Is it possible to report someone with a Wildlife Rehabilitation license?

I'm glad that folks seem like they want to help! Continue to be persistent and hopefully something will be done. I don't live in Georgia, but most state DNR/wildlife agencies are understaffed and underfunded, so it make take some time.
I'm honestly glad there are people on my side! I expected to get "as long as they are being cared for then there's no problem" but I just feel its not right at all for a wild animal to be treated like a pet unless they CANT be released in the wild, not just because someone doesn't want them to be.
I'm still going to try all i can to get these babies the care they ACTUALLY need
 
Unless injured, and unable to be rehabbed to return to the wild, she should not be making these animals dependent on her. A real rehabber has to have habitats for rescued animals.
 
First, yes I agree she's in the wrong. Mental illness is a horrid beast! I too wanted to be like Grizzly Adams when I was young. :(

Next.. if your motivation is pure and to protect the animals, why not look into reporting her earlier? Seems like at this point it could be about getting revenge on you EX. Why do people only do what causes the least amount of consequences for themselves? :confused:

I would start by launching a complaint with the rescue giving her the permit.. to investigate. NO wildlife rehabber in their right mind would EVER be okay with causing perfectly viable wild animals to become habituated to humans. As someone who loves the animals and nature.. I had to remind myself of this when helping with orphaned bobcat cubs at the wildlife rehab where I volunteered one season. I caught myself baby talking to them like pets AT first. It was quite amazing to have one climb my pant leg. But even more exhilarating to see them grow into their natural behavior aggressively wrestling each other, competing for food, learning how to hunt, and ultimately yes being released if there's NO injury or ingrained unnatural behaviors like those described above! :love

The crowding you describe... might get some attention with a simple call of concern to your county animal control officer? Try as MANY contacts as you can until you get results! Eyewitness news on your side?? Maybe an investigative news report to put public pressure on? Can they possibly be managing all the waste properly or is it a health hazard? :sickSpeaking of health hazards.. sounds like maybe a fire hazard.. call the fire department.. they may have blocked exits or other code violations.. You county CODE enforcement office as well.. Even with permit, most locations still have maximum occupancy per property size.

The feds... many states have WAY to lax laws about topics like this.. the department of Fish and Wildlife (law enforcement) might be of some help..

https://www.fws.gov/le/

If all else fails.. call PETA and see what kind of havoc those mislead folks can turn up! :oops: ;)

Taking her license will not likely stop her behavior. But hopefully through this maybe she will get some help to learn other coping tools for feeling loved and accepted. Instead of always scoffing and pointing fingers like the self righteous Stew Pidasso's we are, if folks look to the root cause and become more compassionate, understanding, and maybe helpful.. our prisons might not be full of our mentally ill for petty crimes. You just don't know what a person is facing.. but this Ex's mom is self medicating through her actions!

Yes, animal lives DO matter.. but HUMAN lives matter too. We always look at humans as doing such vile acts.. I've seen nature and there's nothing pretty about the mom's eating their babies if under threat of hunger or thirst themselves, or males killing offspring in order to mate the female sooner.. Most of us don't realize just how brutal nature truly is or that people ARE doing what comes natural to them.. yes other species kill each other over territory, mates, etc...

Again, she is in the wrong and it SHOULD be stopped! I just plead with my fellow BYC'ers... give the human species a little consideration and compassion as well... We ALL have reasons why we do what we do even if we don't realize them.

I do hope the animals get some relief from their well meaning but sadly mentally ill rehab/captor! It may take some persistence on your part, so hang in there.. :fl
Thank you for these points. So many hoarding animal situations are directly linked to mental illness that is never addressed.

save the animals YES, but also save the future animals by helping to solve the problem at the source. So many problems could be helped if we treated mental illness with less stigma.
 
Unfortunately, dealing with hoarders of any kind is a long and probably never ending process. Animal control takes the animals away, the person eventually gets more. The law enforcement usually has bigger and "more important" issues to deal with can't dedicate the manpower and resources to this problem, which is considered relatively "small potatoes" in the grand scheme of things. And a wild animal is NEVER a tame pet, no matter how tame it might act. And a lot of them carry really nasty diseases that can be passed on to people and make them sick, or even die. I'm glad you're taking action. Good luck! It probably won't be a "one and done" thing though :(
 
Hi im in Georgia, and my ex's mom works at a swamp park. This gives her a rehabilitation license by default, but she is heavily misusing it. She lives with three other people in a single wide trailer and has: a baby fox, a baby deer, a racoon, 15 baby possums, 2 ferrets, two turtles, three snakes, four dogs, 12 cats, a baby flying squirell, 3 baby armadillos, and two owls.
All of these animals live inside with no outdoor spaces of their own, just kenneled like dogs at night. She does not train them to be self sufficient, but she treats them all and trains them all as pets. One of the owls that she "released" still does not know how to hunt on his own, he comes to their porch twice a day to get a rat fed to him by hand. When i confronted her about it, she told me, and i quote, "I know its wrong, but I actually want to train all of these guys to love me because they're just so sweet and I dont want to send them back to the wild. If I give them all of this love then they legally cannot be released so ill get to keep them forever".

I believe this is a violation of what her license stands for, and NO ONE should do this to wildlife. She cares for them, but she treats them like PETS. Ive watched and seen that none of these animals know how to get food on their own. They have a yearling deer that still comes up to get bottle fed any time she is hungry. They get lots of cuddles and whatever food they want whenever they want, but nothing is actually wrong with them. Ive seen her take a baby deer off the side of the road and bring it home (this same yearling) without waiting for its momma because she thought it was cute, and her logic was she could raise it safer than the actual momma.

I think this is very wrong, and she should not be allowed to do this.
Is there anyone I can report this to? She refuses to bring the animals to other rehabilitation centers either even when they are all bumping into each other there. They are called "wild" life for a reason.

Can anyone give me any advice to make her not be allowed to do this to these animals anymore?
Just my thoughts on this and it depends on how approachable she is... if it was me I would gently ask her how she would feel if she became really Ill, who would care for these creatures? Then the worse scenario even died. If she loves them so much she would want them to survive. Hopefully she will try to ease them back into their own little world. Good luck. 🥰
 
Just my thoughts on this and it depends on how approachable she is... if it was me I would gently ask her how she would feel if she became really Ill, who would care for these creatures? Then the worse scenario even died. If she loves them so much she would want them to survive. Hopefully she will try to ease them back into their own little world. Good luck. 🥰
I wish it were that easy, but she has three teenage kids and a husband that condone this behaviour. They think having more cuddly pets it "cool" because they're able to tell people they have a fox as a pet, etc.
 
Unfortunately, dealing with hoarders of any kind is a long and probably never ending process. Animal control takes the animals away, the person eventually gets more. The law enforcement usually has bigger and "more important" issues to deal with can't dedicate the manpower and resources to this problem, which is considered relatively "small potatoes" in the grand scheme of things. And a wild animal is NEVER a tame pet, no matter how tame it might act. And a lot of them carry really nasty diseases that can be passed on to people and make them sick, or even die. I'm glad you're taking action. Good luck! It probably won't be a "one and done" thing though :(
Luckily I live in a very boring county. Most people who hunt follow the rules, and harsh crimes are very very rare. Everyone minds their own churchy and farmy business. Hopefully the law enforcement will find this more exciting and be more willing to do something about it. Hopefully. So far they've seemed interested
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom