PSK RESEARCH
Main Menu => Pets, animals & nature => Topic started by: Psk on July 29, 2015, 02:53:24 PM
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Why can't this dentist do something constructive like shark hunting? I wouldn't want someone with total lack of compassion working on my medical or dental problems. Hmmm. A compassionate doctor? That's a rare find these days.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LzXpE1mjqA[/youtube]
The worst part is that lions a very intelligent animals. This was an older collared nature preserve animal. He was used to humans, & most likely thought that they were his friends. This was not a brave hunt. This was a cowardly way to get a fancy trophy to show off to his phoney friends. He should be extradited to pay for his crimes. If we can prosecute kids for killing a turtle, we should be able to send this jerk back for punishment.
He paid a guide $55,000 to hunt & kill the lion. Wow, what a waste of good money. On my current tight budget, I can live of that for about 8 years, or live extremely well on it for 5 years.
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Palmer pleaded guilty to federal charges in 2008 related to the poaching of a black bear in Wisconsin two years earlier. Palmer and others transported the bear, which was killed 40 miles outside of a legal hunting zone, to a registration station inside the legal area. Palmer was sentenced to one year of probation and fined nearly $3,000.
In the spring of 2003, Palmer was convicted in Otter Tail County in western Minnesota and paid a small fine for fishing without a license, a misdemeanor.
Palmer is listed as a member of the trophy hunting organization Safari Club International. His profile on SCI’s website lists 43 kills, including caribou, moose, deer, buffalo, a polar bear and mountain lion.
State records show Palmer has held hunting and fishing licenses in Minnesota, Florida and Alaska.
In a 2009 article on big-game hunting, the New York Times reported that Palmer killed a near-record sized elk with a bow and arrow in Northern California.
Palmer told the Times that he can hit a playing card from 100 yards with his compound bow and he eschews bringing a firearm on hunting trips as a backup.
In 2009, Palmer agreed to a settlement with the Minnesota Board of Dentistry over allegations that he sexually harassed a receptionist. She alleged that Palmer made comments about her breasts, buttocks and genitalia. Without admitting guilt, Palmer settled and paid $127,500 to the woman, who also was his patient. The settlement included references to his bear-hunting conviction and “substandard record keeping.”
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I guess when you go around cold blooded killing lots of animals for no good reason all the time, you're eventually gonna get caught killing one that is loved & that will be missed.
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How could any normal, sane person enjoy killing such a beautiful, majestic, & intelligent creature?
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