crushing traps.
If these types of traps were the only way to capture problem ani-
mals,there might be a good argument to continue their use:Butthat
is not the case.Cather kinds of traps that do not kill or maim animals
can be used to catch diseased and otherwise pesky otters.Trappers
say harmless traps are not as effective.That may be so,but.the price
of efficiency is too high,especially in neighborhoods where there are
pets.Body-crushing traps also can be a threat to children.
Since Prop.4 has failed to put an end to body-crushing traps;tt is
up to counties and cities to ban them.The sooner local officials act,
the sooner traps that endanger children and pets can be repfac ed.
Voices For Pets 0 0
P.O. Box 301836 of 4
Walnut Creek, California 94598
(925) 685-5388
www.voicesforpets.org •
June 16,2000
Dear Supervisor:
Please read the enclosed material and consider if you are willing to help ban body-crushing traps
in the neighborhood=s of your county.
In 1998, an overwhelming majority of California voters passed Proposition 4, which banned
leghold and other body-crushing traps. However,the passage of Proposition 4(which was badly
worded,with many loopholes)has not succeeded in ending the use of these traps, as the trappers
are ignoring-it-and claiming that it does not apply to them. "Trappers continue to set traps
alongside county roads and city streets, in parks and open fields,between residential houses and
in public storm drains. These body-crushing traps do not discriminate between squirrels,
raccoons,birds, endangered species, pets,or children, and they are used in our neighborhoods.
Proposition 4 did one thing: It proved that an overwhelming majority of voters want these traps
banned. It is now up to the cities and counties to ensure that the will of the voters is carried out,
by creating local ordinances that ban the use of these traps within city/county borders. This is
about a city's/county's ability to protect its citizens,no doubt dictated by its charter.
Bay Area cities and counties have evolved from rural communities as existed in the 1950s to
suburban communities highly populated by families,with children and pets,whose family
members are endangered by the use of body-crushing traps. These traps constitute a danger to
the population and are no longer safe and appropriate for continued use.
Please find enclosed a copy of the state Attorney general's opinion and related material.
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact:
Leroy Moyer,Director Camilla Fox
Voices For Pets Animal Protection Institute
P.O. Box 30836 P.O. Box 22505
Walnut Greek,CA 94598 Sacramento, CA 95822
(925)685-5388 (916)'731-5521
Sincerely,
Leroy Moyer,Director
Voices For Pets
Encl2sures
TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
State of California
JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP
Attorney General
-----------------------
OPINION .
P
Of No. 86-607
JOHN K. VAN DE KAMP SEPTEMBER, 3, 1987
Attorney General
RONALD M. WEISKOPF"
Deputy Attorney General
THE HONORABLE PETER R. BONTADELLI, ACTING DIRECTOR OF THE
DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME, has requested an opinion on the following question:
May a county prohibit the use of steel-jawed leghold traps within its jurisdiction?
CONCLUSION
A County may, by ordinance, ban the use of steel jawed leghold traps within its
jurisdiction where such action is necessary to protect the public health and safety and where the
ordinance only incidentally affects the field of hunting preempted by the Fish and Game Code.
ANALYSIS
A steel jawed leghold trap is a spring-powered device used to trap animals with two
metal jaws that clamp shut on an animal's leg when it steps on the trap's pressure-sensitive
trigger. Some have urged banning the use of such traps because they consider it cruel to the
animals caught in them. Since a trap is nonselective, it is indiscriminate in what it snares, and
persons (especially children), pets, and other non-targeted animals have been caught in them.
These considerations have prompted the enactment in at least one county of an ordinance banning
the use of steel-jawed leghold traps throughout the county. Livestock owners oppose such bans
claiming that traps offer an effective means of controlling coyotes, dogs and other predators from
preying on their livestock. The Fish and Game Code permits the taking of certain animals by the
1
use of steel;jawed leghold traps.' We are asked whether a county ordinance prohibiting the use of
steel jawed leghold traps within the jurisdiction of the county is preempted by state law.
Article XI, section 7 of the California Constitution provides that a county "may
make and enforce within its limits all local, police, sanitary and other ordinances and regulations
not in conflict with general law." This legislative authority is often referred to as the "police
power", a power local legislative bodies share with the State Legislature. Regulating the taking of
fish and game is within the police power. (Ex Parte Maier (1894) 103 Cal. 476, 483.) Before the
turn of the century the regulation of fish and game was accomplished both by the state law (ch. 1,
tit. XV of the Penal Code entitled "'Violations of the Laws for the Preservation of Game and Fish"
commencing with § 626)and by local ordinances.
In 1902 the people adopted article IV, section 25112 of the Constitution providing:
"The legislature may provide for the division of the state into fish and game
districts, and may enact such laws for the protection of fish and game therein as it may
deem appropriate to the respective districts."
In Matter of Application of Cencinino (1916) 31 Cal.App. 238, 244 the court held that by enacting
article IV, section 25 1/2 of the Constitution the people had withdrawn and taken from counties
and cities whatever power they might have exercised over the subjects of fish and game and that
the counties and cities were "no longer authored to legislate upon or in any manner or degree
interfere in the matter of the pursuit of fish and game." The Supreme Court gave its approval to
the holding in the Cenncininno case in In re Makings (1927) 200 Cal. 474, 477-478 and reiterated (at
p. 479) that "it was the purpose of this amendment to the constitution to take from local
authorities the right to regulate the fish and game of the state and to invest such power exclusively
in the legislature."
Thus the power of counties to adopt ordinances regulating the pursuit of fish and
game terminated in 1902 with the adoption of Article IV, section 5 1/2 (now art. IV, § 20) of the
Constitution. Insofar as a county ordinance undertakes to regulate the field of law regarding fish
and game which article IV, section 20 reserves to the Legislature, it is void. However,counties are
Fish and Came Code section 4000 et seq govern trapping. Section 4002 provides: "Fur-bearing mammals may be
taken only with a trap,a firearms bow and arrow,poison under a proper permit,or with the use of dogs." (Traps are defined
in 14 Cal. Admin. Caste§4365.5(a)to include steel-jawed„ leg-hold,conibear,mares,dead-falls,cage traps and other
devices designed to confine,hold,grasp,clamp,or crush mammals.) Section 4000 defines fur-bearing marnmals to include
mink,several foxes, raccoon,beaver,badger,and muskrat. Section 4001 fixes the open season on furbearing mammals
between November 16 and the day before the last day of February. Section 4004 proluibits the use of certain kinds of steel-
jawed leghold and other traps and requires the trapper to visit and remove all animals from traps once daily. Section 4005
requires a trapping license to trap with certain exceptions. Section 4009 makes it unlawful to remove or disturb the trap of
any licensee while the trap is being used by the lig on public land or on land where the lincensee has permission to trap.
Section 4009.5 authorizes the Fish and Came Commission to adopt such regulations as it determines to be necessary to
regulate the taking and sale of fur-bearing mammals or nongarne mammals taken under a trapping license. Section 4180
provides: "Fur-bearing mammals which are injuring property may be taken at any time and in any manners except that if leg-
hold steel jawed traps are used to take such mammals,the traps and the use thereof shall be in accordance with the provisions
of subdivisions(a)and(b)of Section 4004.
2
still empowered by article XI, section 7 to legislate other matters within the police power which
are not preempted by state law such as ordinances which protect the health and safety of persons.
It is apparent that an ordinance may serve more than one purpose and affect more
than one field of law. Such is the case with the ordinance presented in this opinion request. Since
the persons may get caught in steel-jawed leghold traps, prohibiting their use is clearly a measure
which protects their health and safety. It is equally clear that prohibiting the use of such traps
affects the taking of furbearing animals in a manner authorized by the Fish and Game Code.
Since counties are authorized to legislate such a prohibition as a health and safety measure but not
as a fish and game regulation how is the validity of such a prohibition to be determined? We
think the answer is found in the case of Feotile v. Mueller(1970) g Cal. App. ,fid 949.
In Mueller the city adopted an ordinance prohibiting the deposit of garbage, refuse
and waste matter in the waters of its harbor. One of its provisions was that "No person shall place
or allow to be placed any live or dead bait in the unconfined harbor [sic] of the Harbor except
when such bait is attached to a hook in the act of fishing." The defendants were convicted of
violation of this provision in the ordinance as a result of their method of fishing in the harbor.
Such fishing involved suspending a light over the water in a particular place and throwing bait
called "chum" within the lighted circle and scooping up fish attracted to the surface by the chum
using net-like chickenwire scoops on the end of long poles. On appeal the defendants contended
that the provision of the ordinance on which they were convicted was void because it constituted a
limitation upon methods of fishing and was void because it invaded an area of regulation
preempted by the Fish and Game Code.
In addressing the preemption argument the Muell r court noted that the purpose
and scope of the ordinance was the prevention of pollution of the waters of the harbor and that
nothing in state law preempted the field of prevention of local water pollution. The court also
noted that the state has preempted the field of fishing citing In re Cencinino, supra. The courts
opinion then states (at 954):
"That proposition, however, is not determinative of the validity of the challenged
ordinance. Preemption by the state of an area of the law does not preclude local legislation
enacted for the public safety which only incidentally affects the preempted are. [Fn.l
Protection against pollution equates with protection of the public safety."
The footnote reads. "It seems beyond question, for example, that a municipality is empowered to
prohibit fly casting from crowded piers or docks to protect members of the public from being
snagged by a low back cast."
2 Health and Safety Code section 4.50 provides:
"The board of supervisors of each county shall take such measures as may be necessary to preserve and
protect the public health in the unincorporated territory of the county, including,if indicated,the adoption of
ordinances,regulations and orders not in conflict with general laws,and provide for the payment of all expenses
incurred in enforcing them."
This section imposes a duty upon counties to regulate to preserve and protect public health. People ex rel.Deukmejian v.
County of Mendocino(19134)36 Cal. 3d 47b,484.
3
The court held that the effect of the ordinance on fishing "is incidental to the
principal purpose of the legislation," the prevention of pollution, and that coverage of the field of
regulation of fishing by the Fish and Game Cade thus did not invalidate the local ordinance. The
judgments of conviction were affirmed.
The Mueller case governs the answer to the question presented in this opinion
request. Like the ordinance in Mueller the ordinance prohibiting steel-jawed leghold traps has
two apparent purposes. One is the regulation of hunting preempted by the Fish and Game Code,
the other the protection of public safety within the county's police power. The Mueller case
requires a determination of the principal purpose of the ordinance and whether the ordinance
affects the preempted field of hunting incidentally. If the principal purpose of the ordinance is the
protection of public safety and it affects hunting incidentally, the ordinance is a valid exercise of
the county's police power.
The request for the opinion in this case did not provide us with any basis for a
determination of the principal purpose of the ordinance. Thus our response must be conditioned
upon the determination a court would make when confronted by a particular ordinance and
evidence concerning its purpose and the effect it will have on hunting in the area covered thereby.
A court's determination in this regard would no doubt be influenced by a number of
factors. Any evidence in the ordinance or its legislative history regarding the purpose of its
enactment would be very significant. however, a court could not be bound by a declaration of the
board of supervisors as to the purpose of the ordinance when evidence indicates some other
purpose was the principal motivation for its enactment. Coulter v. Pool (1921) 187 Cal. 181.)
The nature of the area affected by the ordinance, its impact upon the trapping of game and
furbearing mammals, and the degree to which the public has access to and utilizes the area will be
significant. Thus an ordinance banning steel-jawed leghold traps in the City and County of San
.Francisco, an almost entirely urbanized area, would likely be held to have public safety as its
principal purpose with hunting only incidentally affected. On the other hand, contrary findings
might be expected with respect to the same ban in a rural county with a significant fur trapping
tradition.
In 58 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 519 (1975) we concluded that while a city ordinance may
restrict the shooting of bows and arrows in those areas of the city where such a restriction is
reasonably justified by public safety requirements, such an ordinance may not indiscriminately
extend to areas wherein public hunting may take place without endangering human life or
property. In that opinion we considered and applied the Mueller case in a manner which now
gives us pause. On page 528 we distinguished between the ordinance banning the use of bows and
arrows within the City of Burbank and the ordinance in Mueller. First we noted that the Mueller
ordinance did not prohibit the activity of fishing but merely a collateral activity- chumming. The
opinion then states
"The hunting ordinance before us absolutely prohibits the activity of hunting - a
field of regulation similarly occupied by state constitutional and statutory provisions. This
ordinance poses more than an incidental effect, it prohibits the entire activity within the
city limits."
We believe the quoted language needs correction. The Burbank ordinance did not absolutely
prohibit the activity of hunting, it prohibited only the use of bows and arrows. Just as the Mueller
4
ordinance did not prohibit the activity of fishing, only the collateral activity of chumming, the
Burbank ordinance did not prohibit the activity of hunting, but only the use of bows and arrows.
The statement in the last sentence quoted above that the Burbank ordinance prohibits the entire
activity (of hunting) within the city limits is therefore too broad and thus does not support the
preceding conclusion that the ordinance poses more than an incidental effect (on hunting).
Insofar as said opinion asserts that the effect of a ban on the use of bows and arrows on hunting
could never be incidental it is disapproved. Whether a ban on a particular means of hunting has
an incidental affect on hunting or not is a question of fact to be decided upon the evidence in the
particular case as we have indicated above.
We conclude that a county may, by ordinance, ban the use of steel-jawed leghold
traps within its jurisdiction where such action is necessary to protect the public health and safety
and where the ordinance only incidentally affects the field of hunting preempted by the Fish and
Game Code.
5
An Act Prohibiting the Use of Body-Gripping Devices
Sec. l. Intent
It is the intent of the City Council/County Board to protect public health and safety,
and animal welfare by prohibiting the use of body-gripping devices. The ordinance
is necessary to preserve wild animals and prevent the unselective catching, maiming
of wild animals including birds,endangered and threatened species,and companion
animals,as well as injury to children and adults that come into contact with these
devices.
Sec. 2 Definitions
A. "Body-gripping device" includes, but is not limited to,any snare(neck, body,
or leg), kill-type trap(Conibear), leghold trap(steel-jaw, padded,and offset),
and any other device designed to grip a body or body part. Cage and box
traps, suitcase-type live beaver traps, and common rat and mouse traps shall
not be considered body-gripping devices.
B. "person" means any individual, partnership, corporation,organization,
trade or professional association, firm, limited liability company,joint
venture,association,trust,estate,or any other legal entity and any officer,
member,shareholder,director, employee, agent or representative thereof:
Sec. 3 Prohibitions
A. It shall be unlawful for any person to set or use, or attempt to set or use,a
body-gripping device of any kind designed or intended to take hold of,
capture or kill any animals within city/county limits.
B. It shall be unlawful for the owner, possessor,or any other person in control
of a lot, tract, or parcel of land within city/county limits or any residence or
business premises situated thereon to knowingly permit the use of a body-
gripping device upon the property, residence or premises.
- I -
Sec. d Exemptions
A. The provisions of this act shall not prohibit federal, state, county, or
municipal government employees or their duly authorized agents from using
a Conibear trap in water, padded jaw leghold trap,or non-strangling foot
snare where use of such device is the only method available to protect human
health and safety.
B. The provisions of this act shall not prohibit federal or state employees or
their duly authorized agents from using a Conibear trap in water, padded-
jaw leghold trap, or non-strangling type foot snare where use of such device
is the only means of protecting threatened and endangered species, as listed
under the Federal and state Endangered Species Act.
Sec... 5 Impounding of Body-Gripping Devices
Whenever a body-gripping device is used contrary to the prohibitions outlined in
this Act within the confines of the city/county,the same may be impounded by any
duly authorized police officer or by any State Fish and Game Warden until judicial
action occurs.
Sec. 6 Violations-Penalties
Conduct made unlawful by Section 3 of this ordinance constitutes a misdemeanor
and sh&U be punishable as a misdemeanor. Each misdemeanor violation under this
act shall be subject to a fine not to exceed five thousand dollars(55,000)or
imprisonment not to exceed one year or both fine and imprisonment.
For further information or assistance with drafting and introducing legislation on
prohibiting trapping in your city or county,contact Camilla Fox at the
Animal Protection Institute.
P.O. Box.22505, Sacramento,CA 95822
(916) 731-5521
-2-
WHY WE NEED CITY AND COUNTY TRAPPING ORDINANCES
The following are only two examples of trappers and their activities that demonstrate
why the city and county need an ordinance to protect their citizens.
Trapper James Schmerker, who advertises in the Yellow Pages as "animal damage
control," has been killing our wildlife and pets for many years. In one 2-month period,
Schmerker set body-crushing traps in Emeryville, Lafayette, and Danville that killed three pet
cats and injured one dog. These traps were set in residential neighborhoods, like yours, on
walkways, between houses, in storm drain openings at the curb, etc. It is only a question of
time before a child is injured or killed. Wherever these traps are set, wildlife and pets do
disappear. What is unusual is for a family to find their pet in a trap before the body is disposed
of
At the Watergate Condominiums in Emeryville, the homeowners' association manager
hired Schmerker to set traps throughout the property without notifying the people who live
there, endangering not only wildlife but adults, children, and pets. Even after six-year-old
Michael, a much-loved family cat, was crushed and killed in a trap,the traps were not
removed. Dr. Marybeth Rymer, a veterinarian who lives at Watergate and found her cat
crushed to death, said, "One evening a week later, several of us standing on the boardwalk
helplessly watched in dismay as a screaming raccoon frantically fought a trap on his leg. As he
stumbled across the boulders, he fell into the bay and drowned. We have also heard the heart-
wrenching sounds of raccoons,trapped and dying while sleeping at night." The traps were still
not removed. Three months later, a number of people witnessed a trapped raccoon in the
opening of a sidewalk storm drain next to the tennis court. One witness was missing two pet
cats. When she asked the trapper and the Watergate Management about her pets, she was told
"no cats have been killed."
In a Danville residential neighborhood,Mack Gardner at 112 Gerald Drive hired
Schmerker to trap raccoons. On December 7, 1999, a woman walking her dog stopped to talk
with Mr. Gardner. Her dog, Jimmy, wandered through an open gate and was injured, with his
head caught in a trap, but was rescued before he died. The traps were not removed. Four days
later, a 12-year-old cat, Soccer, was found by his family crushed to death.
In Emeryville, Lafayette, and Danville, when the families did find their pet dead in a
trap, Schmerker said "I have a license and there is nothing you can do about it." Because of
media coverage, Contra Costa Animal Control checked and discovered that Schmerker had not
been licensed since 1995 and charged him with two misdemeanors, which is no more than a
minor traffic violation.
In both the trapping case, and an um-elated case in which both Schmerker and his wife
are charged with possessing methamphetamine and concealed handguns, Schmerker has shown
up for court wearing grimy overalls with blood spatters on his legs and a California Trappers
Association patch on his shoulder. During one court break on April 20, Dianne Schmerker
followed me down and back up the stairs saying things like, "We know where you live and we
know you have pets.
Schmerker is not the only trapper in our neighborhoods. Look in the Yellow Pages
under Animal Trappers and under Pest Control. I am not talking about people who spray for
ants and termites. I am talking about trappers who.cripple and kill our wildlife and pets and
endanger our children.
Richard Harrell, who advertises in the Yellow Pages as Dick's fest Control, claims 20
years of experience.
On September 26, 1997, two women out for a morning walk in Martinez found a
suffering baby raccoon caught in a leghold trap and called Contra Costa County Animal
Control. Lt. Abe Gamez reported that CCC Animal Control found the injured raccoon with its
leg nearly severed, and that the trap was set only three to four feet from the public roadway.
Animal Services euthanized the raccoon and confiscated three leghold traps.
That afternoon, a man named Richard Harrell entered the office at Animal Services in
Martinez. According to Gamez, "Mr. Harrell was irate. He had a small caliber rifle slung over
his shoulder and what appeared to be a .38 caliber revolver tucked in the back of his waistband.
He was upset that we had removed three of his steel jawed traps from where he had set them,
and he wanted them back." Harrell insisted he checked them every 24 hour. Because Harrell
had a license, Animal Control had to give him back the traps.
On October 6, 1998, in a Concord residential neighborhood,47-year-old Harrell was
arrested for cruelty to an animal and reckless discharge of a firearm near Ayers Elementary
School. Harrell, using a steel jawed leghold trap, had trapped a raccoon at another location
and taken it to a field between his backyard on Laurel Drive and Ayers School. Harrell
released the raccoon so that he could shoot it with a scoped rifle. This was done during school
hours with children present.
Concord Police said that Harrell had a license to trap, so no cruelty to animal charge
was warranted and as for discharging a firearm in a residential neighborhood, "This was simply
a man disposing of an animal in an inappropriate manner."
And what about the victims? For the homeless pets,their only crime is that they are
homeless. For the pets that have homes and families, their only crime is that they went
exploring in their own neighborhood. For the wildlife, their only crime is that they exist.
These body-crushing traps do not discriminate between squirrels, raccoons,birds,
endangered species, pets, or children. And they are used in your neighborhood.
Leroy Moyer, Director
Voices For Pets
P.O. Box 30836
Walnut Creek, CA 94598
(925) 685-5388
www.voicesforpets.org
- 2-
A Few of the Many Victims and one of the Perpetrators
qLT).
Soccer"' --- one of many pets killed
by Schmerker '"
James Schmerker, Trapper
is
Raccoons have hands and fingers similar to Raccoon caught in conibear trap at
ours. They pick up their food before Watergate Condominiums.
putting it in their mouth. "Rackus" lost
both hands to an unknown trapper. Photo
courtesy of wildWatch,