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  1. Wild Justice uses the legal system to get a better deal for UK wildlife. We challenge government decisions in the courts. We campaign for better and stronger laws and policies – the ones that nature needs. We provide you with ways that you can make your voice heard in support of wildlife.

  2. Wild Justice: Thrill Killer. Warden Boyd takes an unusual approach to catching hunters suspected of trafficking bear gallbladders. Using real bear paws to mask his tracks and a scent drag to imitate bear presence, Boyd hopes to lure the hunters into a trap and catch them red-handed.

  3. Feb 14, 2021 · Wild Justice: the ‘noisy’ activists still ruffling feathers two years on. Chris Packham, Mark Avery and Ruth Tingay have faced threats and insults for taking the fight for wildlife to court ...

  4. In the nation’s most populous state, people must coexist with wildlife, much of which is critically endangered, and protecting what remains is a primary mission. But more than just crimes against nature, these law officers also take on illegal drugs, dangerous fugitives and urban gangsters on a beat that stretches from residential backyards ...

  5. Wild Justice is a reality television series which followed the activities and exploits of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife game wardens, from 2010 to 2013, as they investigate crimes ranging from poaching to illicit marijuana cultivation. The series was produced by the National Geographic Channel and aired for a total of four seasons.

  6. The objects of Wild Justice are: Nature conservation, primarily in UK. Advocacy to make UK laws, policies and practices more wildlife-friendly. Use of UK legal system to further nature conservation objectives. Encourage public participation in nature conservation issues.

  7. Publishers Weekly. “Focusing here on the gentler side of animal natures, animal behaviorist Bekoff and philosopher Pierce discuss recent scientific studies documenting that great apes, monkeys, wolves, coyotes, hyenas, dolphins, whales, elephants, rats, and mice are capable of a wide range of moral behavior.

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