Monday, September 11, 2006

WOLF ATTACK

All,

Kenton's dad sent me a note on Friday letting me know this was in the works. It is such a relief to them. Let's all Pray they get some closure and some truth from this inquest. At this time, the family cannot get a final report because the wolf ("biologists") or should I say activists, will not finish their investigation and send their final report.

Everyone else is done, the coroner at the scene, Physicians who examined the young man, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, everyone but the wildlife biologists studying wolves. Not only that but in other areas these same biologists are telling people it isn't a proven case of wolf attack knowing full well it is. This kind of bias and untruthful fact finding is harming this family dreadfully, especially after all they have been through.

I have been pretty closed to the vest about this because Kenton's mom and dad have trusted me to be respectful of their family and I plan on doing that. However, it is important to get the truth out and the very fact that the Canadian officials had to request an inquest to finalize the official report is very telling. Please lift the family up in prayer and ask that they finally see some closure and fairness in the report. Especially in light of the latest attacks. Prevention comes with factual education.

thanks
Laura

Inquest called in wolf attack death

Oshawa man died Nov. 8 in Saskatchewan

Sep 9, 2006

A coroner's inquest will be called into the death of an Oshawa man who was killed last fall in a wolf attack. Twenty-two-year-old Kenton Carnegie died Nov. 8 at Points North Landing in northern Saskatchewan. Mr. Carnegie, a student in his third year at the Geological Engineering Co-Op Program at the University of Waterloo, was working in a mining camp at Points North Landing in Saskatchewan’s far north, near the Northwest Territories border. The rugged area is inhabited largely by trappers, hunters and miners, and is accessible only by air for most of the year. A police spokesman at the time said Mr. Carnegie had gone out for a walk and when he failed to return others in the camp went to look for him. The university student's body was discovered not far from a work camp. He had been mauled to death. According to the CBC, the attacked is believed to be the first North American case of a human being killed by healthy wolves in their natural environment. A CBC news investigation revealed that wolves were being attracted to an illegal garbage dump in the area. No date has been set for the inquest.

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