Tell U.S. Soccer Federation That Wild Animals Don’t Belong at Games

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When people go to a soccer game, they don’t expect to see a distressed bald eagle struggling to break free from a handler as fireworks explode around him, but that’s exactly what happened at a U.S. Women’s National Team match in Washington, D.C. The bald eagle, Clark, was hauled from a facility in Missouri just for this spectacle, and the U.S. Soccer Federation must prevent animals from suffering like this again.

Exploiting a bald eagle—who symbolizes freedom—is especially ironic, but no animal should be trucked hundreds of miles and forced to endure terrifying pyrotechnics and thousands of shouting fans in a stadium. There have been several incidents at sporting events in which wild animals have broken loose from handlers, just as Clark tried to do, and birds have crashed while flying around a stadium.

Please use the form below to urge J.T. Batson, CEO of the U.S. Soccer Federation, to prohibit the use of wild animals at events the organization’s teams attend.

JT
Batson
The United States Soccer Federation

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