Racoon's death from leghold trap sparks call for ban - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 12:48 AM | Calgary | -4.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Racoon's death from leghold trap sparks call for ban

The trapping and painful death of racoon in a residential Surrey, B.C., neighbourhood has renewed calls for a provincewide municipal ban on leghold traps.

Raccoon leghold trap

13 years ago
Duration 2:11
The trapping and death of a raccoon in Surrey, B.C., has renewed calls for a municipal ban on leghold traps, the CBC's Susana da Silva reports

The trapping and painful death of racoon in a residential Surrey, B.C., neighbourhood has renewed calls for a provincewide municipal ban on leghold traps.

The animal was discovered by the Owen family, as it was trying to climb a fence in their yard with the trap still clamped on a rear leg.

"His tail was on the ground, he couldn't get up because the trap was too heavy," said six-year-old Tommy Owen.

The animal eventually crawled its way into their shed and that's when the Owens called the SPCA and Langley's Critter Care Wildlife Society.

It took two people to remove the strong trap from the racoon's leg, said Angela Fontana of Critter Care.

Leg almost severed

"The paw was actually crushed, all the bones were broken," said Fontana. "The trap has prongs on it that almost severed the paw in half It was quite gruesome."

She said the animal was too damaged and weakened to be saved and had to be put down.

Animal advocates are asking Surrey and all B.C. municipalities to ban traps like this. (CBC)
The Fur-Bearer Defenders Association has posted a $2,500 reward for information leading to the person who set the trap.

Most leghold traps with teeth are illegal. But leghold traps can still be used legally with a permit outside of residential areas.

The association is calling on Surrey to ban all leghold traps, following onthe lead taken three weeks ago by ago by the town of Gibsons, which became the first B.C. city toissue such a ban, which included snare traps.

With files from the CBC's Susana da Silva