Winner of black rhino hunting permit says he's getting death threats
Published: Jan. 17, 2014 at 10:23 AM
DALLAS, Jan. 17 (UPI) -- DALLAS, Jan. 17 (UPI) -- A man who won an auction for a permit to kill an endangered black rhino in Namibia and received death threats describes himself as a passionate conservationist.
Corey Knowlton, a Dallas-based hunting consultant for The Hunting Consortium, bid $350,000 Saturday night for the chance to hunt the rare animal, CNN reported Friday.
Knowlton's name as the winner of the Dallas Safari Club's auction was spread on social media and since then he has received death threats, he said.
"If I sound emotional, it's because I have people threatening my kids," Knowlton said. "It's because I have people threatening to kill me right now [that] I'm having to talk to the FBI and have private security to keep my children from being skinned alive and shot at."
"You are a BARBARIAN. People like you need to be the innocent that are hunted," one woman posted on his Facebook page.
"I find you and I will KILL you," another message read.
Knowlton said he's a passionate conservationist, pointing out that Namibia offers up a few permits to kill the black rhino each year to help the population thrive.
Namibia, which has an estimated black rhino population of just under 2,000, allows the selective hunting of older, post-breeding bulls that often attack younger bulls that are still breeding, officials said.
"I respect the black rhino," Knowlton said. "A lot of people say, 'Do you feel like a bigger man?' or 'Is this a thrill for you?' The thrill is knowing that we are preserving wildlife resources, not for the next generation, but for eons."
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Published: Jan. 17, 2014 at 10:23 AM
DALLAS, Jan. 17 (UPI) -- DALLAS, Jan. 17 (UPI) -- A man who won an auction for a permit to kill an endangered black rhino in Namibia and received death threats describes himself as a passionate conservationist.
Corey Knowlton, a Dallas-based hunting consultant for The Hunting Consortium, bid $350,000 Saturday night for the chance to hunt the rare animal, CNN reported Friday.
Knowlton's name as the winner of the Dallas Safari Club's auction was spread on social media and since then he has received death threats, he said.
"If I sound emotional, it's because I have people threatening my kids," Knowlton said. "It's because I have people threatening to kill me right now [that] I'm having to talk to the FBI and have private security to keep my children from being skinned alive and shot at."
"You are a BARBARIAN. People like you need to be the innocent that are hunted," one woman posted on his Facebook page.
"I find you and I will KILL you," another message read.
Knowlton said he's a passionate conservationist, pointing out that Namibia offers up a few permits to kill the black rhino each year to help the population thrive.
Namibia, which has an estimated black rhino population of just under 2,000, allows the selective hunting of older, post-breeding bulls that often attack younger bulls that are still breeding, officials said.
"I respect the black rhino," Knowlton said. "A lot of people say, 'Do you feel like a bigger man?' or 'Is this a thrill for you?' The thrill is knowing that we are preserving wildlife resources, not for the next generation, but for eons."
Read more: Top News, Latest headlines, World News & U.S News - UPI.com