California ranchers demand right to blast killer wolves with pepper balls
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Killer wolves terrorize California ranchers desperate to defend livestock from predators
By Josh Koehn Published July 1, 2026, 4:09 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
Add The California Post on GoogleCalifornia ranchers sick of watching blood-thirsty wolves ravage their herds are demanding the right to blast the predators with pepper balls as Republican lawmakers are fighting what they call overly restrictive state laws on protected species.
Assemblywoman Heather Hadwick (R-Alturas) rallied with law enforcement and ranchers Wednesday at the Capitol in support of a package of bills that would allow livestock producers and others authorized by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to use pepper-ball-style projectiles to haze gray wolves, mountain lives and other animals threatening livestock and human life.
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“The intent is not crowd control tear gas, but rather something similar to pepper spray for bears — something a little smelly that keeps the wolf away and may leave a bruise,” Hadwick told The California Post.
“Pepperball hazing gives ranchers and wildlife managers another way to protect livestock, reduce wolf-livestock conflict, and prevent situations where wolves become so conditioned to eating cattle that lethal removal becomes the only option left on the table.”
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James Gallagher, a former Republican assemblymember from Yuba City who co-authored the package of bills before moving on to Congress, said the wolf attacks have been gruesome for ranchers across Northern California.
“It’s been a terrible issue for a lot of ranchers,” Gallagher told The Post.
“Killing the cow is probably the most merciful thing that happens in many cases. These cattle are maimed and have terrible wounds that are walking around with open wounds, and they have to be put down.”
Gallagher accused Gov. Gavin Newsom of ignoring the issue as rural Californians bear the cost.
“Gavin’s running for president,” Gallagher said. “He’s not even addressing housing or homelessness or any of the major issues in California — let alone a wolf problem that’s affecting mostly rural California.”
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Gallagher added, “With his policies, he’s shown a complete disregard for farmers and ranchers and rural people. He pays lip service to it, but then he saddles us with the highest costs of the nation.”
The governor’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Gray wolves are protected under both state and federal endangered species laws. They disappeared from California about a century ago before returning through natural migration from Oregon in 2011.
AB 1673, in its current form, would allow people authorized by the Department of Fish and Wildlife to apply “aversive conditioning” on wolves to buy, possess or use a tear-gas weapon that expels a projectile. It’s a more aggressive approach than one researchers recently tried: blasting the AC/DC tune “Thunderstruck.”
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Sightings have become increasingly frequent, including a lone gray wolf spotted in Los Angeles County.
Sen. Shannon Grove, a Central Valley Republican and coauthor of Hadwick’s additional bill, AB 1722, said ranchers in Sierra Valley and other northern parts of the state have been left powerless while wolves prey on calves.
She added that the issue may not be felt in more urban areas like Los Angeles and San Francisco, allowing animal rights activists to frame the issue in disingenuous terms. In a social media post in May, the group Women for Wolves defended the gray wolves as “just native wildlife.”
“These people say they care about animals, but they don’t care about this baby [calf] just dropping on the ground, and then these wolves come and just start ripping it apart,” Grove told The Post.
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“It’s not just a revenue thing, it should be a kindness thing too.”
AB 1722 would shield Californians from civil, administrative or criminal penalties under the California Endangered Species Act. Ranchers would be allowed to use necessary and reasonable force to protect themselves, a family member or another person from immediate bodily harm from an endangered, threatened or “candidate species,” which covers animals and plants being considered for protective status.
Gallagher said ranchers are not asking for open season on wolves, but for authority to deal with animals that have learned to attack cattle.
“We’re not talking about going out and taking out every wolf,” Gallagher said. “We’re just talking about the problem of wolves who have essentially learned to kill cattle.”
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The bills follow the Department of Fish and Wildlife’s October announcement that it lethally removed four gray wolves from the Beyem Seyo pack after what officials called an “unprecedented” wave of livestock attacks in Sierra Valley.
Between March 28 and Sept. 10, 2025, the wolves were responsible for 70 livestock losses, accounting for 63% of all confirmed or probable wolf-caused livestock losses statewide during that period. Officials documented 17 additional confirmed or probable losses between Sept. 10 and Oct. 14.
State officials said the wolves had become habituated to cattle despite months of nonlethal deterrence efforts, including drones, bean bags, all-terrain vehicles, diversionary feeding, fladry and 24-hour field presence.
“Wolves are as fat as fat can get because they’re feeding on baby calves,” Grove said.
“Let us use tear gas to scare the wolves away. Let us do this to protect people’s property — and actually human life.”
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Even FIFA and Trump can't ruin this World Cup

Algeria fans thank the community of Lawrence, Kansas, where their team's base camp was located, before a match against Austria in Kansas City, Missouri, on June 27, 2026.Charlie Riedel/AP
Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily.Despite the countless problematic aspects of the 2026 FIFA Men’s World Cup—power-hungry fascists and the wealthy elite grabbing every ounce of political and monetary gain they can imagine at the expense of fans, national team players and staff, workers, and more—there are a few inspiring stories that I have been following.
Among them: A national team playing in its first World Cup, outplaying established opponents with their spirit and tactics; a friendship between residents of a Kansas town and the national team players training there; and a young player showing the world what his sister always saw in him.
As Jules Boykoff, a former US men’s national team and professional soccer player—and current politics professor at Pacific University in Oregon—told me just before the tournament started, soccer has the power to spark new connections within our communities and organizing. More simply, it can be fun.
Cape Verde’s ascent to the knockout stages
Cape Verde, a nation of about 530,000 people (about the same population as Atlanta), qualified for its first World Cup last year. This year, they earned draws against their three group stage opponents: Spain, one of the favorites to win the whole tournament, Uruguay, and Saudi Arabia. Vozinha, the goalkeeper, had a star performance against Spain with seven saves and gained 14 million followers on Instagram as a result, but beyond that, the Verdean team genuinely challenged Spain during the match in ways that they had no answer to.
Against Uruguay, Cape Verde scored its first two goals—including Kevin Pina’s stunning, long-distance free kick that punished their opponents’ flimsy defensive wall—and the team created much better chances to score than Saudi Arabia.
Prior to the start of the tournament, Cape Verde was projected to have the fourth-lowest chance of making it out of the group stage behind Iraq, Curaçao, and Haiti. They beat the odds with flying colors and will play Argentina, led by perhaps the greatest player of all time, Lionel Messi, on Friday.
Lawrence, Kansas, residents connect with Algerian national team players and fans
At the start of the World Cup, a video of two Lawrence residents enthusiastically welcoming Algerians to town after the national team set up their training camp there went viral. If you didn’t get the chance to watch it, one resident explains to a reporter that he attended what appears to be a fan event because he was “so happy” that “they chose our town for their base camp.” While both he and another resident said in the interview that they didn’t know much about Algeria, they were already adopting their fan chants: “1, 2, 3, vive l’Algerie,” or “1, 2, 3, long live Algeria”—a phrase with ties to Algeria’s fight for independence from French occupation.
Local outlets have done some great reporting on the new Kansas-Algeria bond, which I highly recommend you give a read.
The friendship has led to some of my favorite videos to come from the tournament:
Bless this man, his excitement about Team Algeria and their base camp in Lawrence, Kansas, is just 🤌
— Anne Thériault (@annetheriault.bsky.social) 2026-06-13T03:35:16.643Z
Algerian fans chanting THANK YOU LAWRENCE
— Rodger Sherman (@rodger.bsky.social) 2026-06-28T19:20:03.383Z
Ivory Coast’s star winger Yan Diomande plays a great tournament for his first fan
I sometimes find myself searching for the personal stories of the soccer players I enjoy watching. Diomande plays for the major German club RB Leipzig; his story in the Players’ Tribune, a platform that publishes first-person stories from athletes, really moved me.
You should take a look at it yourself—his words are so powerful that any description I come up with wouldn’t do it justice—but Diomande talks about his sister Roxanne, who believed that he would become a great soccer player, taking him to tryouts for professional teams, and about his shock and grief when Roxanne died at the age of 15 after someone spiked her drink at a party. Yan Diomande has achieved so much at just 19 and is attracting the attention of the best teams in the world.
His dribbling is mesmerizing, and his decision-making after the dribble—whether that be a pass or shot—is impressive for how early he is in his career. His Ivory Coast teammates are so cleverly organized and look to get him the ball often to cause chaos in the opposing team’s defense.
Given that, I still think about one quote from Diomande’s story, entitled “Dear Roxanne”: “Everything I do on a football pitch, it’s for you.”
Although the Ivory Coast lost 1-2 against Norway on Tuesday, he and his teammates have achieved so much, reaching the knockout stage for the first time in their World Cup history.