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I am very sorry for your loss.  The world needs more Stevens and I am grateful for all he did.
Thank you Steven for all you have done for Nonhumans and for inspiring all of us to empathize and think beyond ourselves.
What a devastating loss. My condolences to Steven's family, friends, and colleagues. His amazing life's work and dedication to animal rights have inspired my professional and personal journey.  May his legacy be a beacon of hope and progress in the ongoing fight for the rights and dignity of all beings.
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In lieu of flowers

Please consider a gift to The Nonhuman Rights Project.
Thank you for being a voice for defenseless animals. The world needs more people like you, especially now. 

So sorry for the untimely passing of Animal Champion, Attorney Steven Wise.  May 10,000 plus Animal Advocate attorneys continue his journey to righteousness  for the animals. May they not be thwarted but ever made stronger in creating legal standing for Animals everywhere. May his breath be present to uphold the transition from primitive bias to rightful legal domain for the animals, which is inevitable.

Amen.  

Mariah Almonte 

This world will be lost without you.  May your legacy live on forever.  Words cannot express the gratitude for your amazing life. A truly incredible person. 
My condolences to Steven's family, friends, and colleagues.  He will be sorely missed.  My hope is that his work will be continued with the same passion and fervor.

Deepest condolences to the Wise family. I was lucky enough to meet Steve last year when I was interning for the NHRP. He was so kind to send me a letter wishing me the best in my completion of law school. That letter means so much to me and it has been taped to my refrigerator ever since I got it. 

His story is nothing short of awe-inspiring. His courage, passion, and groundbreaking mission will live on far beyond all of our lives. Rest in peace, Steve.

This was truly a great man with a heart of gold! The world has lost a wonderful hero to countless animals  the great work that this man has done will never be forgotten! We will carry on in your memory and in your honor,thank you and God bless you all and keep you safe and meet your every need! Peggy Smith from Corbin Kentucky 

For Steve:

Very few people have the opportunity to leave a legacy that will influence future generations. Doing so requires a combination of qualities, including brilliance of mind, stamina, perseverance, unparalleled focus, and passion. Steve Wise created such a legacy. It did not just happen to him. He made it happen as he dug deeper and deeper into his lovely obsession with trying to figure out how to create legal rights for nonhuman animals, a class of individuals who have never before held legal rights, and the world is forever changed by his remarkable achievements.

Oftentimes, I do not remember when or how I met people, but I clearly remember when, where and how I met Steve: Thanksgiving weekend, 1981, New York City. We were both attending the very first animal rights law conference. After a lifetime of feeling alone in my beliefs about our duty to adequately protect animals, I walked into a room and it felt like I was coming out of a dark cave into the sunlight. Before me were 60 people, 30 of them lawyers, and they all shared my values. I had found a home with other early animal rights lawyers and activists who were committed to protecting animals and establishing their legal rights.

And, there was Steve, an engaging, friendly, disheveled young lawyer from Boston, who charmed us all with his dry, self-deprecating sense of humor and impish grin. His intelligence and energy were obvious, as he told us about taking on veterinary malpractice cases and talking to the local media about the concept of animal rights. This was long before it was considered acceptable or even sane to pursue lawsuits on behalf of animals. Steve and I quickly became colleagues and friends.

Soon after that 1981 conference, we formed a national board of directors for the fledgling Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF), the nonprofit litigation organization that I had co-founded in 1979, and of course, we wanted Steve to be on our board. I was the Executive Director of ALDF for 25 years, and for ten of those years, Steve served as the President of the Board. We grew up together there, spending countless hours on long distance phone calls, dreaming, planning, and discussing how to create lawsuits and a movement of lawyers who would devote their careers to protecting animals.

There came a time when Steve said to the ALDF Board that he could no longer work on the animal “protection” lawsuits. For him, it felt like he was nibbling around the edges. He wanted to dive deeper and dismantle the system that viewed animals, not as sentient beings, but as “things.” So, while I stayed on building ALDF and the movement, Steve founded the Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP) and devoted virtually all of his waking hours to the creation of legal rights for here-to-fore rightless beings.

I was lucky enough to have a front row seat and watch his professional evolution over a period of decades. I eagerly read his many law review articles, often when they were in draft form, and we would discuss his thought process as it was happening. Later came his widely acclaimed books, such as Rattling the Cage: Toward Legal Rights for Animals and Drawing the Line: Science and the Case for Animal Rights. I watched, in awe, as he assembled the pieces, bit by bit, to translate a purely philosophical concept into on-the-ground litigation. Doing so is a tremendously difficult and unforgiving task, one that cannot be truly appreciated unless you have tried the endeavor yourself.

I saw Steve transform on a personal level too, from that novice Boston private practitioner into an international figure, a legal scholar who earned the respect and friendship of renowned legal scholars Lawrence Tribe, Cass Sunstein, Martha Nussbaum, and others. His friends and colleagues also included internationally known animal protection icons, like Jane Goodall and Cynthia Moss. Steve’s influence reached well beyond the burgeoning field of animal law, to policymakers, leaders, students, activists, artists, media and film makers on a global level. He even appeared in a memorable and hilarious interview with Stephen Colbert on The Colbert Report. He motivated countless lawyers to become animal lawyers, a concept that was just being born when we walked into that conference room in New York City in 1981.

Nobody else has come close to Steve’s accomplishments in developing animal rights law. He spent many thousands of hours researching and writing to develop his theories and then bringing them to life in the American legal system. No one else has taken the philosophy of animal rights and translated it into a practical cause of action in the courtroom. No one else has done that.

And, still, despite his international success and recognition, he remained Steve, my beloved friend of 42 years, forever unwilling to comb his hair (except when he appeared on The Colbert Report), his shirttail showing, his tie crooked, and so sweet and funny.

We are honored that Steve shared his talents with our students at Lewis & Clark Law School, teaching as an Adjunct Professor in our Animal Law Program for more than two decades. His grateful admirers include our Lewis & Clark community, as well as lawyers and law students from around the globe, who were inspired by his vision to challenge the legal status quo and push the law to treat animals as the remarkable individuals who they are. Steve built something that can’t be stopped; he laid a very solid foundation for those who will come after him, and an extraordinary body of animal rights law scholarship.

The movement will not be the same without Steve. On behalf of myself and all of us at the Center for Animal Law Studies, thank you Steve; we are honored to have known you, worked with you, and been inspired by you as we watched you lead NhRP and empower legal professionals all over the world to carry on your remarkable legacy.

Ti amo amico mio,

Joyce

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He was a pioneer in this ongoing fight for the rights of these forgotten primates.  Rest in peace, knowing you made a huge difference in the lives of some of our closest relatives on the Tree of Life.       
I was so sorry to hear about Steven's passing. He sounded like an awesome human being. 
I just found out that Steve passed. I was so sad to hear it. I met him in 1995 when I was in my second year at Harvard Law School. I wanted to study animal law but there was no class. I found out about Steve and took two other interested students to meet him at his office and talk to him. I then took his class at Vermont Law School over the summer and was instrumental in bringing him to Harvard to teach that first class, which unfortunately happened only after I graduated. He inspired me a lot, and he inspired many others. He was always kind and always willing to help. May he rest in peace and justice.
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Our sincere and heartfelt condolences to Steven's family. We met Steven walking through our Kensington Circle neighborhood and we hit off immediately having known of Charlie the Karate Chimp from our neck of the woods Niagara Falls!  We wish him eternal peace. 
The strange fact that the American public is wasting their time blabbering about Taylor Swift and Trump, rather than talking about what matters, like the passing of an exceptionally kind, hard-working,  and  wonderful human is bizarre to me.   The heavens must be glowing with his new presence.
I was so saddened by this news and send my deepest condolences to Steve’s family. I will always be grateful for the tremendous contribution Steve has made to animals and the field  of animal law inspiring and encouraging so many of us in this field. And I will always remember, too, his alacrity of argument and kindness, generosity, and good cheer as a person. It was always a delight to see him at conferences and talk. What an amazing impact he has made with his life’s work and commitments. 

Steven was a pioneer in the fight for animal rights, his tireless work has left an indelible mark on all of us who fight for the recognition of the rights of other animals.

Steven's teachings will live and his example will last, inspiring future generations to defend other animals and fight for a more just world for all.From Argentina, we want to extend our deepest and most sincere condolences to his entire family and loved ones, accompanying them in these difficult times. 

Equipo Judicial Sandra (Elena Liberatori, Noelia Villarino, Lucia Guaimas, Maria Jose Fernandez, Juan Martin Miraldo)

Ah, what a loss. But hurray for Steven! I will miss his clear vision, steely resolve, and good-humor-through-it-all.

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Steven Wise