PETA Urges Additional Charges Against Suspect Charged For Starting Wildland Fires In Area

The group PETA, or People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, have sent a request in the form of a letter to Fond du Lac and Washington county district attorneys asking them to add cruelty-to-animals charges to those that Daniel Enright currently faces for allegedly igniting at least eight fires that have burned across an estimated 60 acres of land in the two counties since 2020.

The letter notes that a “vast number of species, including sandhill cranes, spotted salamanders, and star-nosed moles,” were residing in and around Kettle Moraine State Forest, where at least one of the fires occurred, and that causing animals to suffer and die painfully, as was likely the case in these fires, violates Wisconsin’s animal protection laws.

“An untold number of terrified animals likely burned and died in agony, and the natural homes of even more of them were destroyed,” says PETA Senior Vice President Daphna Nachminovitch. “The person responsible for so much suffering should face charges, and PETA is asking anyone who found an animal harmed or killed due to one of these wildfires to please come forward.”

According to PETA, prosecutors in California and Oregon recently added cruelty-to-animals charges in similar wildfire cases, resulting in convictions on those charges.

Here is a copy of the letter:

The Honorable Eric Toney District Attorney Fond du Lac County

The Honorable Mark Bensen District Attorney Washington County

Dear Messrs. Toney and Bensen:

I hope this letter finds you well. I’m writing to request that your offices add cruelty-to-animals charges, as appropriate, to the charges of arson and intentionally setting fire to another’s land that Daniel Enright already faces in connection with at least eight fires in Fond du Lac and Washington counties since 2020.

Although thankfully no humans lost their lives, the countless wild animals who resided on the approximately 60 acres of land estimated to have burned were undoubtedly less fortunate. The forests, marshes, and grasslands in and around the Kettle Moraine State Forest—where at least one of the fires occurred—are home to a vast number of species, including sandhill cranes, spotted salamanders, and star-nosed moles. Wildfires inflict terror and suffering on these (and other) animals—and cause them to endure prolonged, agonizing deaths.

Wis. Stat. § 951.02 states that “[n]o person may treat any animal … in a cruel manner.” Wis. Stat. § 951.01(2)defines “cruel” as “causing unnecessary and excessive pain or suffering or unjustifiable injury or death.” Given that Enright is accused of intentionally starting multiple wildfires that surely led to unnecessary and unjustifiable suffering, injury, and death for an untold number of animals—and that such conduct hardly qualifies as the lawful taking of wild animals otherwise exempt from prosecution—we respectfully ask that investigators and your offices add mistreatment-of-animals charges to the ones he already faces. Prosecutors in California and Oregon pursued these charges in similar cases that resulted in convictions last year.

Thank you for your consideration and for the difficult work you do.

Sincerely,

Sarah Deffinger

Senior Evidence Analyst

Cruelty Investigations Department