PETITION TARGET: The Congressional Animal Protection Caucus
UPDATE (4/24/2025): The Bureau of Land Management has planned several roundups — including cruel helicopter roundups that drive horses to horrific injuries or death — for the summer of 2025 across 10 US states.
Lady Freethinker has documented a plethora of gruesome injuries and deaths over the past few years at these cruel roundups.
In 2024, we sent an observer to the North Lander Complex in Wyoming to document a helicopter-assisted roundup and witnessed wild horses terrorized by extremely low-flying choppers. Thirteen horses died in the first 15 days, according to the daily gather reports. A 4-year-old mare broke her neck while being forced into a trailer, another mare died from a brain aneurysm, three horses died from “capture myopathy” — or from stress of being captured — while struggling in a holding corral, and two young horses died after breaking their necks in a holding corral. Six horses were euthanized.
In 2023, Lady Freethinker sent an observer to the Antelope Complex to document the atrocity that happens year after year. Horses were driven relentlessly, despite high winds and excessive heat. Thirty nine horses died during the roundups or were killed due to “pre-existing conditions” once the roundups concluded.
While the BLM’s reports cite “pre-existing conditions” – including blindness, fractures, club feet, poor body condition, and bad or no teeth – as the cause for most of the killings, the majority of wild horses died specifically from acute or gather-related injuries, according to the gather reports.
Here are some of the victims, according to the BLM daily gather reports:
- a bay foal killed for a “pre-existing” fractured leg
- a sorrel foal killed reportedly for dehydration and diarrhea
- a 3-month-old filly killed for a leg deformity
- a 1-year-old sorrel killed for a “pre-existing” shoulder fracture
- a 3-year-old stallion who broke his neck
- a 3-year-old brown mare who broke her neck
To read about the other numerous victims in the 2023 roundup, you can read our report here.
While the BLM says that helicopters are a humane way to manage wild horse removals, the horrific death toll from a single year alone shows they are cruel, violent, and unacceptable.

Roberts Mountain Complex Roundup (Scott Henderson Photography)
Wild horse experts from several advocacy groups say a more effective – and less deadly – approach would involve fertility control via humane darting that would allow wild horses to remain on the range, while also contributing to the thriving ecological balance the BLM is required to maintain.
That alternative also would save U.S. taxpayers the millions of dollars spent each year to hold upwards of 50,000 wild horses in long-term holding corrals or to pay ranchers to keep the horses on private property.
Captured wild horses also sometimes meet grisly ends, with the BLM’s Adoption Incentive Program exposed by the New York Times as knowingly handing over the protected animals to individuals with a history of selling horses to slaughterhouses.
It’s time for these brutal gathers to end, once and for all.
Sign our petition urging officials to end deadly helicopter gathers in favor of safer, more cost-effective approaches involving humane fertility control that would allow wild horses to remain free on the range, and so help end unnecessary, grisly deaths — from injuries to intentional slaughter.