The breathtaking secret past of American wombat woman who has shocked the nation – as her US boss reveals why he SACKED her, and the government gets set to axe her visa

The breathtaking secret past of American wombat woman who has shocked the nation – as her US boss reveals why he SACKED her, and the government gets set to axe her visa

EXCLUSIVE 

The American tourist who manhandled a baby wombat and enraged the world is no stranger to controversy as new details emerge about her chequered past.

Samantha Strable, 24, shared a now-deleted video of her laughing as she grabbed a wombat joey from its distressed mother and ran off with it dangling in her arms.

The act infuriated Aussies, including Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who urged the influencer to try her luck with some other Australian animals.

‘Take a baby crocodile from its mother and see how you go there,’ Mr Albanese said.

‘Take another animal that can actually fight back rather than stealing a baby wombat from its mother.’

The government is now investigating if she can be deported after wildlife service WIRES said Ms Strable had violated Australia’s biosecurity and animal welfare laws. 

But despite being an avid wildlife hunter – who has posted multiple selfies with wild creatures she had killed – Ms Strable tried to get a job with animal rights group PETA.

Samantha Strable, 24, shared a since-deleted video to her Instagram account on Tuesday of her grabbing a wild wombat joey

Ms Strable's adventures included killing a wild pig with a knife in New Zealand

Ms Strable’s adventures included killing a wild pig with a knife in New Zealand

They rejected her application after a background check discovered she was an ‘avid hunter and carnivore’.

A second controversial video of Ms Strable also resurfaced on Thursday, sparking further outrage.

The clip shows her handling an echidna, which appeared to be in the wild, and showing it off to her almost 100,000 followers last month. 

Now her former boss in the US state of Wyoming has broken his silence to Daily Mail Australia and revealed he had to sack her from his hunting tour company after just 30 days when he claimed he found out she misled him about her experience.

Bruce Lindsey, of Best of the West Outfitters, employed her in October 2021 as a ‘packer’ who helped clients on rocky mountain elk hunting trips in the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem.

Mr Lindsey said the wombat furore surrounding his former employee ‘certainly doesn’t surprise me’.

He said he was forced to fire Ms Strable after just her first month on the job.

Mr Lindsey said it was clear his fresh-faced worker wasn’t cut out for the tough job of leading a string of mules through the Yellowstone snows.

‘She just didn’t have the knowledge, didn’t have the experience, and we had to assist her greatly with her duties,’ he said, citing a catalogue of issues with her work.

She then ‘contacted the state and wrote a bunch of blogs (about the company) that caused issues’.

He added: ‘I don’t recall her being a ‘biologist’ at all.’

Ms Strable fell in love with chasing game after doing a hunting mentor program

Ms Strable fell in love with chasing game after doing a hunting mentor program

Despite admitting in a 2023 newspaper interview that as a child, she thought hunting was ‘pretty gross’, Ms Strable went on to fall in love with it.

She changed her mind after doing a hunting mentorship program which saw her shoot a deer and then tasted some of the cooked tenderloin from her kill.

Raised in Great Falls, Montana, Ms Strable was born into a Christian family with four siblings, all of them home-schooled but high achievers.

Samantha’s younger sister, Kimberly, stepped away from California Intercontinental University with a doctorate in Business Administration at just 17 years old. 

‘We Strables are high performers by nature,’ Samantha’s mother Adria Strable said at the time. 

‘And Kimberly embodies that work ethic, ‘Whatever your hand finds to do, work at it with all your might as working for the Lord.”   

Raised in Great Falls, Montana, she didn't grow up around hunting - telling a Wyoming paper in 2023 that she initially thought the sport was 'pretty gross'

Raised in Great Falls, Montana, she didn’t grow up around hunting – telling a Wyoming paper in 2023 that she initially thought the sport was ‘pretty gross’

By 2020 Ms Strable was basing herself in Pinedale, Wyoming, for seasonal work during the northern summers, and then flying to the southern hemisphere to hunt during the northern winters.

Her adventures included killing a wild pig with a knife in New Zealand and stalking red deer with a bow in Chile.

Two years later, Ms Strable applied for a job at the animal rights group PETA, according to the Hustead Law Firm based in Denver, Colorado.

She didn’t get the job and lodged a complaint with the Montana Human Rights Bureau alleging age discrimination. 

Samantha’s younger sister, Dr Kimberly Strable, has received about $350,000 USD in settlements from 300 discrimination claims, according to US court documents. 

Hustead Law Firm was retained to represent PETA, and after doing a background search on Ms Strable, discovered that she was an ‘avid hunter and carnivore, characteristics expressly prohibited by PETA’s policies’.

Her complaint to the Human Rights Bureau about the failed job application was dismissed 

In the footage released on Tuesday, Ms Strable was seen running towards her car with a wombat joey swinging in her arms. It’s unclear where the encounter happened, and Australia’s animal welfare laws vary by state. 

Despite being an avid wildlife hunter - who has posted multiple selfies with wild creatures she had killed - Ms Strable tried to get a job with animal rights group PETA

Despite being an avid wildlife hunter – who has posted multiple selfies with wild creatures she had killed – Ms Strable tried to get a job with animal rights group PETA

The joey’s mother was seen desperately chasing her while an Australian man laughed as he filmed the scene.

‘I caught a baby wombat,’ Ms Strable said as the joey shrieked and wiggled trying to free itself from her grasp.

She initially defended her actions, claiming she did not harm the joey and only held it for one minute.

‘For everyone that’s worried and unhappy, the baby was carefully held for ONE minute in total and then released back to mum,’ she wrote.

‘They wandered back off into the bush together completely unharmed. I didn’t think I would be able to catch it in the first place, and took an opportunity to appreciate a really incredible animal up close. 

‘I don’t ever capture wildlife that will be harmed by my doing so.’

Daily Mail Australia has contacted Ms Strable for comment. 

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