In short? Authorities say Molly the magpie will be returned to its original carers on the condition they make no commercial gain from the bird.

The couple, who have had the bird for four years, run a popular Instagram account and have signed a book deal.

What’s next? The environment department will work with the couple to ensure the magpie is properly cared for.

The department said in a statement that independent expert veterinary advice had shown that Molly was highly habituated and may have developmental issues, meaning he can never be rehabilitated or returned to the wild.

Good news they’ve put the condition on in this particular instance, but you can guarantee other Instatockers who want their five minutes of fame will be out there collecting whatever they can get their selfish mitts on to try and be the next big thing.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    18 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A Gold Coast couple whose pet magpie was seized by Queensland authorities will have it returned on the condition they no longer profit from the bird.

    Last month the pair surrendered the bird to the Department of Environment, Science and Innovation (DESI), which claimed the magpie was “taken from the wild and kept unlawfully with no permit, licence or authority”.

    But following a public outcry and calls from Queensland Premier Steven Miles to return the bird, DESI agreed to work with the couple to issue an appropriate licence.

    The department said in a statement that independent expert veterinary advice had shown that Molly was highly habituated and may have developmental issues, meaning he can never be rehabilitated or returned to the wild.

    Bond University associate professor of law Wendy Bonython said it was vitally important for the government to not set a precedent of allowing people to profit from native wildlife.

    “It’s going to depend an awful lot on what the Instagram account is being used for, whether it’s being used to generate personal profit, whether it’s being used to promote wildlife conservation and protection measures, or whether it’s somebody posting essentially photos of their pet,” she said.


    The original article contains 467 words, the summary contains 198 words. Saved 58%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • @saltesc
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      48 months ago

      Those idiots. Every Australian knows you can have wild magpies come chillout with you around your home. They’re smart and social. You don’t need to capture one. Just a few days of feeding bits of ham and talking, they’ll come visit and be on your shoulder in no time. The problem is when they get too confident and go in the house and give you sass telling them to gtfo. Or they disappear to have kis and come back with the fam

      • @Dkarma
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        28 months ago

        Sounds like they had to capture it to save its life and didn’t do it to make the thing a sideshow.

        • @saltesc
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          8 months ago

          There’s no mention of that apart from a single sentence of “…claimed they rescued”. Now it’s being returned because it’s so removed from nature it probably can’t survive so…what a “rescue”.

          And especially an area like the Gold Coast, there’s a bajillion wildlife shelters and sanctuaries where people take at risk native animals they find. There’s even a literal bird sanctuary there that’s so big it’s a tourist attraction.