Arfin,
Carl the coyote roamed San Francisco's Golden Gate Park, becoming beloved by local residents. Over the course of 6 years, Carl became familiar with the city and grew to see its many parks as home. After all, there aren't many places in the crowded Bay Area where coyotes like him can live. He was friendly and comfortable being out-and-about in public. But authorities grew wary of Carl. And then, one summer, they shot him dead.
The only thing Carl did "wrong" was adapt to his environment. Humans created a city, and surrounded it with suburbs, and left coyotes like him with nowhere to go. His crime was learning to adjust and get comfortable. After Carl became a new parent, having fathered a litter of his own pups, officials used that to their advantage. One evening, after the botanical gardens near his den had closed and visitors had dispersed, they played a recording that mimicked the sounds of coyote pups crying out in anguish. Carl came to investigate, in case one of the pups was his own. Instead, he met a bullet. Agents shot and killed him on sight.
According to a spokesperson for the San Francisco Animal Care and Control, "It was heartbreaking for everyone involved. No one wanted this to happen." Unfortunately, under California state law, agents are not allowed to relocate coyotes. So even though Carl and his family might have enjoyed a peaceful existence in a more wild, rural area, far away from people, they couldn't get that chance. California authorities must change this law, in order to spare other animals this same cruel fate. Sign the petition to demand that California lawmakers allow animal control officials to employ non-lethal methods to deal with urban wildlife, including by relocating them to safer homes!
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