A new report found that criminal cases from officials over killing or harming bald and golden eagles have fallen. The AP cited data from the Fish and Wildlife Service.
Dozens of permits approved or pending would allow roughly 6,000 eagles to be killed over several decades, government documents show. More than half the killed birds would be golden eagles, which prefer the same open landscapes as wind developers.
ROLLING HILLS, Wyo. (AP) Criminal cases brought by U.S. wildlife officials for killing or injuring protected eagles dropped sharply in recent years, even as
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