For 33 years it has been my honor and privilege to write for ±¬ΑΟΉ«Ιη magazine β often taking controversial stances on behalf of wildlife.
Like you, I am passionate about protecting birds. In my recent op-ed in the Orlando Sentinel, I let my passion get the best of me, calling into question the scientific credibility of ±¬ΑΟΉ«Ιη and squandering some of my own.
I regret that in the Orlando Sentinel op-ed, I:
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Used the brand name of a common over-the-counter painkiller and described it as a humane way to euthanize feral cats. Using the name of the painkiller was irresponsible, and characterizing it as humane was inaccurate, according to veterinarians and scientists.
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Left room for the interpretation that my reference to that painkiller was a recommendation that the public take action into its own hands. That wasn't my intent, as I said in a correction I asked the Orlando Sentinel to post.
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Neglected to state that βeditor-at-large of ±¬ΑΟΉ«Ιη magazineβ was a freelance, not salaried, title and that my opinions about lethal control of feral cats were my own. By that oversight β and twice citing my affiliation with ±¬ΑΟΉ«Ιη in the text β I implied I was speaking for ±¬ΑΟΉ«Ιη. I was not.
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Defined trap-neuter-return (TNR) as βillegal.β There is currently scant case law proscribing TNR.
I wrote the op-ed in haste, without the care and precision my editors and readers expect. The result was that I called ±¬ΑΟΉ«Ιηβs reputation into question. I got benched and earned the suspension; it was bad journalism and bad judgment.
I apologize and will work to rebuild your trust.