Big58cal wrote:Just about every place that doesn't have an honest to goodness confirmed population, if there's just a few sightings or a few killed, the DNR/F&W agency will always say that it was an escaped pet.

It doesn't matter if there really is a breeding population there, it's an "escaped pet".
If the DNR/F&W agency acknowledges that the animals are there and are breeding, then they have to expend the resources and money and develop management plans for them and are on the hook for any depredation losses.
Of course, if you talk with anyone in the agency about it, they'll deny it.

X2
Just because the OMNR declares them endangered does not make it so.
There is a known population from Alaska all the way down to the bottom end of South America.
Easier to slap a label on them than to actually manage them.
In this case, we are not given all the details either.
The OPP are not a bunch of gunslingers going around looking for something to kill.
It is entirely possible that there was no option but the end result.
If there was not any imminent danger the OMNR would have been called to tranquilize and remove the animal.
They do it with bears all the time.
Personally if I can't get to my vehicle safely and trying multiple times to do so I'll let my Excal do the talking whether it be a coyote or a cougar. Whichever it is will have a burial in the dark and the only witness will be me and I won't be talking about it.
"Death leaves a heartache no one can heal. Love leaves a memory no one can steal"