Categorized | 1 News Release

Rescue of Fawn from Storm Drain Nets PETA Award for Woodbridge Police

Baby Deer Stuck Inside Underground Pipe System Is Uninjured and Returned to Woods

Officer Tim Majek rescues a fawn from a storm drain. *Photo Courtesy of the Woodbridge Police Department

Press Release
WOODBRIDGE — A Compassionate Police Department Award is on its way from PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) to the Woodbridge Police Department, after Officer Tim Majek rescued a baby deer from a storm drain on May 24. After responding to a call from a concerned neighbor, he arrived on the scene and found the fawn about six feet down inside the drain. He opened the grate, lowered himself in, and managed to carry the fawn to safety before returning the uninjured animal to the nearby woods. Video footage of the rescue recorded by the police department can be viewed here.

“This brave and determined police officer saved this tiny fawn from a terrifying, life-threatening predicament and carefully returned the animal to the forest to find his or her mother,” says PETA Vice President Colleen O’Brien. “PETA hopes this story will inspire others to come to the aid of animals in distress.”

Last year, Officer Majek helped rescue a buck who was caught in a soccer net and another who was entangled in fence netting. PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to abuse in any way”—will send the Woodbridge Police Department a framed certificate and a box of delicious vegan cookies.

For more information about helping animals, please visit PETA.org.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Browse Current Issue - Click Here

Safety Announcement

We are taking safety precautions in the City of Perth Amboy, and emphasize that it is important: IF YOU SEE SOMETHING, SAY SOMETHING!!
Report Suspicious Activity – Be Vigilant – STAY ALERT! Do not think that any call or report is too small. Don’t allow the actions of a few dictate your quality of life.
FOR ALL EMERGENCIES, DIAL: 9-1-1
FOR ALL NON-EMERGENCIES, DIAL: 732-442-4400