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'Extremely cruel': Raccoon trapped, left to drown in garbage bin in Metro Vancouver

A raccoon has died after it was caught in a live trap for more than a week and then placed in a garbage bin full of water to slowly drown.

A raccoon has died after it was caught in a live trap for more than a week and then placed in a garbage bin full of water to slowly drown.

Staff at聽聽- which provides care and rehabilitation to mammal species native to B.C - say they are shaken up after dealing with the 鈥渆xtremely inhumane鈥 case of animal cruelty.

 This raccoon was caught in a live trap and then place in a garbage can full of water to drown.This raccoon was caught in a live trap and then place in a garbage can full of water to drown. Photograph By CRITTER CARE WILDLIFE SOCIETY

Animal care supervisor Brooklynn Martin said staff were called to a property in Burnaby on Friday about 1pm after the young adult female raccoon had been found by a tenant in the garbage can barely alive.

Martin said it was believed the landlord of the property had set the trap about a week and a half ago and the tenant had assumed the raccoon had been released.

鈥淚t turns out that the raccoon was left in the trap and he put it in a garbage can and filled it with water and left the trap there,鈥 she said.

鈥淎s soon as the tenant found out what happened he called us immediately and was very frantic asking what he could do in the meantime before we got there.鈥

The tenant took the raccoon out of the trap, dried her off and placed hot water bottles around her to keep her warm until staff arrived.

鈥淚t was a full-grown adult raccoon and it was so weak and so mentally gone that the tenant and my staff were just handling it without gloves,鈥 Martin said.

Martin told the Courier it was by-far one of the worst cases of animal cruelty she had come across in her three years working at the wildlife society.

 The trap was placed in a garbage bin full of water. - Critter Care Wildlife SocietyThe trap was placed in a garbage bin full of water. 鈥 Critter Care Wildlife Society

鈥淭his raccoon was stuck in a trap with no food and basically being forced underwater with no way to get out,鈥 she said.

鈥淪he came in and her nose was all scratched up, all her nails on her paws had been ripped out, her paws were raw she had been trying so hard to get out and there was basically no hair left on her tail.

鈥淓ach cruelty case is bad and you deal with the situation and it makes you sad but this one, in my opinion, is probably the worst that I have had to deal with.鈥

She said it was common for people to set live traps for problem critters and it wasn鈥檛 illegal if it was done in a humane manner.

鈥淚f you don鈥檛 want them on your property you have a 10km radius around your house where you can trap them and then you can relocate the animal somewhere else,鈥 Martin explained.

鈥淏ut legally you are not allowed to set a trap and leave whatever is in there for longer than 24 hours and this poor raccoon was in a trap for over a week.

鈥淲e have dealt with a lot of cruelty cases, mainly leg hold traps, and they maim the animal and cause them pain.

鈥淏ut physically torturing the animal and trying to drown it - it got to all of us at the centre, all the staff were pretty shaken up about it.

鈥淭he way this live trap was used was extremely cruel and extremely inhumane.鈥

https://www.facebook.com/CritterCareWildlife/posts/2284698344908680

The wildlife society posted about the incident on its Facebook page stating, 鈥渃ruelty has no place in the modern day!鈥 The post has so far received over 1000 likes in support and been shared more than 300 times.

Staff did their best to save the critter but sadly she passed away Friday night.

Martin said the case had been reported to authorities including BC SPCA cruelty line and the Association of Furbearing Animals.

In a separate incident, the BC SPCA has issued a warning to people about the dangers of DIY pest control after itreceived a call from a member of the public in the Arbutus Ridge area of Vancouver, who found a raccoon trapped inside a home-made electrified cage trap.

In a statement, the BC SPCA said the caller heard the young raccoon crying throughout the night and found the raccoon trapped in a modified cat trap on an adjacent property.

 The electrified cage trap. - BC SPCAThe electrified cage trap. 鈥 BC SPCA

鈥淭he trap was connected to an extension cord, apparently causing an electric current to run through the all-metal trap. The caller immediately unplugged the trap and freed the raccoon, and then called the BC SPCA Animal Helpline.鈥

It鈥檚 illegal to use electrocution on raccoons.

Rather than harmful and ineffective DIY methods, the BC SPCA encourages members of the public to first聽聽and consult its聽.

If a raccoon enters a home or shed, call an聽聽that uses exclusion techniques instead of trapping, relocation or killing.

The BC SPCA does not recommend trapping and relocating wildlife.