A young protester along Bath Road outside the Bath-Brunswick veterinary hospital plea for the life of Mia, a wolf hybrid who was captured last week and scheduled to be euthanized.

A young protester along Bath Road outside the Bath-Brunswick veterinary hospital plea for the life of Mia, a wolf hybrid who was captured last week and scheduled to be euthanized.

Protesters lined Bath Road outside the Bath-Brunswick veterinary hospital Friday morning hoping to generate support for their effort to save the life of a wolf-hybrid who was captured in Waldoboro last week and is scheduled to be euthanized next week.

Among the protesters, James Doughty, founder of Wolf Ledge Refuge and Education Center in Bristol, said Friday that confusing state regulations have prevented him from renewing his license to keep the animals until they can be adopted.

A wolf hybrid named Mia, captured last week in Waldoboro, is scheduled to be euthanized next week. Protestors in Brunswick Friday pleaded for the animal's life to be spared.

A wolf hybrid named Mia, captured last week in Waldoboro, is scheduled to be euthanized next week. Protestors in Brunswick Friday pleaded for the animal’s life to be spared.

He and “hundreds, if not thousands” of people have contacted U.S. senators, congressmen and other officials to try to intervene and save the animal’s life, he said.

Hospital manager Perian Haslam said the facility must adhere to state and other protocols. For more on this story, see Monday’s edition of The Times Record.

 


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