Beloved pet squirrel Peanut seized by New York state after 7 years in home - There is no political solution. You are shooting your way out of this

Beloved pet squirrel Peanut seized by New York state after 7 years in home​

Published Oct. 30, 2024, 10:06 p.m. ET by Shane Galvin
Link (Archive)
1730465440166.png
A rescued pet squirrel that sat atop a social media and charity empire has been seized by New York state — with its owner saying it’s slated to be euthanized, according to an Instagram post.

Peanut the Squirrel was taken from his Elmira, NY, home Wednesday by officials from the Department of Environmental Conservation, who served a warrant to Peanut’s guardians after receiving complaints of “unlawfully possessed” animals, according to the post.
1730465461333.png

“Well internet, you WON,” the caption from account Peanut_The_Squirrel12 reads. “You took one of the most amazing animals away from me because of your selfishness. To the group of people who called DEC, there’s a special place in hell for you.”

A DEC spokesperson confirmed to The Post that officers took away Peanut the Squirrel and a pet raccoon.

The squirrel’s owner, Mark Longo, claimed that he was in “shock” and “disbelief” that DEC was going to allegedly euthanize his pet and friend, according to the social media post.

The DEC said that the animals were seized in coordination with Chemung County Health department “due to the presence of a rabis vector species (raccoon) in the home.”

The state agency did not comment on whether the animals will be euthanized.

Longo took in Peanut seven years ago, when he was just a kit, after seeing its mother get hit by a car, according to social media accounts.

Peanut boasts 532,000 followers on Instagram, more than 423,000 followers on Facebook, and over 2 million views on TikTok.

1730465507734.png

Longo, a Connecticut native, moved to Elmira in 2023 to start an animal sanctuary named P’Nut’s Freedom Farm, a 501.C.3 approved nonprofit.


“Last year we moved to NY in hopes of starting a NONPROFIT animal rescue in PNUT’s Name. [P’Nuts Freedom Farm] will forever live in PNUT’s memory,” Longo wrote in the post announcing Peanut’s seizure.


“With over 350 rescues, we’ve relied heavily on PNUT and his internet family to father donations to help more animals. I don’t even know how will [sic] continue to fundraise for this nonprofit.”


P’Nut’s Freedom Farm is an organization made up of veterinarians and caregivers who are dedicated to rescuing animals from abusive or dire situations, according to the group’s website.


Following the announcement of Peanut’s capture, Longo posted several phone numbers for the Department of Environmental Conservation onto his feed – asking supporters to call in protest against the government’s actions.

There is also a petition to return Peanut to his rightful home.


This is not the first time the DEC is in public relations hot water over confiscating a beloved pet.

Earlier this year, the department confiscated a 750-pound alligator from a Hamburg, NY, home, which was outfitted with a massive room and pool for the reptile’s comfort.

“Albert” the alligator had lived in his home for 34 years and was raised from a hatchling by guardian Tony Cavallaro, who is now suing the department to regain custody of his longtime friend.
 
Last edited:
This is why I'm glad at least some states are more sensible with their regulations- they just require a permit for keeping these kinds of animals. There's a middle ground between someone with a rescued squirrel or opossum, and people keeping tigers, and it's reasonable to acknowledge that difference. Especially since the only way to test animals for rabies involves euthanizing the animal, so these pets are always going to be killed if they're seized.

Also, it's ironic to say this here, but some people really need to just mind their damn business. If the animal isn't being abused (like snake guy tormenting his snakes), just leave them alone.
 
You think you hate the government and all associated bureaucracies enough...

But you don't.


Someones house would be on fire if I was this guy. After a while, a pet becomes part of the family. Actions like these should mark everyone involved (with the exception of the owner, obviously) with a scarlet letter, and a constant need to always be checking behind them.
 
Last edited:
No matter what I do I can't get the AI to make an image of a police officer kneeling on a squirell. I can get a police officer kneeling next to a squirell all day but not actually on top of the squirell. I have failed peanut.
This is the best I could do:

IMG_0193.png


IMG_0192.png

Checkpoint: fluxFusionV24StepsGGUFNF4_V2GGUFF16.gguf

Prompt:
In an absurdly high photorealistic quality, generate a picture of a police officer in New York City ((forcefully driving his knee into a squirrel’s body on the ground, squishing and choking it.)). (((The squirrel is lying on its back with a knee on it))). There are hundreds of armed NYPD SWAT officers with riot gear in the background.

Steps: 4
Sampler: Euler
Schedule type: Beta
CFG scale: 1
Seed: 2279580436
Size: 896x1152
 
Last edited:
Why wasn't the animal released after it became old enough? Old uncle farmer dad Ben wouldn't find himself in a situation like this. Running animal rehab means being aware of laws and having certs. I've always admired Ben for being on top of his shit.
Someone I know took in a litter of baby squirrels that were orphaned (tree fell and mom stopped coming around) and he successfully released 4/5 with the fifth one refusing to leave. That's how he ended up with a pet squirrel for 8 years. It's easier said than done.
 
Gonna be an unpopular opinion, but wild animals are not pets, just grabbing one out of the park is dumb. The Rabies story is probably just a cover and it was put down because that's usually what happens to wild animals that are raised by humans and unable to be returned to the wild.

Squirrel isn't a particularly offensive one, but if you normalize it, like every feckless thot putting a service vest on a Pomeranian and taking it into the grocery store. You're going to have more people trying to keep the ones that are, like Deer with a potential for a brain prion disease hopping species.

The other issue is they were advertising it. You want to do that, buy an exotic, don't steal an animal from the wild, get those to a center that can properly take care of them, Even then, don't blast it on the Internet like a gangbanger ventilating a convenience store clerk. No one is going to come kicking your door in cause you rescued a baby animal if you're not advertising it to the world.

The geese down in the park are in fact not free(unless they are non-native)
 
Especially since the only way to test animals for rabies involves euthanizing the animal, so these pets are always going to be killed if they're seized.
Squirrels (and rodents in general) rarely, if ever, get rabies. It's something of a 0.4% chance, they just don't survive bites from rabid animals to transmit it in the first place.

The raccoon could indeed be a reservoir for rabies, theoretically it could have spread the disease to the squirrel, but if that was the problem they could have euthanised only the racoon to check before going for the squirrel.

I've done an internship at a wildlife hospital and not once did we ever worry about rodents having rabies. Stray dogs and cats have a much higher chance of transmiting it than squirrels, and we don't euthanize them on sight.
 
Back