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Feds Keep Wasting Millions On N.C. Red Wolf Experiment

The federal government is spending millions of taxpayer dollars on red wolf experiments in North Carolina. But according to a nearby landowner, the government has a history of releasing wolves on private land — and then the wolves bred with coyotes and wreaked havoc on local wildlife.

The Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is continuing a plan set forth under former President Joe Biden’s administration to reestablish red wolves in North Carolina and beyond. The plan has an estimated price tag of nearly $328 million.

“We are committed to the strategy outlined in the recovery plan, particularly the focus on collaborative conservation,” an FWS representative told The Federalist. 

In December, the Federal Highway Administration awarded $25 million in fiscal year 2024-2025 funds for highway wildlife crossings in North Carolina — because the wolves, after release, keep getting hit by cars.

The red wolf, native to the American South, was declared extinct in 1980. While the federal government has been releasing red wolves since 1987, it paused releases and the fostering of wolf pups from 2015 to 2020. But left-wing conservation groups sued, and FWS resumed the program during Biden’s administration.

The red wolf program had a 50-55 percent mortality rate in 2023. As of February this year, the “total estimate” was 17-19 red wolves in the wild, 16 of which were “known/collared.”

The Federalist asked the White House for comment, questioning whether this plan will continue under President Donald Trump’s administration and whether the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has any plans for the program. Officials did not comment in time for publication.

A ‘Hybrid Swarm’

Jett Ferebee, a real estate developer, owned 2,000 acres near the Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge in Eastern North Carolina. He told The Federalist he used the land to take his children hunting.

“They’d always say, Dad, let’s go to the zoo. … It was so much wildlife, it was unreal,” Ferebee said. But in 2008, he wrote the Department of Interior, explaining red wolves were intruding on his property. 

“All of a sudden, my dream of having land for my family to enjoy would not be of use because the government had basically overrun it with a wolf program,” Ferebee told The Federalist.

Over the coming years, Ferebee would embark on years of research and advocacy for private landowners. He eventually obtained documents by public records request, which he shared with The Federalist, showing that the federal government had been releasing wolves on private property from 1990 until at least 2013. In an email Ferbee provided to The Federalist, an FWS official explained that the agency did not have legal authority to do this.