“There really isn’t much you can do for a wounded pigeon
except put it out of its misery,” says Comroe. Prior to an order in
2002 by the Court of Common Pleas in Berks County, most of the wounded
were picked up by trapper boys and girls, some as young as eight years
old, who killed the birds by stomping on their bodies, hitting them
against structures, stuffing them into sacks, and dumping them, some
still breathing, into large barrels. Some also wrung the birds’ necks
or ripped them from their bodies. Since that order, the “trappers” are
at least 18 years old and have gone “high-tech”; they now use garden
shears to sever a bird’s head.
Trappers can’t get all of
the birds. Hundreds at a large shoot will fly to surrounding areas and
remain untreated as long as several days to die a painful death, says
Johnna Seeton, Humane Society police officer. Pigeon shoot organizers
do their best to keep observers from the scene, and don’t allow
volunteers to pick up and treat wounded birds unless they fly off the
property, even if there’s no shooting at the time. “We have only been
able to rescue a few birds,” says Seeton.
Dave Comroe,
now 32 years old, had begun hunting when he was 12 years old. That
first year he killed his only deer. Although he has been deer hunting
many times, he says he has “only taken a shot once.” He has gone
pheasant and dove hunting about a half dozen times.
“Fathers take their sons out,” he says, noting that hunting is “a
“bonding experience.” That “bonding” continued through his teens and
early 20s when he went to pigeon shoots. “I went as a spectator,” he
says, “and to hang out with my friends.” He was 14 when he attended his
first pigeon shoot, and remembers he didn’t compete until a year or two
later. Comroe says he competed in five shoots, “but attended 10 or 12
overall,” including two or three at Hegins.
That shoot,
at one time the largest and most controversial in the nation, brought
as many as 250 shooters and as many as 10,000 spectators, from animal
rights activists to neo-Nazis and skinheads, to the community park
every Labor Day. The organizers claimed they only wanted to raise money
for the town park. But they refused an offer by the Fund for Animals,
which later merged into the Humane Society, to buy traps, clay pigeons,
and ammunition for a non-violent event. Confrontational protests, begun
in 1991 under the direction of the Fund for Animals, were abandoned two
years later in favor of a large-scale animal rescue operation. Each
Labor Day, more than 5,000 birds were killed and thrown away.
The organizers of the Hegins shoot finally cancelled the contests in
1999, 66 years after they began. It had nothing to do with a
realization that killing domesticated pigeons is cruel. It had
everything to do with a unanimous ruling by the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court that humane society officers could arrest participants and
organizers under state anti-cruelty charges.
Comroe, a
Syracuse graduate and instruction technology specialist, is pleasant,
soft-spoken, and definitely not violent. Some who attend pigeon shoots
aren’t. Heidi Prescott, who has been to more than 50 shoots, has seen
“Children ripping the heads off live birds or throwing them into the
air like footballs, adults cheering and laughing when crippled birds
flop up and down in pain, and spectators parading around the park with
pigeons’ heads mounted on plastic forks.”
It’s hard to
reconcile the compassion seen in Comroe’s eyes with the reality that he
calls pigeon shooting a sport. “There’s no pretense about it,” says
Comroe, “It isn’t hunting. It’s a sport.” Pigeon shoots, claims the
National Rifle Association’s Institute for Legislative Action, “are a
traditional and international shooting sport.” But, killing trapped
pigeons isn’t a sport, according to the International Olympic Committee
which banned pigeon shooting after its only appearance in the 1900
Olympics. The reason why pigeon shooting isn’t recognized as a sport
was best explained by the IOC. “It’s cruelty,” it said after thinking
about the Olympics’ only bloody “sport.”
Sensitive to the
public outrage, almost every shooter and the organizers of the gun
clubs that sponsor the events refuse to talk to the public or the
press. But, in private, the shooters claim not only are they sportsmen,
but they hold a high moral code. The NRA claims the participants “are
law-abiding, ethical shooting enthusiasts, hunters, and sportsmen.”
However, there appears to be a different morality for pigeon shooters
than allowed under state and federal laws. Like dog fights and cock
fights, participants and spectators make money not from the prizes,
which are usually belt buckles, trophies, and purses that average
$20–$100 per event, but from an extensive underground in gambling.
Comroe acknowledges “a lot of money trades hands” at pigeon shoots. In
addition to tax fraud, money is also made by the illegal capture,
interstate transportation, and sale of pigeons, also a violation of
federal laws.
Pennsylvania is the only state where people
openly kill live pigeons in organized contests. Every other state, with
the exception of Tennessee, which has no law against it but also no
shoots, has either banned the practice by law or by court action, or it
is covered under the state anti-cruelty statues. The actions of pigeon
shoot organizers “is clearly animal cruelty, and the Pennsylvania
legislature needs to finally address it,” says Johnna Seeton. Several
bills have failed to gather majority support in either house of the
Pennsylvania legislature.
Current bills in the state
legislature not only ban shooting any captive bird at a trap or block
shoot, they extends to a little-known practice of tying turkeys to hay
bales and then shooting them, often with arrows. In the Senate, SB
1150, introduced by Patrick Browne (R-Lehigh Co.), has languished in
committee since November. The Senate Judiciary committee was scheduled
to vote on the bill in March, but pulled it to deal with an equally
controversial gay marriage amendment. The pigeon shoot bill has not
come up for a vote since.
The history in the House of
Representatives to enact legislation has been more contentious. In
1994, the year after State Police arrested 114 persons at the Hegins
pigeon shoot, the House of Representatives voted 99–93 to ban all
pigeon shoots. Supporters, however, needed 102 votes, a majority, for
passage. Subsequent bills have been blocked by the Republican
leadership, aided by Democrats from the more rural parts of the state.
In the House, HB 2130, introduced by Rep. Frank Shimkus (D-Lackawanna),
is also stalled in the Judiciary Committee. Rep. John Pallone
(D-Armstrong), chair of the subcommittee on crime and corrections, said
in February he would “convene hearings [on the bill] at the earliest
convenience.” There have been no hearings. Pallone says he just doesn’t
think a law is necessary, “because we do have animal laws relative to
domestic and wild animals.” Heidi Prescott disagrees.
“Although the Pennsylvania Supreme Court rightfully termed these shoots
‘cruel and moronic’ and allowed humane officers to prosecute
participants for animal cruelty, this narrow procedural ruling did not
stop live pigeon shoots,” says Prescott. The Humane Society, she says,
“has tried in court to apply the cruelty law to shoots, but without
success so far.”
Pallone says the bill, now with 51
co-sponsors, one-fourth of the House membership, an abnormally large
number of co-sponsors for any piece of legislation, “is not a
legislative priority.” Rep. William DeWeese (D-Waynesburg), majority
floor leader, sets the legislative priority. According to insiders in
the House, DeWeese, like Pallone, vigorously opposes legislation to ban
the state’s pigeon shoots. Pallone claims that “it couldn’t be any
further from the truth” that DeWeese is blocking the bill from coming
to the floor and has influenced the subcommittee. DeWeese, who has been
in the House 32 years, twice before voted against bills that would ban
pigeon shoots.
Records filed with the Pennsylvania
Department of State reveal that DeWeese’s campaign committees have
accepted significant political contributions from organizations that
oppose the ban on pigeon shooting. State records reveal that his
committee has received $750 from the Flyers Victory Fund, the political
action arm of the Pennsylvania Flyers Association, an organization of
about 300 members who are dedicated to promoting live pigeon shoots.
His campaign committees the past four years, according to Department of
State records, have also received $6,500 in contributions from the NRA
Political Victory Fund.
When Sen. Roy Afflerbach first
introduced an amendment in 1998 to ban pigeon shooting, only about five
senators supported it but, says Afllerbach, “the Senate has come a long
way since then.” A poll of Senate committee members, conducted in
February and March, revealed a majority of committee members, including
both the committee chair and minority chair, support the bill. An
informal and confidential poll of House committee members in March
revealed that 14 of the 29-member House committee would probably vote
for the bill; nine were undecided and only six were firmly opposed.
“It does not require any courage to shoot a pigeon launched from a box,
and it shouldn’t require much more for a legislator to decree that it
is wrong to do so,” says Prescott, who is acknowledged even by
opponents as one of the most effective lobbyists in the state capitol.
But, Prescott is facing a formidable opponent.
“Banning
pigeon shoots would be a first step in advancing [the] agenda [of
animal rights activists], and they won’t stop there,” wails an alarmist
message on the NRA website. “It’s the first step in an agenda that
would prohibit all hunting,” NRA spokesperson Rachel Parsons told the
Pittsburgh City Paper in February.
“That’s a ridiculous argument, and nothing less than a scare tactic,”
says Karel Minor, executive director of the Humane Society of Berks
County, Pennsylvania. Roy Afflerbach, who grew up on a farm, says he
hunted “from the time I was old enough to walk into the field.” He
says, “We grew up with a reverence for life, and never shot anything
that we couldn’t eat, that gave us sustenance for life.” Opposing
pigeon shoots “is not a firearms or hunting issue, but an issue of
violence and animal cruelty, the mass killing of animals and birds
solely to award prizes,” says Afflerbach, now president of the
Afflerbach Group after serving four years in the state House of
Representatives, 12 years as a senator, and as Allentown mayor.
“Only the most extremist hunters would defend launching, shooting, and
then dumping animals into a trash bag as hunting or as a sport,” says
Heidi Prescott. Jerry Feaser, spokesman for the Pennsylvania Game
Commission, agrees. Pigeon shoots, he told the
Philadelphia Inquirer, “are not what we would classify as fair-chase hunting.” Rep. Shimkus told the
Scranton Times-Tribune,
“I do not support gun control,” and vowed to “never allow this bill to
go forward if it had to do with gun control.” The bill specifically
excludes legitimate hunting activities.
Karel Minor says his
organization became involved “because reasonable hunters,” including
those on his board of directors, “deem pigeon shooting is so far out of
the mainstream.” Reasonable hunters, he says, realize that “it’s
cruelty in order to make money from shooting animals that are
catapulted.”
If Pennsylvania hunters are really worried,
says Heidi Prescott, “they can look at other big hunting states—like
New York, Texas, Montana, West Virginia, and Michigan.” These states,
says Prescott, “have outlawed captive bird shooting, but hunting
continues unaffected.”
While the NRA is expending
considerable time and resources to block the bills, most of the state’s
sportsmen’s organizations, says Afflerbach, “recognize that this
‘sport’ is indefensible.” The 4,000-member Unified Sportsmen of
Pennsylvania (USP) has not devoted resources to trying to quash the
bills; only a one-line notice in a list of bills USP opposes indicates
that organization opposes the ban on pigeon shoots.
There were about two dozen shoots during the past year at the Pikeville
Gun Club, Strausstown Gun Club and Wing Pointe in Berks County, as well
as one at Valley View in Schuylkill County and Erdman in Dauphin
County. At each shoot, more than 1,000 pigeons are killed and thrown
away.
Dave Comroe no longer goes to pigeon shoots. “It’s not too exciting for
me,” he says. “It’s not something I’m interested in. It’s not my
thing,” he says. His “thing” is competitive trapshooting. Comroe now
kills inanimate clay pigeons made of tar and pitch, hitting about 96
percent from the 16 yard line, occasionally busting a perfect 100 to
earn championships.
Heidi Prescott and the 11.6 million
members of the Humane Society, about 7.3 million more than the NRA,
wish the few hundred Pennsylvanians who are active pigeon shooters
would follow Comroe’s example and stop participating in the cruelty of
pigeon shoots—either voluntarily or by force of law.
[Dr.
Brasch attended and reported on five pigeon shoots. An award-winning
syndicated columnist, he is professor of journalism at Bloomsburg
University and president of the Pennsylvania Press Club. His latest
book is
Sinking the Ship of State: The Presidency of George W. Bush (November 2007), available through amazon.com and other bookstores. You may contact Brasch at
brasch@bloomu.edu or through his website at:
www.walterbrasch.com.]